Hawaiian tradition calls Oahu "The Gathering Place" and nowhere else on the planet compares to the North Shore when it comes to defining the global growth of surfing. The location of the Hawaiian Pro, Haleiwa, unofficially the gateway to the North Shore, seems all the more appropriate.
Flavio Nakagima - WSL / Tony Heff
Take Heat 4 of Round Two of the Hawaiian Pro, for instance. The heat included: An essentially unsponsored Brazilian "privateer" in the form of Rafael Teixeira; a Moroccan, Ramzi Boukhiam, who was a member of Quiksilver's Young Gun generation that includes current Championship Tour surfers Kanoa Igarashi, Ezekiel Lau and Leonardo Fioravanti; a Hawaiian who moved to Tahiti and has since returned home to Oahu in Keoni Yan; and finally, another lightning bolt from the Brazilian storm, Flavio Nakagima, who finished 2nd at the QS 3,000 Hang Loose São Sebastião Pro just two weeks ago.
Rafael Teixeira - WSL / Tony Heff
Luddites and flat Earth societies be damned, progress marches on and as the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo -- the first ever to include surfing -- begins to take shape, surfing becomes less and less a regional phenomenon. Each competitor from this Hawaiian Pro petri dish represents the next wave for a new generation of surfers from Europe, South America, Asia and Polynesia.
Keoni Yan - WSL / Tony Heff
A quartet of surfers has converged at Haleiwa, providing a microcosm of pro surfing to come, with all four of its emerging regions colliding in a single snapshot. In the end, Teixeira and Boukhiam advanced on while Yan and Nakagima were sent home but not without providing a glimpse into the not so distant future.
World Class
Brad Drew
Hawaiian tradition calls Oahu "The Gathering Place" and nowhere else on the planet compares to the North Shore when it comes to defining the global growth of surfing. The location of the Hawaiian Pro, Haleiwa, unofficially the gateway to the North Shore, seems all the more appropriate.
Flavio Nakagima - WSL / Tony HeffTake Heat 4 of Round Two of the Hawaiian Pro, for instance. The heat included: An essentially unsponsored Brazilian "privateer" in the form of Rafael Teixeira; a Moroccan, Ramzi Boukhiam, who was a member of Quiksilver's Young Gun generation that includes current Championship Tour surfers Kanoa Igarashi, Ezekiel Lau and Leonardo Fioravanti; a Hawaiian who moved to Tahiti and has since returned home to Oahu in Keoni Yan; and finally, another lightning bolt from the Brazilian storm, Flavio Nakagima, who finished 2nd at the QS 3,000 Hang Loose São Sebastião Pro just two weeks ago.
Rafael Teixeira - WSL / Tony HeffLuddites and flat Earth societies be damned, progress marches on and as the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo -- the first ever to include surfing -- begins to take shape, surfing becomes less and less a regional phenomenon. Each competitor from this Hawaiian Pro petri dish represents the next wave for a new generation of surfers from Europe, South America, Asia and Polynesia.
Keoni Yan - WSL / Tony HeffA quartet of surfers has converged at Haleiwa, providing a microcosm of pro surfing to come, with all four of its emerging regions colliding in a single snapshot. In the end, Teixeira and Boukhiam advanced on while Yan and Nakagima were sent home but not without providing a glimpse into the not so distant future.
Ramzi Boukhiam
In an unforgettable quarterfinal, Morocco's Ramzi Boukhiam takes on the legendary 11x World Champ Kelly Slater at firing Teahupo'o in 2024.
Featuring Gabriel Medina, Tatiana Weston-Webb, Vahine Fierro, Caroline Marks, Sawyer Lindblad, Ramzi Boukhiam, Ryan Callinan, Kanoa
The 2024 standout Ramzi Boukhaim added a hefty heat win to his name, pushing World No. 1 John John Florence and 2023 World Title contender
The Rip Curl Pro Anglet comes back for a 10th edition at la Chambre d'Amour.
The GOAT bows out to a defiant Ramzi Boukhiam, threading one of the deepest barrels of the comp to cement a near-perfect 9.80, placing him
Hawaiian Pro
Drop in on the Hawaiian surfing event series, the most intense on the planet.
Colapinto becomes the first Californian ever to win the Vans Triple Crown of Surfing.
The North Shore local breaks down Haleiwa, home to the first stop of the Vans Triple Crown.
A look back to 2017 as Qualifying Series stars react to making the cut for the Championship Tour.
Some interesting qualification subplots emerged after the first jewel in the Triple Crown ran at Haleiwa.