The Hurley Pro Sunset Beach: Day 3

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By Steve Shearer (freeride76)

The Hurley Pro Sunset Beach: Day 3

Steve Shearer picture
Steve Shearer (freeride76)
Form Guide

There's no doubt the impact of the Pipe Finals day was monumental for women's surfing. It's been all over the mainstream press. Some have even speculated it was part of the reason for Toledo's sabbatical, a reasoning I find highly dubious.

In practical terms, the major impact seems to have been on the rest of the women’s field. The psychological impact from Pickles, Caity, and Bettylou's showing seems profound and is lingering into Sunset, possibly extending right through to Finals Day.

Bettylou knifing through a perfect inside Sunset barrel (WSL/Bielmann)

If you looked at swagger, confidence, maturity, performance, and dominance as key indicators you would assume Molly Picklum was the current World Champion and Caz Marks was a mid-career journeywoman. There's no comparison.

All of a sudden, last year's Final 5, including the current World Champion and the year before, seems completely irrelevant. Imagine now a World Champion who can't ride a backside tube? After that day at Pipe it's now fundamentally inconceivable. Tyler Wright, after two 9ths, is in mortal danger of not making the cut. 2021 Runner-up Tatiana Weston-Webb looks way off the pace, as does 2022 Final 5'er Johanne Defay. Defay only progressed against Tati today in their Round of 16 heat on the strength of riding the most beautiful Sunset wave that came through all day and not falling.

Molly taking cues from Jack and John (WSL/Heff)

Women's surfing is progressing, but at wildly varying rates and the gaps in performance that are opening up are huge. Sally Fitz clearly caught the better waves in her Round of 16 heat against Bettylou but was soundly beaten by a superior performance. Like Tyler, consecutive 9ths puts Sally below the cut with the wildcard lucky dip bag surely now empty.

21-year old Molly Picklum's maturity seems almost surreal until put into historical context. Steph came on tour at 18, won her first title at 19, and had three by the time she was 21. Carissa won her first at 18 and had two by the age of 20. There has been an evolution on the women’s tour, analagous to the men's if not as extensive, whereby careers are extended past their former use-by dates as a result of the application of knowledge about diet, recovery, mindset etc etc. Not to mention the increased financial backing available to women surfers. Nothing kills a career faster than having to get a day job. Maternal instincts have largely bypassed women tour surfers with a few exceptions (Chelsea Hedges, Lisa Anderson) but there's no doubt family formation very much favours male tour surfers as far as continuing on with a career goes.

We lost ten surfers today. Wildcard Zoe McDougall could not make a meaningful mark in her two heats and replacement for Carissa Moore, Sophie McCulloch, likewise couldn't produce a decent score with two go outs in improving Sunset surf. They were the two sent home in the Elimination Round. By the time the Round of 16 kicked off it was dreamy, almost as good as Sunset gets for the size. Bluewater, sunshine, groomed by light trades, and bombing sets which by degrees became more frequent as the swell filled in.

For my mind, the best surfer of the day failed to progress. While Pipe showed women’s progression in the tube, Gabby Bryan at Sunset today showed the progression on the rail. Some of the turns were vicious. Fully committed. We now have a distinction between what is half-done and finished with release - or on the fins as Tyler Wright’s laybacks tend to be - and what is a fully committed gouge. If you missed them, go watch Gabbys scoring waves. My favourite ride of the day was her 6.33 for a single-turn ride against Brisa Hennessy in a losing heat. A brutal turn that called to mind Trent Munro with his similar low centre of gravity attack.

Three gaffs and a lip hit. Despite not progressing, Gabrielle Bryan showed the most commitment to the rail (WSL/Bielmann, Heff)

Still, like Tyler and Sally, Gabby is now sitting on two 9ths and will need big results from here to avoid the cut. She should be a Final 5'er if she can manage that.

Brisa's turns weren't as savage or committed but she caught better waves and, unlike a lot of the field, was prepared to immediately turn hard up into the bowl, instead of waiting. That gave her two or three turns rides all day long and judges were forced to pay them. As they did when she won the comp in '22. A repeat performance on Glenn Pang boards which look perfect for her is not out of the question.

The rookies looked wobbly. Alyssa Spencer got sent packing by Caz Marks in a lacklustre affair. Spencer looks a little undercooked in her rookie year and will likely be sent back to the Challenger Series with three more ultra challenging venues ahead.

