Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Conner Coffin wins 2013 Quiksilver Rincon Classic

Good things come to those who wait. After more than two months of false starts and crummy-surf causing delays, the 30th Annual Rincon Classic finally hit the water at the end of Bates Road this weekend and the fabled locals-only surf competition did anything but disappoint.Summer-like sunshine and some sneaky good surf conditions rolling through the point (especially on Saturday) greeted competitors and spectators alike for the two-day, action-packed affair that concluded just before sunset on Sunday with champions new and old, including Conner Coffin power surfing his way to his first-ever Pro Division win and Demi Boelsterli winning her unprecedented 9th Classic title.


“It was a lot like child birth this year,” summed up contest director Chris Keet in the after glow of the event, himself a father of one and with another on the way. “There was pain and difficulty on the way but once it happened, everything turned out beautiful. We couldn’t have scripted it any better.”

Day one of the contest was supposed to be the less impressive surf-wise according to forecasters and, if you were down at the Queen of the Coast on Friday evening and saw the wind tattered thigh slappers on hand, your hopes for good waves come Saturday morning were anything but, well, hopeful. But that is the beauty of Mother Nature; she doesn’t always do what she is predicted to and, by the time the first heat of the Boys Division hit the water at 7am, the waves were a silky smooth waist to shoulder high with even bigger sets. And so began a darn good day of surfing.

The glassy conditions held all day long for the most part and the surf, with some afternoon sets enjoying head high drops, continued to deliver the goods through the ebb and flow of the tide. The better waves were connecting from the corner of the Indicator (top of the point) all the way through to the Rivermouth section, offering up racing walls and the occasional thin-lipped bit of tube time for the savy waverider. With a couple thousand surf fans mobbing the beach, early round standouts included Miky Clarke and Henry Hepp in the Boys Division, Jabe Swierkocki and Tommy Mckeown in the Gremlins, Abby Brown in the Wahines, Vince Perry and Max Cail in the Masters, Dennis Rizzo in the Mens, and Bobby Martinez and Killian Garland in the Pros.

However, as impressive as the aforementioned performances were, the two biggest buzz makers on Saturday were undoubtedly the efforts put in by a very in-form Gabe Venturelli in the Masters Division- his combo of high speed lines, grab rail floaters, and layback power snaps bringing a definite element of electricity to his heats and eventually earning him the distinction of the having both the highest single wave score (a perfect 10) and the highest total heat score of the entire contest- and the “backside” surfing of Brandon Smith in both the Mens and the Pro division.

A big-haired and ripping goofy foot, Smith lost a bet this past year that had him surfing all day sans-wetsuit in a stunning red and black horizontally stripped Speedo. With the Pacific no more than a chilly 55 degrees, Smith braved multiple heats on Saturday in his revealing swim wear (paired brilliantly with a pair of booties) and surfed flawlessly, mixing up stylish top to bottom rail surfing with regular fins-free flair.

Day 2 of the Classic, however, is when the action really cranks up and Champions get crowned. And while the surf wasn’t quite up to Saturday’s standards, the waves, albeit a bit on the unorganized and inconsistent side of things, continued to dish out plenty of opportunity. One of the biggest draws of the day was the Womens Final which saw 8-time Classic Champion Demi Boelsterli trying to lock down her unrivaled 9th title. Just back from an overseas surfing sojourn that saw her chasing waves in Australia and representing Team USA in China, a jet-lagged Boelsterli cruised to victory on Sunday with her trademark punk rock pocket gouges and general full throttle down the line approach. In a similar dominant fashion, Cole Robbins came out on top in the Longboard division and managed to score one of the days only barrels along the way thanks to a throaty little double-up just below the Rivermouth.

But before you go thinking that the Championship rounds were drama free, consider the action that transpired in the Boys Division. With wave heights pushing overhead for these still-growing groms, Miky Clarke and Josiah Amico dueled it out for first place with the tilt being decided on a wave exchange in the final minute of the heat. By less than a point, Amico won the battle. The Masters Final didn’t disappoint in the drama department either as Venturelli’s hot surfing ran head long into a field of seasoned competitors. In what Keet called “easily the best heat of the contest”, Carpinteria’s Aaron Smith just squeaked by Venturelli, Ian O’Neil and 4th place’s Max Kail; their final rankings determined by a series of rapid fire waves ridden by all of them in the final 120 seconds of the heat.

After Simon Murdoch turned in the day’s most style-conscious effort in route to a win in the Mens Division, the always anticipated Pro Final popped off with its usual level of world class high-performance surfing. It was all regular foots in finals for the Classic’s only cash prize division, Lompoc’s own Pete Mussio, Montecito’s Conner Coffin, SB’s Killian Garland and Ventura’s Mike McCabe all vying for bragging rights as 2013‘s King of the Queen of the Coast. Garland was looking for his 8th overall Classic championship but, despite nailing two frontside 360 airs in the Final, saw his hopes dashed by some red-hot surfing from both Coffin and McCabe. Riding waves mostly south of the Rivermouth, Coffin put on a power surfing clinic in the deteriorating conditions, carving large salt-water chunks out of the fast sectioning waves and, in the process, making the surf look a heck of a lot more rippable than it actually was. In the end, despite a late charge from McCabe that featured a particularly crisp tube ride to layback schwack combo, Coffin’s vintage pointbreak approach winning the day.

Event organizers, Surf Happens, would like to thank the California State Parks for extending the waiting period for this amazing weekend. The Rincon Homeowners for supporting the event, thus making it possible, and all of the amazing support from sponsors, the local community, and staff, and Jonathon Warren and the Surfline team, and John Lindsey for helping to make the call. See you next year!

Source; Rincon Classic Media - Story by Ethen Stewart

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