CT surfers enter the field and QS surfers looking to qualify rise to the occasion as the Vans World Cup completes Round 3.
Vans World Cup of Surfing defending champion Michel Bourez (PYF) made event history during Round 3 with the highest heat total of the 2015 Vans Triple Crown thus far, a near-perfect combined score of 18.60. Another record-shattering performance was made by Australia's Jack Freestone, who earned the first perfect wave score of the series with an impressive 10-point barrel and a big finishing maneuver to take the heat lead.
Bourez dominated his heat against Matt Wilkinson (AUS), Miguel Tudela (PER), and Bino Lopes (BRA), with his top two waves coming in at 9.00 and 9.60. The Tahitian dedicated his performance to the late Teahupo'o charger and fellow countryman Malik Joyeux, whose life is celebrated every December 2nd after passing away 10 years ago.
"I have to surf my best out there for him," said Bourez. "It was such a good heat for me. I expected to have good waves like this today, so I'm stoked just to make it."
The Spartan takes control of the Hawaiian Airlines competition with an 18.60 heat total in Round 3.
Freestone's 10-point barrel ride saw the 23-year-old maintain first place with a combined wave score of 17.67, while Sunset specialist Mason Ho (HAW), Aritz Aranburu (ESP), and Nat Young (USA) battled for second place advancement.
"Those ones are really hard to come by, especially when it's like this," said Freestone in regards to his perfect 10. "I was just lucky to be in position, I was under Nat and Aritz and they both didn't even look at it. I just swooped on it and it just had the perfect shape on it."
Young, who sits comfortably in 10th position on the Championship Tour (CT) rankings, made it past Ho by just over a point with an 11.93 combined heat total to advance into the next round. Spanish standout Araburu was pushed out of the competition.
Jack Freestone disappears behind a thick Sunset Beach barrel for a perfect 10-pointer during Round 3 of the Vans World Cup.
Ending the day in epic fashion was current World Champion Gabriel Medina (BRA) with a gravity-defying floater. With a flurry of waves in the final minutes of the heat, places shifted quickly and left everyone eagerly anticipating scores. Deivid Silva (BRA) moved from fourth to first place and Medina from third to second in the final seconds before the horn sounded. Ryan Callinan (AUS) and Connor O'Leary (AUS) were left behind, as Silva and Medina advanced in first and second respectively.
"Luckily I got that last one," said Medina. "That was a tough floater. It felt like an air when I was landing. Yeah, stoked to land that one and get the score."
Silva currently leads the Triple Crown Rookie of the Year contest and needs a third-place finish at Sunset to make the Top 10 in the Qualifying Series (QS) and ultimately qualify for the elite Tour. Fresh off a QS6,000 win in Brazil, Silva is a serious contender in the tricky conditions and showed fierce talent to take down Medina.
Watch the drama that unfolded when reigning World Champion Gabriel Medina took to the lineup with a wave-by-wave recap.
Big wave surfer Ian Walsh (HAW), who leads the regional rankings, had a successful heat against Stuart Kennedy (AUS), Adriano de Souza (BRA) and Carlos Munoz (CRI). Walsh posted an 8.50 for a solid opening performance and continued to take on big Sunset with confidence and positioning to post another good score, a 7.27.
Walsh's knowledge of big waves gives the surfer a huge advantage when competing at a renowned break like Sunset.
"I think the more time you spend in big surf definitely helps here, especially because the line up is so big," he said. "Positioning, that's what it comes down to at Sunset. Knowing when to shoot in to get a wave, when to shoot out to not get caught. There's a lot of little intricate details but you still get smoked every now and again."
World No. 1 Mick Fanning (AUS) and entertaining freesurfer Dane Reynolds (USA) traded giant waves in an exciting heat that also included Joan Duru (FRA) and Noe Mar McGonagle (CRI). Reynolds narrowly trumped Fanning for first place by posting a 6.17 and an 8.77, just 0.45 points ahead. Both advanced into the next round.
