Surfline’s Mechanics of Sunset Coincides With Major Swell for Vans World Cup

[ 2 ] November 30, 2011 |

HONOLULU, Hawaii (Wednesday, November 30, 2011) - Sunset’s reputation looms like a nightmare waiting to happen. Lung-crunching hold-downs; converging west and north peaks that consume you like an avalanche; and a wasteland for those not privy to the code of lineup markers. Year after year, Sunset sifts through the world’s bravest and most willing challengers to crown one surfer who masters its infamous “world’s most challenging” conditions.

“I’ve watched the best at Sunset since the inception of the pro tour. I still contend that you’re not a complete surfer until you’ve hoisted the World Cup. Not even Kelly Slater’s pulled that off.” Randy Rarick, Vans Triple Crown of Surfing Executive Director.

This week, the Vans World Cup of Surfing at Sunset Beach will crown its 37th champion; someone will join one of surfing’s most illustrious lists that includes names like Andy Irons, Shane Dorian, Sunny Garcia, Tom Carroll, Derek Ho, Dane Kealoha, Shaun Tomson, Ian Cairns, and Mark Richards.

Sunset has about as many combinations as a 7-digit phone number: A massive reef that extends almost a mile offshore; a multitude of swell directions; and a line-up that shifts with every incremental foot of wave height. Surfline.com today released the first official Mechanics of Sunset study, by Sean Collins, that investigates the mystique, mystery and complexities of a break that very few will ever master.

“I think that’s why we all surf: that excitement of the unknown. Sunset delivers on all levels. It is a tough wave,” says Pancho Sullivan, who is still in contention for a maiden World Cup victory at Sunset this week.

Sullivan is one of a dedicated breed of surfers who is committed to the break. While he can put on a great show at Off The Wall, Pipe or Rocky Point, his ‘heavyweight’ build, lead-footed power, and love of a challenge have naturally aligned him with Sunset.

The Momentum Generation packed their narrow boards and headed a mile west in the early ’90s, taking most of the cameras and focus with them. Subsequently, only a handful have come close to conquering Sunset in the years since. The Vans World Cup of Surfing is one of the only major events on the ASP World Tour that 11X world champ Kelly Slater has not written his name on. He hasn’t competed at Sunset in five years and may retire before ever raising the World Cup overhead.

A new swell is filling in at Sunset Beach this second. Tomorrow ASP World Tour hotshots Taj Burrow, Dane Reynolds, John John Florence, Jordy Smith, Julian Wilson and Adriano De Souza will paddle out in wave face heights exceeding 20 feet, prepared to face their Sunset fears. On Friday, the 37th Vans World Cup champion will be crowned. Join us LIVE at www.vanstriplecrownofsurfing.com.

The Vans World Cup of Surfing is the second jewel of the $830,000 Vans Triple Crown of Surfing, presented by Rockstar Energy Drink. It is an ASP PRIME event with a $250,000 prize purse.

For a full breakdown on the mechanics of Sunset Beach view the feature on Surfline.com

Share and enjoy:

Tags: , , ,

Category: All ASP News, ASP Prime News

Comments (2)

Trackback URL | Comments RSS Feed

  1. Andy Crow says:

    This article has just reminded me what a farce the ‘triple’ crown is nowadays. The surfers with a good chance of winning the triple crown should qualify for Pipe not these ‘Pipe specialists’. It is more than fair that Pipe specialists get to surf in the big Pipe contest – you just don’t get to call it part of the Triple Crown – cos it no longer really is part of the Triple Crown.

  2. anton says:

    if theres 1 country that should have 2 events on the dream bla bla tour it should be hawaii and sunset should be there.Its the 1 wave where it really shows a top surfers technique and power.I still think guys like sunny and tom carrol ,occy ,pancho surf it better than most of the guys on the current world tour.The current world tour surfers should have to justify there surfing at sunset.I dont understand why its not on the dream tour.And i look at the early videos of Slater at solid sunset his style looks ugly.I think out of any surf spot on the world tour SUNSET should be the 1st choice.

Leave a Reply

Before you attempt to submit a comment, we suggest you read the rules.




Please note: comment moderation is currently in use. Please do not submit your comment twice, it will appear shortly after being approved.

* Copy this password:

* Type or paste password here:

RSS Feed ASP on Facebook ASP on Twitter ASP on Myspace ASP on Youtube
Rankings
Schedule
Surfers
About ASP
Regions
ASP World Title
ASP Women's World Title
ASP Men's World Rankings
ASP Women's World Rankings
ASP Junior Men's World Ranking
ASP Junior Women's World Ranking
ASP Men's Longboard World Ranking
ASP Women's Longboard World Ranking
Archived World Tour Rankings
ASP World Tour
ASP Women's World Tour
ASP Men's Prime Events
ASP Men's Star Events
ASP Women's Star Events
ASP Junior's Events
ASP Longboard World Tour
ASP Longboard Qualifying Series
ASP Specialty Events
Archived World Tour Results
ASP Men's Profiles
ASP Women's Profiles
ASP World Tour Champions
ASP History
ASP Member System
Frequently Asked Questions
ASP Rule Book
Sponsorship
ASP Newsletter
Contact Us
ASP Australasia
ASP Europe
ASP North America
ASP Hawaii
ASP South America
ASP Africa
ASP Japan
Hosting by Media Temple