Current And Future Surf Stars Do Battle At The Australian Open Of Surfing

[ 2 ] February 17, 2012 |

18-year-old Matt Banting (AUS) one of today's top performers at the Australian Open Of Surfing. © ASP/Dubnar

MANLY, NSW/Australia (Friday, 17 February, 2012) – The Australian Open of Surfing presented by Hurley and Billabong has seen surfing’s past, present and future stars doing battle in front of thousands of fans at Manly Beach. Today the surfers were forced to put their aerial skills on display in small 2 foot (1 meter) wind swell conditions.

Matt Banting (AUS) is on fire this week at the Australian Open Of Surfing after advancing to the Final of the Pro Junior division on the weekend and today defeating ASP World Title Series surfers – Jordy Smith (ZAF) and Matt Wilkinson (AUS).

“I’m rapt! I’m really happy with my surfing right now,” Banting said. “I’ve made the final of the Pro Junior, and I’ve been surfing every day since then so I feel like I know the waves pretty well here. It’s great to have a heat with those guys, let alone win, they’ve been my heroes since I was a little kid.”

Joel Parkinson (AUS) advanced to the round of 16 with a solid heat win this afternoon alongside Kolohe Andino (USA) who finished 2nd. Parkinson was looking sharp both in the air and on the open wave face and finished the heat with a big air-reverse.

“It’s crazy sitting in the water and looking back at a packed out beach,” Parkinson said. “The surf is small but we’re all dealing with the same conditions, I actually caught some fun ones. I’m a bit of a momentum builder, I don’t want to surf my best heat in the first or second round, I want to try and peak towards the end.”

Mitch Crews (AUS) continued to impress at the Australian Open Of Surfing, racking up another heat win to advance to the round of 16, the first man-on-man round of the contest. Crews managed to find some long right-handers and belted out some big turns.

“It’s fun, it’s tiny, but you can still generate speed in the pocket,” Crews said. “I saw that Ace (Buchan) went into the lead at the end there and it fired me up, then I got a good wave and tried to go big to take the lead back off him. I’m frothing.”

Tomas Hermes (BRA) looked right at home in today’s challenging conditions, finding a few nice waves and going big with a couple of clean airs.

“The waves are like where I’m from in Brazil,” Hermes said. “It’s feels great to win the heat because this contest is so hard and full of really good surfers. This event is huge, just like the US Open, it’s great to be here in Manly.”

Keanu Asing (HAW) advanced to the next round after finishing 2nd to an in-form Jesse Mendes (BRA). Asing’s powerful carves and huge inverted airs have been impressing the judges and the masses of onlookers on the sand.

“To make this heat feels so good, especially after losing first round in Brazil last week,” Asing said. “Our heat got lucky we probably had the best waves of the afternoon, so it was great see some nice waves and good surfing. Every heat at this contest is a tough one, I’m just going to keep doing what I’ve been doing and hopefully go a lot further.”

The last heat of the day saw an upset with the number 2 seed, Taj Burrow (AUS) eliminated by Granger Larson (HAW) and Peterson Crisanto (BRA).

Tomorrow the Australian Open Of Surfing will see Men’s ASP 6-Star action and will also feature skating competitions and demos, music concerts, athlete signing sessions and much more. The event is free for the public to view in person and live on the internet via australianopenofsurfing.com

IMPORTANT EVENT INFO

The cigarette and alcohol-free event is expected to welcome more than 100,000 people to Manly, the location of the very first World Surfing Championships in 1964 and the first Australian beach to legalise day-time swimming in 1904.

Destination NSW, along with major event partners Hurley and Billabong, expect the Australian Open of Surfing to inject more than $6 million into the local community.

The Australian Open of Surfing is made possible with the support of the following event partners: Destination NSW, Events NSW, Manly Council, Sony, Blackberry, Monster Energy, Fuel TV, Channel [V], The Manly Daily, Surfing World, Reef, Skullcandy, ASP Australasia and Surfing NSW.

Comments

comments

Tags: , , , , ,

Category: All ASP News, ASP Star News

Comments (2)

Trackback URL | Comments RSS Feed

  1. marcio says:

    hey amanda, last year i had same problem, someone told me to pause wait till it loud complitally and then play again, worked pretty good to me, but im not in the uk, hope it helps you for next event

  2. Amanda says:

    FYI ASP, as a heads up, I have never had any issues streaming your comps before. With your new streaming co, livestream I cannot get it to work at all, I have been trying for the last few nights and if I am lucky I might get 5 seconds of voice and live pictures before the picture cuts out and cannot reconnect sometimes cutting off completely, sometimes it leaves me with just the voice despite closing the browser, usually I cannot even hear that properly as for some reason it triplicates itself so I have to shut down my PC.

    I haven’t had any issues streaming most of last years events online, and I hope the main world tour won’t be using this same technology as it doesn’t work here in the UK where I am:-(

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.

ASP on Facebook ASP on Twitter ASP on Instagram ASP on Youtube ASP on Tumblr
Rankings
Schedule
Surfers
About ASP
Regions
ASP World Championship Tour
ASP Women's W.C.T
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 Championship Tour
ASP Women's W.C.T
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
Press Room
Contact Us
ASP Australasia
ASP Europe
ASP North America
ASP Hawaii
ASP South America
ASP Africa
ASP Japan
Hosting by Media Temple