Mick Fanning, Dane Reynolds, Noe Mar McGonagle and Joan Duru engage in a powerhouse matchup in Round 3.
Reynolds competed on a brand new Channel Islands surfboard, a fearless move for the 30-year-old. As a shaper himself, he has the ability to understand how a board will ride well before even testing it.
"I'm feeling good, that was the first time I rode this board," said Reynolds. "It's hard to feel confident when you haven't even stood up on a board yet, but I stood up on an insider my first wave and it felt pretty good, rail-to-rail transitions, and wasn't doing anything weird so I felt comfortable when I finally did stroke into a decent wave."
Conner Coffin (USA) was under pressure in Round 3 to make his heat against Wiggolly Dantas (BRA), Sebastian Zietz (HAW) and Jack Robinson (AUS), since the California native needs a 13th-place finish in this event to make the 2016 CT. Coffin made it through in second with a 6.33 and 4.83, while Robinson advanced on with a combined heat score of 13.50. The 17-year-old Australian phenom looked incredibly cool under the high pressure of triple-overhead waves.
The fourth and final day of the Vans World Cup will likely take place Thursday, December 3 with an 8 a.m. start. Wave faces are forecasted to be in the 8-to-12-foot range with occasional 15-foot faces gracing the Sunset lineup. Frontrunners will surf an impressive four times to make it to the podium. Multiple champions will be crowned, including the Vans World Cup of Surfing winner, the WSL Regional champion and the Hawaiian Airlines Mile leader.
Top Surfers Stand Out with Record-Breaking Performances
WSL
Vans World Cup of Surfing defending champion Michel Bourez (PYF) made event history during Round 3 with the highest heat total of the 2015 Vans Triple Crown thus far, a near-perfect combined score of 18.60. Another record-shattering performance was made by Australia's Jack Freestone, who earned the first perfect wave score of the series with an impressive 10-point barrel and a big finishing maneuver to take the heat lead.
Bourez dominated his heat against Matt Wilkinson (AUS), Miguel Tudela (PER), and Bino Lopes (BRA), with his top two waves coming in at 9.00 and 9.60. The Tahitian dedicated his performance to the late Teahupo'o charger and fellow countryman Malik Joyeux, whose life is celebrated every December 2nd after passing away 10 years ago.
"I have to surf my best out there for him," said Bourez. "It was such a good heat for me. I expected to have good waves like this today, so I'm stoked just to make it."
Freestone's 10-point barrel ride saw the 23-year-old maintain first place with a combined wave score of 17.67, while Sunset specialist Mason Ho (HAW), Aritz Aranburu (ESP), and Nat Young (USA) battled for second place advancement.
"Those ones are really hard to come by, especially when it's like this," said Freestone in regards to his perfect 10. "I was just lucky to be in position, I was under Nat and Aritz and they both didn't even look at it. I just swooped on it and it just had the perfect shape on it."
Young, who sits comfortably in 10th position on the Championship Tour (CT) rankings, made it past Ho by just over a point with an 11.93 combined heat total to advance into the next round. Spanish standout Araburu was pushed out of the competition.
Ending the day in epic fashion was current World Champion Gabriel Medina (BRA) with a gravity-defying floater. With a flurry of waves in the final minutes of the heat, places shifted quickly and left everyone eagerly anticipating scores. Deivid Silva (BRA) moved from fourth to first place and Medina from third to second in the final seconds before the horn sounded. Ryan Callinan (AUS) and Connor O'Leary (AUS) were left behind, as Silva and Medina advanced in first and second respectively.
"Luckily I got that last one," said Medina. "That was a tough floater. It felt like an air when I was landing. Yeah, stoked to land that one and get the score."
