Rip Curl Pro Bells Beach: Day 2
Rip Curl Pro Bells Beach: Day 2
Wild, entertaining day of upsets at janky, join-the-dots Winkipop with an almost incomprehensible judging pattern being the chief feature of the day.
It was new Head Judge Luli's first big test and by my reckoning he and his panel lost control of the numbers by gifting Tyler an 8 for a short two-turn closeout at Bells yesterday. They followed on this morning with the opening ride of the day, a single closeout hit from Sophie McCullough, getting a 6.
'They will pay single closeouts hits' was the clear message...except they didn't. They didn't pay turn quality, which became clear after Molly Picklum got low-balled in her loss to Sawyer Lindblad. At that point it seemed we had almost regressed back to distant Easter meets where bell-bottomed judges earned a free lunch counting turns to determine who won or lost. Who got the biggest wave looked like the winning formula until Ethan Ewing grovelled his way to a low-speed 6 and change on a scrappy insider to beat wildcard George Pittar. Even the normally unflappable Ronnie Blakey was forced to drily observe that “it was very hard to pick the numbers today”. Under these conditions, upsets occurred willy nilly.
Back to the high point of the day though.
The star performer on the women's side of the draw was easy to identify. Johanne Defay backed up her Portugal win with a dominant showing, throwing away 7's, mostly on the strength of end section hits. Steph Gilmore made an astute observation yesterday relating to surfers near the cut retreating back to defensive surfing. We've seen a lot of that as the cut looms: defensive, anxious surfing. Anxiety is the defining condition of our age and we're used to thinking that surfing is a relief from terrestrial concerns which plague us. Not so for the pro surfers of 2024. Even Caity Simmers referred to feeling less anxious in her second scrappy heat win over Izzy Nichols - who seemed positively paralysed with anxiety as the heat wound down.
Fellow cut-line dweller Sammy Pupo admitted he hadn't been able to sleep at night, so riddled with worries and emotional pressure was he over his results. There's no doubt this business of the cut has deeply traumatised exponents of what used to be one of the most joyful and light-hearted professions one could imagine. Surf all day, party all night, and travel the world collecting memories and maybe a few less salubrious companions. Not anymore. Our athletes need coaches and psychologists to deal with the downwards forces set in motion by the WSL's direction of the sport.
Defay was in full attack mode, which Gilmore had identified as the antidote to this epidemic of anxiety sweeping through the ranks. Defay sent Sally Fitzgibbon packing, where she now sits well below the cut-line after four consecutive second last place finishes. Sally is one of the few immune to the anxiety, mostly due, I suspect, to the robust commercial arrangements she has built with non-endemic sponsors. Whitegoods, sheds, cars of many makes have all been enhanced by the Sally Fitz smile.
Two Elimination Round heats and eight heats of the Round 16 for the women gave us an encompassing look at the field in scrappy but high performance surf for almost the first time this year. It's obvious there is both a performance gap on tour but more noticeably a style division. Tom Curren claimed “style is technique", and by that measure we have girls who surf with modern style and technique and those who...don't. Stinky, over-coached arms, funky stances, half turns, etc etc. There's a clear dichotomy and the current World Champ is on the wrong side of it. On the right side is Molly Picklum, Caity Simmers, wildcard Ellie Harrison, Isabella Nichols, Gabby Bryan, Bettylou Sakura Johnson.
You can name the rest. Or not, if you disagree.
If Curren's style is technique equation is correct then sooner or later judges will have to pay attention to that technique and the execution it enables. A few stinky, squatted half-turns and an enthusiastic closeout hit is paid far too often.
A lot of incredibly tight heats today in the womens Round of 16. Ellie Harrison's win over Tyler seemed clear enough but came down to less than a point. Brisa took out Lakey by 0.01 of a point, Tati over Luana by 0.30, Caity over Izzy Nichols by 0.17. That's toss of a coin stuff. Heartbreaking for Lakey and Izzy who now surf for their careers at Mainbreak.
Five heats of the Men's Round of 32 were completed in pretty crapulous but surfable Winki. Straightaway I thought Morgan Ciblic would be able to tap into muscle memory from shitty days at Merewether pool and onshore Angas. Jack's opening ride was generously scored, especially after Morgs started punching portholes into fluffy closeout sections. A huge layback hit from Jack was under-scored - remember the 6 from the first wave of the day? This was a three-turner for a 5.93 - but in the end there was an undeniable force to the Cibilic attack. Two lost years on the Changa will need to be redeemed this year by Morgs before major sponsors start tightening the taps, as they already have.
Ryan Callinan was the best performer of the day in my books. Somehow in onshore garbage he managed full bottom-to-top carve surfing with insane flair on the end section. Leo had a shocker against a rampaging Sammy Pupo who epitomised the Gilmore attacking philosophy, but it begged the question for coaches clipping tickets for 10%: What if the other guy just out-surfed you? How do you analyse and debrief that?
Behind Sammy's brick wall of poor results, insomnia, and mounting anxiety stands three Round of 16 losses, all of them by less than a point. Maybe coaches should be trained in Stoic philosophy to make sense of this poor fortune.