As the trades lay down and surface turned to butter, Caity Simmers put more trust in her rail (WSL/Heff)

Sawyer Lindblad looks more fully formed as a CT surfer but was sent home by Caity Simmers after a bizarre day where she ended up on the wrong side of the Priority Judge twice. In her Round 1 heat the best wave of the day came through and Johanne Defay caught it with the booth believing Sawyer still had priority. Minutes later we found out she had lost P for a very tepid look at the wave which didn't look like much to me or Coach Jake Patto. “That's pretty heavy,” he said. “Jeez, that wasn't even a paddle. It wasn't a committed paddle.” It cost her the heat.

Sent to the Elimination Round she fell foul of the rules (and etiquette) a second time, paddling back out in a lazy fashion and straight into the path of Gabby Bryan who had to avoid her and thus missed the chance to pull into an inside drainer. The subsequent paddling interference meant she lost half of her lowest scoring ride. That was still enough for her to get past Sophie McCulloch.

Unfortunate to face an on-point Pickles, India Robinson approached Sunset in a manner befitting a professional: deep bottom turns exchanged for committed top turns, keeping speed all the way (WSL/Heff)

Dark horse for the event has to be Isabella Nichols after a brave lip hit on one of the biggest sections of the day to get past Tyler Wright - see the opening photo. She's got a tough draw against Bettylou SJ.

All eyes on former champs Pickles and Brisa, with Caz Marks having the easiest draw.

Given what is expected tomorrow and who is left in the draw, it looks like another epic Finals Day in the offing.

// STEVE SHEARER

Comments

yodai's picture
yodai's picture
yodai Wednesday, 21 Feb 2024 at 4:15pm

As I suggested the other day early rounds today saw a few of the older girls getting through with little commitment to steeper part of wave ,Eg sally and Tyler but still got through with softer turns

Island Bay's picture
Island Bay's picture
Island Bay Wednesday, 21 Feb 2024 at 4:51pm

A pumping 3 hours surf got in the way, but what I saw I really liked:
- Pickles' maturity and World Champ demeanor
- Gabriella Bryan's brutal turns
- Bettylou's hungry attitude and tube savvy

The men's rankings may be all over the place, but the women's look to be snapping in two. There will be a lot of 'year off' taking, I reckon.

Thanks again, FR.

drodders's picture
drodders's picture
drodders Wednesday, 21 Feb 2024 at 4:52pm

The surf looked so fun - there was so me very good surfing and I’m looking forward to see BLSJ, Pickles, and BH charging in the finals

southernraw's picture
southernraw's picture
southernraw Wednesday, 21 Feb 2024 at 5:28pm

This is a really good write up FR.
It seems to be true. It's a whole new generation of women moving to the front of the pack.
I reckon the only time i've seen something similar in my lifetime was the momentum generation and how they completely changed the face of surfing (and made average surfers worse by riding too thin a board for about a decade trying to copy them!).
In the space of a year or two, the Elkos, Carrols, Hardmans, Lynch etc, were replaced by Slater, Machado, Powell, Dorian etc. It happened quickly and ruthlessly.
You can't imagine that the women that haven't been able to step up in Hawaii are going to magically do it elsewhere. It is irrelevant. Hawaii is everything.
I thought Pickles turn at the end of her heat today was the highlight for me. It was ridiculous, one of the best I've seen at Sunset and it barely raised an eyebrow.
Says alot for how quickly womens surfing is progressing.

zenagain's picture
zenagain's picture
zenagain Wednesday, 21 Feb 2024 at 6:00pm

What the bloke above said. It's quickly becoming night and day between the old and the new.

TheWhoSellOut's picture
TheWhoSellOut's picture
TheWhoSellOut Wednesday, 21 Feb 2024 at 6:31pm

As fun as it has been watching Simmers, Picklum, and Johnson at Pipeline and now at Sunset, after leaving Hawaii, the first womens’ surfer who can consistently land air reverses in head high surf, will be the one that will be tough to beat, given the WSL ‘s judging criteria over the last eight seasons.

freeride76's picture
freeride76's picture
freeride76 Wednesday, 21 Feb 2024 at 6:58pm

Maybe. Won't be any air reverses going down at winter-time Subertubos, or Bells or Margies.

Then they are at Chopes after the cut.

