VANS WORLD CUP DEBUTS IN CLASSIC SUNSET CONDITIONS, LOCALS DOMINATE ROUND ONE

 – BREAKOUT PERFORMANCE BY MAUI’S LOGAN BEDIAMOL
– STRONGEST FIELD OF VANS TRIPLE CROWN ROOKIE CONTENDERS IN 35 YEARS
– DEFENDING VANS TRIPLE CROWN WINNER JOHN JOHN FLORENCE WITHDRAWS FROM SUNSET TO FOCUS ON PIPE MASTERS 

 Logan Bediamol (HAW) stalls for a picture-perfect barrel and secures the highest wave score of the day, a 9.43.
Image: WSL / Freesurf / Heff

Event:      Vans World Cup of Surfing                                            
Window:   November 25 – December 6, 2017
Rating:   Men’s QS10,000
Conditions:   8-10ft. WNW swell, ENE offshore winds

HALEIWA, Oahu/Hawaii – (Wednesday, November 29, 2017) — Opening day of the Vans World Cup, the final stop on the World Surf League (WSL) Qualifying Series (QS) and most important event in the qualification story for the 2018 Championship Tour (CT), delivered true Sunset conditions today with wave face heights occasionally topping out at 20-feet. The day’s biggest performances came from Hawaii, particularly the three youngest competitors in the Vans Triple Crown of SurfingLogan Bediamol (Haiku, Maui), Barron Mamiya (North Shore, Oahu) and Finn McGill (North Shore, Oahu), all only 17 years of age.Bediamol and Mamiya help make up the rookie class of 19 surfers, which represents the strongest field in the 35-year history of the Vans Triple Crown of Surfing (VTCS).

In Heat 6, Bediamol showed incredible control with a combination of turns and a calculated stall to navigate a deep barrel on the second wave of the set. He earned the first highest single wave score of the day, a 9.43 for the ride and ultimately the heat win ahead of Jackson Baker (AUS).

Bediamol takes a lead on the VTCS Rookie Award along with Mamiya after today’s performances. The confidence boost comes after a challenging start to the season for Bediamol, but after a third place finish at the Turtle Bay Resort Pro Junior in October and a breakout performance today at Sunset, he is eager to find more solid results.


Logan Bediamol blasted out of the barrel for a 9.43 and a slot into Round 2. Image: WSL/Freesurf/Heff

“I’m super excited, I really want to do well,” commented Bediamol. “I grew up watching this event on TV at home on Maui. It’s always been a dream of mine just to be in the comp so to be able to surf and make heats, it’s so cool… I figured this winter season will hopefully be one of my better ones. Coming into the Vans World Cup I was so stoked to even just be here.”

With another year left to compete against Hawaii’s top 18 and under, Bediamol will stay tuned into the WSL Hawaii/Tahiti Nui regional junior events for 2018.

“I’m going to be 18 so it will be my last amateur year, I’m going to focus on finishing out strong though the Pro Juniors and the amateur events,” he continued. “I’ll be doing QS’s on the side but still the main focus is on the amateur stuff.”

After a morning of big, consistent surf, the competition fired up even more when Dusty Payne (HAW) catapulted from fourth to first in Heat 14 after tying Bediamol for another near-perfect 9.43 score with less than 30 seconds left on the clock. Anticipation built after Payne dropped into the wave in the dying moments of the heat, needing something excellent to knock out Sunset regular Mason Ho (HAW) and advance. The Maui surfer set up with two powerful turns then pulled in for an overhead barrel and found the exit to explosive cheers on the beach.


A come-from-behind performance is the new norm for Dusty Payne. Image: WSL/Freesurf/Keoki

“When you need a score you have to claim it,” Payne laughed during his post-heat interview. “I got lucky, I just wish Mason (Ho) was winning the heat and we could have gone 1 and 2, but that’s competitive surfing, sucks when you have to surf with your friends in heats. I just got lucky that wave came in. Sometimes it’s better to be lucky than good and I was pretty fortunate that one showed up.”

Big wave standout Billy Kemper (HAW) scored two solid waves – a 6.50 and 6.33 – in Round One Heat 3 with dynamic surfing and a confident approach in the lineup to earn a slot in Round Two. A 2x Pe‘ahi Challenge winner, Kemper is building his legendary status in the big wave arena and demonstrated his powerful style in the extra-large surf today.

“I mean, just free surfing Sunset is stressful, but it was definitely fun out there,” said Kemper post-heat. “I woke up this morning and saw what was at hand and I was very stoked, it looks like we have a few days of incredible surf. To surf in your backyard at 10ft. Sunset with three other guys out is somewhat of a blessing so I’m just kind of having fun and taking it heat by heat.”

Torrey Meister (HAW) was the first to put a 9-point ride on the scoreboard after he pulled into one of the best barrels of the day on the inside bowl, bringing beach fans to their feet as the day continued to deliver all-time conditions. The Big Island surfer finaled at the Vans World Cup last year and looks in fine form to advance to the podium again.


