"There are actually four different swells working out there right now," said Kelly Slater before his opening round heat at the Outerknown Fiji Pro. "I haven't been out there yet -- I was testing boards at Restaurants -- but I think I know what's happening out there."
The race for the 2017 World Title is wide open as the Championship Tour hits the dreamy South Pacific.
Slater, who was up against Mick Fanning and Bede Durbidge in the last heat of Round One, stopped mid-sentence at the sight of Michel Bourez traveling through a lengthy backhand tube. After a long day of watching a bunch of Cloudbreak thumpings, things were finally starting to look more lined up. "But then again, there's been times when I thought I knew what was going on out there and it was actually nothing like it. That's Cloudbreak."
In fact, Bourez, Ace Buchan, and Miguel Pupo were actually enjoying the best heat of the day just as Slater was making his assessment. It was first time all day that all three surfers had cracked double digits. Until then, heat winners were taking the bulk of the spoils, which weren't much to speak of.
Matt Wilkinson - WSL / Ed Sloane
The tough stuff translated into some painful Cloudbreak welcomes. Joan Duru earned a paltry 3.94 total in his opening round. He had plenty of company. Ethan Ewing, 6.90. Ezekiel Lau, 8.17. Bino Lopes, 3.30. Jack Freestone, 5.10. Parko, 8.6. Dantas, 5.63... You get the idea.
Michel Bourez defeats Ace Buchan and Miguel Pupo in the best heat of Round One.
Wins weren't coming easy for anyone, save possibly for the frontrunners on the Jeep Leaderboard. John John Florence arrived in Fiji at World No. 1, with 24,750 points. Sitting just 350 points behind him, though, are equal-No. 2s Jordy Smith, Adriano de Souza and Owen Wright -- and all four of them did a solid job of solving the Cloudbreak riddle Sunday.
It's been nearly two years since Owen Wright last surfed a heat at Cloudbreak.
Wright won his match against Leonardo Fioravanti and Ezekiel Lau on the strength of a solid 8.5 score. It's his first time competing at Cloudbreak since his win in 2015, and he's looking as lethal as ever.
De Souza had to grind out a win against Kanoa Igarashi and Bino Lopes as conditions deteriorated, but for some reason it never seemed in doubt that he would take this one. De Souza knew the tubes weren't working, so he leaned into some high-speed arcs with dogged determination and purpose, and was rewarded with a win.
After a runner-up finish in Fiji last year, the Aussie returns to form at his favorite stop on Tour.
Jordy Smith took the turn-route to victory as well, throwing his big board and body around with vigor in the powerful stuff. Meanwhile, if Yago Dora and Jack Freestone looked lost out there, it's because they were.
Jeep Leader John John Florence was able to blend a mix of tubes and turns together to earn a crucial win in his heat over local wildcard Tevita Gukilau, who earned the highest score of the heat, and Josh Kerr, who played the role of odd man out in that one.
Adriano de Souza credits his Tavarua training session with Kelly Slater for his strong Fiji form.
And while the frontrunners didn't give an inch, neither did No. 5-ranked Matt Wilkinson, or defending champion Gabriel Medina. Both showed why there were finalists here last year, looking dialed with their equipment and in rhythm with the moody ocean that Slater mentioned.
Slater, by the way, learned that Cloudbreak can still play hard-to-get, even after 27 years of happy marriage. He spent half the heat underwater after getting flogged by set waves out the back. Meanwhile, Fanning and Durbidge picked off some workable walls on the inside corner. Slater made a valiant attempt at a big barrel in the last half, but Cloudbreak was in no mood today. He was brutally brushed off his board, and finished last.
Slater will be trying to turn things around in Round Two Monday, when he takes on rookie Ethan Ewing in Heat 5. The death round is expected to start at 7:30 a.m. Fiji time.
Frontrunners Start Strong at Outerknown Fiji Pro
WSL
"There are actually four different swells working out there right now," said Kelly Slater before his opening round heat at the Outerknown Fiji Pro. "I haven't been out there yet -- I was testing boards at Restaurants -- but I think I know what's happening out there."