Connor just got lost in the scrambled mess and tried, too late, to regain a rhythm he had surrendered to Matty McGillivray.
The final heat of the day was a cracker. Wildcard George Pittar forced Ethan Ewing into some early mistakes as he invited him into beachbreak looseness. Pittar had Ewing down needing a 6 and change with less than thirty seconds remaining, when Ewing scrapped into an insider. First watchings had me convinced Pittar had won but after rewatching the heat in its entirety I've changed my tune. I think judges got the result right. Ewing's turns were bigger, fully realised, and carved all the way back. Pittar relied too heavily on the end section hit.
Is Pittar CT material..? We just don't know and that is the major problem with the CS. We have no idea how surfers who blaze the CS will do once they hit the CT due to the vast difference in wave quality. They come from Riberia D'ilhas and Saquarema to Pipeline and Sunset beach. Based on those CS results it’s not possible to determine if they will be competitive at CT level.
Based on form today you would back R'Cal to go one better this year with Sammy Pupo as his dance partner, while Defay rings the Bell on the women's side of the draw.
// STEVE SHEARER
Rip Curl Pro Bells Beach Presented by Bonsoy Women’s Elimination Round Results:
HEAT 1: Sophie McCulloch (AUS) 13.17 DEF. Molly Picklum (AUS) 11.50, India Robinson (AUS) 4.67
HEAT 2: Caitlin Simmers (USA) 12.04 DEF. Tatiana Weston-Webb (BRA) 11.23, Alyssa Spencer (USA) 10.56
Rip Curl Pro Bells Beach Presented by Bonsoy Women’s Round of 16 Results:
HEAT 1: Johanne Defay (FRA) 15.46 DEF. Sally Fitzgibbons (AUS) 13.17
HEAT 2: Ellie Harrison (AUS) 13.73 DEF. Tyler Wright (AUS) 12.74
HEAT 3: Sawyer Lindblad (USA) 15.67 DEF. Molly Picklum (AUS) 11.74
HEAT 4: Brisa Hennessy (CRC) 12.74 DEF. Lakey Peterson (USA) 12.73
HEAT 5: Caroline Marks (USA) 15.67 DEF. Sophie McCulloch (AUS) 12.10
HEAT 6: Tatiana Weston-Webb (BRA) 11.97 DEF. Luana Silva (BRA) 11.67
HEAT 7: Caitlin Simmers (USA) 13.10 DEF. Isabella Nichols (AUS) 12.93
HEAT 8: Gabriela Bryan (HAW) 13.83 DEF. Bettylou Sakura Johnson (HAW) 12.04
Rip Curl Pro Bells Beach Presented by Bonsoy Men’s Round of 32 Results:
HEAT 1: Morgan Cibilic (AUS) 13.64 DEF. Jack Robinson (AUS) 12.93
HEAT 2: Ryan Callinan (AUS) 14.50 DEF. Imaikalani deVault (HAW) 7.13
HEAT 3: Samuel Pupo (BRA) 15.23 DEF. Leonardo Fioravanti (ITA) 9.70
HEAT 4: Matthew McGillivray (RSA) 10.66 DEF. Connor O'Leary (JPN) 9.34
HEAT 5: Ethan Ewing (AUS) 12.93 DEF. George Pittar (AUS) 12.73
Comments
Y’know what else is inconsistent, your photo credits :P
Fixing now...just wanna get it up.
Can't believe how quick you are...
It’s all we do.
Ha. Nice Ed!
same page steve re pupo and r-cal, they both seemed above the pack …. i’ll take your word on ee’s win- i definitely wanted him to get thru but sheesh, that was a tight call
hoping huey sorts things out moving forward (craig?)
I had Tyler, Sally, Lakey, and Betty Lou as my fantasy picks........ good grief....
"Straightaway I thought Morgan Ciblic would be able to tap into muscle memory from shitty days at Merewether pool " - Good call- same goes for R Cal.
Pretty entertaining day overall and as great write-up as usual filling in the blanks.
I'm calling Ethan or Medina and for the girls, dare to dream, would love to see Ellie get up.
I still reckon that 6.4 of Ethans was juiced though.
Maybe the 6.43 was slightly high, but it would be an even up for the 6.9 Pittar got, which was definitely high. That was the wave that threw the judging out, with the scale set with George’s 5.83 and then Ethan’s 6.5
i think that's the right take Stamos. EE definitely got fortunate with the final score but I don't think he should have needed that much in the first place.
8 hrs of coverage and about 90 sec of reading is about as much as the day deserved. Cheers for the summary.
Ethan's 6.4 closing was very soft. There was no major turn. Only a strong check turn, two fat cutbacks and a soft flat easy close out. Hard to call but George's last wave was also soft except for a strong last turn.
I so wanted to see Molly and Ethan progress today but the universe had other ideas and a few judges other ideas again.
So now we wait probably 6 days before another on day ?
