World’s Best Ignite Round 4 of O’Neill Coldwater Classic, Possible Champion Crowned Tomorrow

Comments November 5, 2012 |

STEAMER LANE, Santa Cruz/California (Monday, November 5, 2012) – The O’Neill Coldwater Classic, Stop No. 9 of 10 on the ASP World Championship Tour (WCT), completed Rounds 3 and 4 today, with the ASP World Title Race and requalification campaigns heating up at Steamer Lane.

Joel Parkinson (AUS), 31, current frontrunner for the ASP World Title, moved one step closer to achieving his goal of winning the O’Neill Coldwater Classic. Parkinson was selective in his slow Round 4 heat, but the cautious wave choice allowed the Australian to notch the day’s highest score of 9.50 for a powerful combination of turns, aiding in his advancement to the Quarterfinals.

“It was really slow at the start and I didn’t get a wave for about 11 minutes,” Parkinson said. “That 9.5 was a good wave. I waited. I figured I wasn’t going to waste my time on small waves. I’d rather lose than see someone get the wave that I wanted.”

Parkinson, a three-time ASP World Runner-Up, is within striking distance of his maiden elite crown and knows big results in the last two events will be crucial in finishing atop the ASP WCT Rankings.

“That heat was really important,” Parkinson said. “I’m dropping a 9th and replacing it with a 5th or better now. Tomorrow’s a new day and there’s still a lot of work to do. It’s great to have the title come down to Pipe. It’s the best thing to be in it for Pipe and it’s good for surfing.”

Jeremy Flores (FRA), 24, was another natural-footer to find success in today’s challenging conditions. Like Parkinson, the Frenchman also started strong with a powerful forehand attack on his opening wave, notching an excellent 9.37 for the ride to hold off Tahitian powerhouse Michel Bourez (PYF), 27, and Kelly Slater (USA), 40, to earn his Quarterfinals berth.

“That first wave was perfect,” Flores said. “It was the best wave I’ve had so far and I feel better. It’s funny, I changed my wax and I actually felt better. It feels good to actually put a heat together. Wave choice out here is important. I think the guy that catches the right waves out here is going to win the heat if they don’t fall. Of course guys like Kelly (Slater) or even Michel (Bourez) can get a 9 on anything. I’ve been scratching through heats, so that one felt better.”

Taj Burrow (AUS), 34, looked sharp in his Round 4 bout. Burrow combined an array of turns and airs to advance directly to the Quarterfinals over high-flying Brazilian Gabriel Medina (BRA), 18, and dangerous goofy-footer Travis Logie (ZAF), 33.

“I’m having fun,” Burrow said. “The conditions aren’t great, they’re a little bit slow, but I actually connected quite a few good waves in that heat, so I was pretty lucky. Even on the good ones, they were pretty tricky to ride. I hit a few lumps. I got lots of good turns, but I fell twice on an air. Three man’s pretty tough, but I was happy that I got a couple.”

Burrow, current No. 7 on the ASP WCT, finished equal 13th in both France and Portugal and the progressive Australian feels his Round 4 success could be the rebound towards a strong result at the O’Neill Coldwater Classic.

“I’m feeling really good because I haven’t had a good heat yet and I’ve just picked a new board that feels a bit sparkier,” Burrow said. “I feel like my best is yet to come and I’m going to try and peak at the right time for a change. I feel like I’m on my way to doing that.”

Matt Wilkinson (AUS), 24, former O’Neill Coldwater Classic winner (2010), was electric on his backhand today, taking wins in both Rounds 3 and 4 to earn his best result of the season. Wilkinson, current No. 30 on the ASP WCT, was in need of a major result to remain among the ASP Top 34 for 2013 and his advancement to the Quarterfinals will vault him to a more stable position on the rankings.

“This result is massive for me,” Wilkinson said. “It’s the first time I’ve passed that third round this year. I’m freaking out. I know I really need points, so that feels good.”

Up first tomorrow morning will be Gabriel Medina (BRA), 18, against Alejo Muniz (BRA), 22, in Heat 1 of Round 5.

Event organizers will reconvene tomorrow morning at 6:15am local time for a possible 6:45 start.

To watch the O’Neill Coldwater Classic LIVE log on to www.oneill.com/cwc/

O’NEILL COLDWATER CLASSIC ROUND 4 RESULTS:
Heat 1:
Taj Burrow (AUS) 15.47, Gabriel Medina (BRA) 15.13, Travis Logie (ZAF) 12.67
Heat 2: Joel Parkinson (AUS) 14.77, Raoni Monteiro (BRA) 11.93, Alejo Muniz (BRA) 7.37
Heat 3: Jeremy Flores (FRA) 15.87, Michel Bourez (PYF) 13.50, Kelly Slater (USA) 13.00
Heat 4: Matt Wilkinson (AUS) 16.60, Adriano de Souza (BRA) 15.20, Damien Hobgood (USA) 10.37

O’NEILL COLDWATER CLASSIC ROUND 3 RESULTS:
Heat 9:
Jeremy Flores (FRA) 9.50 def. Yadin Nicol (AUS) 8.66
Heat 10: Matt Wilkinson (AUS) 14.83 def. Owen Wright (AUS) 14.00
Heat 11: Damien Hobgood (USA) 14.26 def. C.J. Hobgood (USA) 12.56
Heat 12: Adriano de Souza (BRA) 16.97 def. Patrick Gudauskas (USA) 15.23

Tags: , , , , , ,

Category: All ASP News, ASP World Tour News

Comments

  1. Rusty says:

    The judges score Mick and Parko well because they understand surfing. They watch the board and (usually)not the exaggerated body language of some of the ASP posers (we all know who they are). The only problem with Mick and Parko is that they are naturals and make the very difficult look easy.

  2. asterX says:

    Si je puis me permettre, la traduction en français est franchement déplorable; SVP Merci
    Cordialement

  3. gil westreich says:

    in my opinion parkos 9.5 was more like 7 maybe an 8 , hes great and can get a 9.5 easily but in this particular wave he didnt deserve it, i dont care how much the commentaters was analyzing each turn with the shoulder position justifing the score ,it was patetic ,why can they just say the truth it wasnt a 9.5 anyway you look at it ( also jeremy 9. something was way over scored, this time one of the comentators even said that he thought that michels wave was better) also with mick and kellys final in bells they gave mick a 9. something on a 7 or 8 wave doing some basic turns, in today standarts, and falling in the end ( that part was even taking out in the replay of this wave),same thing with medina and julians final. for some reason the judges are favoring the australians and making this kind of ¿mistakes? wich in this point, getting so closed to the end of the race can be very crutial ,i wish they will stop making judging a joke. just my opinion

    1. Rusty says:

      Just shows you don’t know much about real surfing do you.

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
Careers
Contact Us
ASP Australasia
ASP Europe
ASP North America
ASP Hawaii
ASP South America
ASP Africa
ASP Japan
Hosting by Media Temple