Silva currently leads the Triple Crown Rookie of the Year contest and needs a third-place finish at Sunset to make the Top 10 in the Qualifying Series (QS) and ultimately qualify for the elite Tour. Fresh off a QS6,000 win in Brazil, Silva is a serious contender in the tricky conditions and showed fierce talent to take down Medina.
Big wave surfer Ian Walsh (HAW), who leads the regional rankings, had a successful heat against Stuart Kennedy (AUS), Adriano de Souza (BRA) and Carlos Munoz (CRI). Walsh posted an 8.50 for a solid opening performance and continued to take on big Sunset with confidence and positioning to post another good score, a 7.27.
Walsh's knowledge of big waves gives the surfer a huge advantage when competing at a renowned break like Sunset.
"I think the more time you spend in big surf definitely helps here, especially because the line up is so big," he said. "Positioning, that's what it comes down to at Sunset. Knowing when to shoot in to get a wave, when to shoot out to not get caught. There's a lot of little intricate details but you still get smoked every now and again."
World No. 1 Mick Fanning (AUS) and entertaining freesurfer Dane Reynolds (USA) traded giant waves in an exciting heat that also included Joan Duru (FRA) and Noe Mar McGonagle (CRI). Reynolds narrowly trumped Fanning for first place by posting a 6.17 and an 8.77, just 0.45 points ahead. Both advanced into the next round.
Reynolds competed on a brand new Channel Islands surfboard, a fearless move for the 30-year-old. As a shaper himself, he has the ability to understand how a board will ride well before even testing it.
"I'm feeling good, that was the first time I rode this board," said Reynolds. "It's hard to feel confident when you haven't even stood up on a board yet, but I stood up on an insider my first wave and it felt pretty good, rail-to-rail transitions, and wasn't doing anything weird so I felt comfortable when I finally did stroke into a decent wave."
Conner Coffin (USA) was under pressure in Round 3 to make his heat against Wiggolly Dantas (BRA), Sebastian Zietz (HAW) and Jack Robinson (AUS), since the California native needs a 13th-place finish in this event to make the 2016 CT. Coffin made it through in second with a 6.33 and 4.83, while Robinson advanced on with a combined heat score of 13.50. The 17-year-old Australian phenom looked incredibly cool under the high pressure of triple-overhead waves.
The fourth and final day of the Vans World Cup will likely take place Thursday, December 3 with an 8 a.m. start. Wave faces are forecasted to be in the 8-to-12-foot range with occasional 15-foot faces gracing the Sunset lineup. Frontrunners will surf an impressive four times to make it to the podium. Multiple champions will be crowned, including the Vans World Cup of Surfing winner, the WSL Regional champion and the Hawaiian Airlines Mile leader.
Deivid Silva
Deivid Silva was all business in a Quarterfinal bout with Mateus Herdy and pushed the qualification hopeful to the final buzzer. But, in
Deivid Silva has officially qualified for the 2025 Championship Tour here at the Corona Saquarema Pro presented by Banco do Brasil.
The former CTer and defending event victor, Deivid Silva, picked up where he left off in Ericeira with an excellent 8.17 to steal the show
Featuring Erin Brooks, Samuel Pupo, Macy Callaghan, Ian Gouveia, Zahli Kelly, Rosie Smart, Charly Quivront, Kyuss King, Oscar Berry, Deivid
Recently relegated to the Challenger Series, Deivid Silva is on a mission to prove he belongs among the world's best and delivered a
Vans World Cup
See who's making the leap from the Qualifying Series to the Championship Tour -- and what to expect at the Billabong Pipe Masters.
Mick Fanning takes down an all-CT final heat for the win, his maiden victory in Hawaii.
Mick Fanning stormed through a stacked field of competitors to claim his first victory at the Vans World Cup of Surfing.
Check out which Qualifying Series surfers will join the elite ranks in 2016 following the end of the last QS 10,000 event of the season.
As finals day unfolds at the QS10,000 at Sunset beach, see who's left in the running to make the Tour next year.