Ethan did progress
Good stuff Steve. Totally agree with your take on the judges and some of the women. Sorry to say, and I look forward to being proven wrong, but I think the current world champ is becoming more exposed now as being regularly over scored for what is basically just very good conventional surfing. More tail drift in those top turns, and some progression with an air component, is required to match the new breed. At least surfers like Tati have added some added looseness to her vertical turns. As for the shortened power hack snaps from others, yeah, I think these are over scored too. One other point I think worth mentioning, the ferocious paddle battle between Sawyer and Molly. It was not even noted by the commentators, but allowed Sawyer to regain priority, which more or less changed the outcome of that heat. Fascinating to see such tenacity from the American. And Molly is a good paddler.
Where is JMD ?promoted?doesn’t do the call each morning as to what the day will hold?
Suggestions above Rcal is on fire.fully agree but we are yet to see Medina and italo on small low tide winki going vertical on the backhand too
And possibly going by forecast they might need to hold a fair few heats still in those conditions
The commentary team of the Blakey Brother's was the winner of the day...
100%. Add Steph and the team was perfect
Yep, always loved Ron and Vaughn brings good comedic value.
full credit to them both for getting a gig, but i don't think the Laura / Flick partnership (alongside Joe of all people) offers much, particularly in comparison to the Blakeys.
Nicely summarised. Only watched the replays and from that perspective Ethan got juiced. But I’m the first to throw in that its totally different watching it live.
thanks for the new word. janky.
Go R Cal
He was buttery smooth and so flexible in junky and compact waves. I'd love to see him win this.
Favourite style
I have always thought there should be more points for good style in the womens.
There should be no place at the top level for bum squat wrenches and kooky arm waving.
Taking Style out of the judging criteria was a disastrous decision, for both the women and the men.
Thought Molly's punt to end the heat was quickly overlooked by everyone.
There's like 3 women on tour who can do an air like that.
Agree.
In 2021, Carissa did an air rev at Newcastle on a similar sized wave and got a 9.90 - three judges even giving her 10 points.
Molly's was never gonna get the score but it deserved some recognition.
It's like the womens criteria isnt ready/not sure what to do with it - easy to ignore instead of asking the tough questions.
If they want to push progression then airs like that should score huge until the day comes when the whole tour can do them comfortably, which is essentially what happened on the mens tour.
if you heard her post heat interview too, Molly said she needed to go to the air but the wind was coming from the wrong direction so she had to go for the grab. definitely a higher order of thinking and execution going on there.
Next level.
pretty basic if you're a new age professional surfer i would imagine.
The best thing about mediocre days is using creativity and experience to find a subject to write about.
This is the best wrap up I've read in a long time - and Shearer doesn't miss a beat most of the time.
The Thoughts about style should be read out loud in an annual meeting of the board - and discussed.
i wonder if anyone from the wozzle reads this and meditate on what has been written.
Everyone now loves Ewing and as good as he is will never be a World Champ at Trestles. There is always going to be surfers in the top 5 with an air game on lock. That’s where the love affair ends and extra points begin.
Not sure everyone loves him. But the judges surely give him the points….. personally the more certain surfers seem to get higher scores the less I like the show. He has nothing on the turns from Jordy or that last turn from robbo
Yesterday's highlight was NOT having to hear Tyler on the glass - thanks Ellie Harrison!
I gave up watching Pro Surfing with sound ages ago!
The script “ Iconic Bells Beach” “ Longest running contest” “ So much history” “Curren v Occy heat” “The bells trophy”.
Rinse and repeat
Kelly semi officially retired?? If he doesn’t win Bells or Margs he’s ok with it being over…
About time…
How does one find out the prize money for each round?
Here ya go
They would save a lot of money if they just went to the post-cut numbers/format for the whole year, not to mention make it a better spectacle.
did i miss something at Bells while watching replays for cloudbreak?
2.5
... the number of left hand fingers lost by Boris Yeltsin when trying to open a grenade. Relevance? none
initally was thinking pupo for the outwright win after that last heat. but then reality kicked in when realising judging will always favour ewing in a nailbighter due to his execution.
g. colapaintio/ewing to have the last dance.
absoulute dart board job trying to pick an outright. harder than than selecting the caufield cup winner
Judging shouldn’t favour Ewing style is nice but variation is very low and his level is not at the same as others. His highlight reels would be way more dull than some of the others. Give it to Gabes or Griff or Jordy if the waves are worthy
Don’t be silly
Gees I hope they don’t run at any stage over Easter. shizen forey. Wednesday onwards should deliver the best average waves .
Everything feels like its geared for a surf competition to be run over the Easter weekend. I don't think it's going to matter what the waves are like
Enjoying the write up and comments. Love the Blakeys. Swellnet is the men's shed of surfing
Does anyone else have an opinion on the Robbo v Morgs heat? Ive rewatched it a couple of times and feel ok with the result but gee could’ve really gone either way in my eyes.
I have a man crush on both Robbo and Morgs.. it’s like being asked to pick your favourite son
Could have gone either way.
I think Morgs did bigger turns, so I'm OK with the result.
They underpaid that huge layback gaff JR did though.
Yeah Morgan’s hits were faster bigger for sure.
I thought Robbo had a good flow that Morgs lacked and dotted the ‘i’s’ the best he could with the waves he had.
He could feel ripped off………he’s won a lot of close ones in the past though