Won't be until Rio and El Salvador that we will see rippable hot dog surf suitable for airs, then they are off to Cloudbreak.

I don't see airs playing much of a factor this year.

Filipe won Trestles last year with barely a single air.

TheWhoSellOut's picture
TheWhoSellOut's picture
TheWhoSellOut Thursday, 22 Feb 2024 at 6:46am

Fair point about the waves at this year’s tour sites. I think it might be an anomaly on this year’s tour, due to the Olympics. Who knows how many more years the current wsl is built to last. The wsl or whoever buys them will probably have more contests at the wsl wavepool venues.
But, i do think when there is a woman surfer on tour who can consistently land airs, she will win at least one world title.

conrico's picture
conrico's picture
conrico Wednesday, 21 Feb 2024 at 6:03pm

Great to see the girls nailing some huge moves. As you suggested Steve, next generation is totally changing the game

frog's picture
frog's picture
frog Wednesday, 21 Feb 2024 at 6:45pm

Well worth watching the highlights for the dreamy waves and some great surfing as FR noted above.

Some turns any surfer would be proud of scattered through the day.

wishiwasyounger's picture
wishiwasyounger's picture
wishiwasyounger Wednesday, 21 Feb 2024 at 7:21pm

Seriously boys .......you have all complained that the women are shit and then when they get a go in good surf now re the wsl you are all 'shocked' that they can put a show on....grow up .....stop slagging the current veterans off .......they surfed the shit they were put out in.

AndyM's picture
AndyM's picture
AndyM Wednesday, 21 Feb 2024 at 7:26pm

Sick sequence of Gabrielle Bryan, Elko could learn a thing or two there.

And yeah, good analysis of where women's surfing is at now Steve.

In my eyes it would be no great loss if Tyler, the Waning Fitzgibbous and even Caroline Marks disappeared into the salt haze, and let the Great Leap Forward of women's surfing do its thing.

3vickers's picture
3vickers's picture
3vickers Wednesday, 21 Feb 2024 at 7:33pm

unfortunately didn’t get to see any of it today but watching replays now - molly could take on a few of the lads the way she is going!!

nextswell's picture
nextswell's picture
nextswell Wednesday, 21 Feb 2024 at 7:36pm

Beautiful day of waves. Agree there are a number of new crew that will see a change of the guard. There’s maybe a handful pushing hard. Luana Silva looks out of place on the ct. Barrel at pipe and rail at sunset not there. Gifted a position from Steph and Carissa. Great to see progression from the women but I’m not sure of the depth. Loved to be proven wrong by 8 tomorrow rather than just 3 or 4. Definitely finals tomorrow?

batfink's picture
batfink's picture
batfink Wednesday, 21 Feb 2024 at 10:50pm

Was watching on replay through the arvo, didn’t quite get to the finish of today. Now have to decide whether to watch the end of today’s coverage then go on to day 4, or just jettison it and catch up.

Women’s day definitely showed some who are just way ahead, and the many who are left behind. This younger crew, and perhaps the ones behind them currently in juniors, will push the older crew out in time.

The circle of competition surfing.

Can’t deny the leap though. Not a progression, a leap, a revolution.

batfink's picture
batfink's picture
batfink Wednesday, 21 Feb 2024 at 10:51pm

Those water shots are incredible. Nothing gives you the feeling of being out there quite like them.

Remigogo's picture
Remigogo's picture
Remigogo Thursday, 22 Feb 2024 at 12:38am

Second that batfink.
They are indeed great shots. What a difference to visual aesthetics. When a decent wave face, lotza blue, compliments a deep rail, top hack or barrel with wiggle room.
Go Girls!!!

NDC's picture
NDC's picture
NDC Thursday, 22 Feb 2024 at 9:09am

It looked like an EPIC day and I thoroughly enjoyed watching the highlights
If Pipe felt like 2-3 women elevated performance levels
Yesterday it loooked like a whole swag of them found new gears
I'm loving the show - almost as much as my surfing wife
who was hooting at the replays she was casting to the telly last night loud enought to wake the sleeping teenagers - haha

rooftop's picture
rooftop's picture
rooftop Thursday, 22 Feb 2024 at 3:20pm

An exciting time for women's surfing, for sure.

Perhaps this turn sums it up (spoiler alert if you don't know the results):

https://www.worldsurfleague.com/posts/526645/yellow-jersey-update-molly-...