All eyes locked on Sunset and performances like this, Torrey Meister’s 9.00 ride. Image: WSL/Freesurf/Heff

“I just enjoy surfing this place and you know, I’ve had a pretty rough year competing and it just feels so good to end it here,” commented Meister. “I feel really comfortable out here and I always enjoy myself. Sunset is all about doing homework, when you enjoy your homework you get good results usually, I enjoy this place.”

Jordy Collins (USA) has been back and forth between home and Hawaii after he competed in the Hawaiian Pro earlier this month then earned a fifth place finish in the Pismo Beach Open to become the North America Men’s QS Regional Champion. Collins is one of the handful of rookie VTCS surfers that remain in contention and could easily add another title to his stellar year after proving his dedication to the competition.

John John Florence (HAW), 25, reigning WSL Champion and defending Vans Triple Crown winner, has withdrawn from the Vans World Cup of Surfing, opting to focus his energy on the year-end WSL Title showdown at the Billabong Pipe Masters in Memory of Andy Irons.

“I have decided to pull out of the Sunset Beach Triple Crown event,” Florence said. “It was a difficult decision for me. As much as I enjoy competing at home, I want to fully prepare for and focus on the Pipe Masters.”

Florence is leading a four-pack of contenders for the 2017 WSL Title that includes Gabriel Medina (BRA), 23, Julian Wilson (AUS), 29, and Jordy Smith (ZAF), 29, heading into the final event of the season from December 8 – 20, 2017.

Contest organizers are confident competition will resume at 8am tomorrow morning; first in the water will be Round Two Heat 3 which features Josh Kerr (AUS)Miguel Tudela (PER)Billy Kemper (HAW) and Benji Brand (HAW). For more information, please visit www.WorldSurfLeague.com or download the WSL app to receive updates on your mobile device and watch LIVE action. Fans can also tune into Spectrum SURF Channel, which will televise the 2017 Vans Triple Crown events LIVE and in replay on digital channels 250 SD and 1250 HD, across the state of Hawaii.

The Vans Triple Crown of Surfing runs from November 12 – December 20 and features three events along the North Shore of Oahu; the Hawaiian Pro, from November 12 – 24, which saw the first Brazilian winner, Filipe Toledo, take out the competition on November 20; the Vans World Cup from November 25 – December 6; and the Billabong Pipe Masters from December 8 – 20, which is also the culminating event of the World Surf League (WSL) Championship Tour (CT).

RESULTS
Surfers shown in order of 1st through 4th

Round of 96 (1st and 2nd advance, 3rd = 65th place, 4th = 81st place)
H1: Evan Geiselman (USA), Maxime Huscenot (FRA), Elijah Gates (HAW), Nat Young (USA)
H2: Raoni Monteiro (BRA), Felipe Luel (BRA), Soli Bailey (AUS), Ricardo Christie (NZL)

Round of 128 (1st and 2nd advance, 3rd = 97th place, 4th = 113th place)
H1: Elijah Gates (HAW), Luel Felipe (BRA), Tanner Hendrickson (HAW), O’Neill Massin (PYF)
H2: Raoni Monteiro (BRA), Maxime Huscenot (FRA), David do Carmo (BRA), Makuakai Rothman (HAW)
H3: Billy Kemper (HAW), Hizunome Bettero (BRA), Jacob Wilcox (AUS), Shayden Pacarro (HAW)
H4: Dion Atkinson (AUS), Benji Brand (HAW), Shane Campbell (AUS), Keoni Yan (HAW)
H5: Torrey Meister (HAW), Olamana Eleogram (HAW), Oney Anwar (IDN), Tomas Tudela (PER)
H6: Logan Bediamol (HAW), Jackson Baker (AUS), Tanner Gudauskas (USA), Timothee Bisso (FRA)
H7: Cam Richards (USA), Jordy Collins (USA), Makana Eleogram (HAW), Tomas King (CRI)
H8: Brett Simpson (USA), Makai McNamara (HAW), Kalani Ball (AUS), Ariihoe Tefaafana (PYF)
H9: Cody Young (HAW), Koa Smith (HAW), Marco Fernandez (BRA), Heremoana Luciani (PYF)
H10: Mihimana Braye (PYF), Victor Bernardo (BRA), Lliam Mortensen (AUS), Tereva David (PYF)
H11: Aritz Aranburu (ESP), Imaikalani deVault (HAW), Mateus Herdy (BRA), Kekoa Cazimero (HAW)
H12: Kaito Kino (HAW), Kaimana Jaquias (HAW), Parker Coffin (USA), Hiroto Arai (JPN)
H13: Rafael Teixeira (BRA), Lucas Silveira (BRA), Dylan Goodale (HAW), Luke Shepardson (HAW)
H14: Dusty Payne (HAW), David Van Zyl (ZAF), Mason Ho (HAW), Taumata Puhetini (PYF)
H15: Evan Valiere (HAW), Mitch Coleborn (AUS), Michael Dunphy (USA), Lucca Mesinas Novaro (PER)
H16: Finn McGill (HAW), Barron Mamiya (HAW), Seth Moniz (HAW), Mitch Crews (AUS)

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