Slater, who was up against Mick Fanning and Bede Durbidge in the last heat of Round One, stopped mid-sentence at the sight of Michel Bourez traveling through a lengthy backhand tube. After a long day of watching a bunch of Cloudbreak thumpings, things were finally starting to look more lined up. "But then again, there's been times when I thought I knew what was going on out there and it was actually nothing like it. That's Cloudbreak."
In fact, Bourez, Ace Buchan, and Miguel Pupo were actually enjoying the best heat of the day just as Slater was making his assessment. It was first time all day that all three surfers had cracked double digits. Until then, heat winners were taking the bulk of the spoils, which weren't much to speak of.
Matt Wilkinson - WSL / Ed SloaneThe tough stuff translated into some painful Cloudbreak welcomes. Joan Duru earned a paltry 3.94 total in his opening round. He had plenty of company. Ethan Ewing, 6.90. Ezekiel Lau, 8.17. Bino Lopes, 3.30. Jack Freestone, 5.10. Parko, 8.6. Dantas, 5.63... You get the idea.
Wins weren't coming easy for anyone, save possibly for the frontrunners on the Jeep Leaderboard. John John Florence arrived in Fiji at World No. 1, with 24,750 points. Sitting just 350 points behind him, though, are equal-No. 2s Jordy Smith, Adriano de Souza and Owen Wright -- and all four of them did a solid job of solving the Cloudbreak riddle Sunday.
Wright won his match against Leonardo Fioravanti and Ezekiel Lau on the strength of a solid 8.5 score. It's his first time competing at Cloudbreak since his win in 2015, and he's looking as lethal as ever.
De Souza had to grind out a win against Kanoa Igarashi and Bino Lopes as conditions deteriorated, but for some reason it never seemed in doubt that he would take this one. De Souza knew the tubes weren't working, so he leaned into some high-speed arcs with dogged determination and purpose, and was rewarded with a win.
Jordy Smith took the turn-route to victory as well, throwing his big board and body around with vigor in the powerful stuff. Meanwhile, if Yago Dora and Jack Freestone looked lost out there, it's because they were.
Jeep Leader John John Florence was able to blend a mix of tubes and turns together to earn a crucial win in his heat over local wildcard Tevita Gukilau, who earned the highest score of the heat, and Josh Kerr, who played the role of odd man out in that one.
And while the frontrunners didn't give an inch, neither did No. 5-ranked Matt Wilkinson, or defending champion Gabriel Medina. Both showed why there were finalists here last year, looking dialed with their equipment and in rhythm with the moody ocean that Slater mentioned.
Slater, by the way, learned that Cloudbreak can still play hard-to-get, even after 27 years of happy marriage. He spent half the heat underwater after getting flogged by set waves out the back. Meanwhile, Fanning and Durbidge picked off some workable walls on the inside corner. Slater made a valiant attempt at a big barrel in the last half, but Cloudbreak was in no mood today. He was brutally brushed off his board, and finished last.
Slater will be trying to turn things around in Round Two Monday, when he takes on rookie Ethan Ewing in Heat 5. The death round is expected to start at 7:30 a.m. Fiji time.
Tevita Gukilau
Kolohe Andino vs. Tevita Gukilau
Along with a cool 10 grand USD, the local wildcard gets some bragging rights for creative surfing and cinematic work, combined.
Competitors at this year's Fiji Pro were vying for the GoPro Challenge prize during their free surfs. Enjoy the fruit.
In his fifth GoPro Challenge entry, Tevita Gukilau finds a clean tube as the sun sets on Fiji.
The event wildcard rides into the sunset in his fourth Fiji GoPro Challenge entry.
Outerknown Fiji Pro
Looking back on the event at the world's most amazing wave, Cloudbreak.
Top 2017 waves from the champ.
Two powerhouses leave it on the waves at the 2017 Outerknown Fiji Pro finals.
Epic clash in the semifinals of the 2017 Outerknown Fiji Pro.
Semifinals clash between two powerhouse shredders, 2017 Outerknown Fiji Pro.