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Tahiti QS leg will open with Air Tahiti Rangiroa Pro
Lauren Rolland
The WSL Hawaii/Tahiti Nui region shifts from the North Shore of Oahu to the French Polynesian islands of Tahiti and Rangiroa for the next leg of competitive events on the regional QS. The first event of five qualification events in the region this year, the Air Tahiti Rangiroa Pro, a Men's QS1,000, has a holding window from March 5 - 9 and will take place at the hollow reef break at the Hotu a Ura pass on the ring of islets known as Rangiroa.
Now in its third year of partnering with the WSL, the Rangiroa Pro Open has consistently delivered technical barrels and high-performance opportunities to challenge athletes and create exciting competition. Defending event winner Heremoana Luciani (PYF) will look to guard his title and keep the win on home turf, however with names like 2017 World Junior Champion Finn McGill (HAW), 2017 Regional Champion Benji Brand (HAW) and Big Wave Tour No. 2 Kai Lenny (HAW) entered in the 48-man field, Luciani will have a fair amount of Hawaii threats looking to play spoiler.
"I don't feel any kind of pressure, I am just enjoying Polynesian life and really happy to compete at home," Luciani commented. "I train to win, and names are just names, everyone can win. This year I am going to follow the Hawaii/Tahiti Nui events and try to qualify for the Triple Crown, and I also will be in Europe for a few events."
After Luciani's win last year in Rangiroa, he went on to compete in seven additional events including three QS3,000's - the Martinique Surf Pro at Basse Point, Barbados Surf Pro at Drill Hall Beach and HIC Pro at Sunset Beach - and the coveted Hawaiian Pro, a QS10,000 and the first event of the Vans Triple Crown of Surfing. Luciani ranked 6th in the region for 2017; the 2018 Rangiroa Pro will be his competitive debut of the new year.
Another Tahitian standout,Ariihoe Tefaafana will be on the hunt for his second QS victory after earning a maiden win at the 2017 Papara Pro Open. The highest placing Tahitian in the 2017 regional ratings, Tefaafana ended the year in the No. 4 position following the highly-competitive Vans Triple Crown season and will be working hard again to qualify for another coveted slot.
Produced by the WSL and Fédération Tahitienne de Surf (Tahitian Surfing Federation), the Air Tahiti Rangiroa Pro is the third QS event of the Hawaii/Tahiti Nui season and is supported by Air Tahiti, the inter-island airline that covers 47 of the country's islands and connects more than 90 percent of the population. Surf fans can tune into live scoring and daily highlights during the Air Tahiti Rangiroa Pro at WorldSurfLeague.com, plus find daily recaps of the day's action and more on the event page.
Following the Air Tahiti Rangiroa Pro, the juniors and women will mix up the divisions for the Papara Pro Open, which features a Men's and Women's QS1,000 and a Men's and Women's Pro Junior competition. The events will take place at Tahiti's famous black sand beach of Papara, known for its punchy surf, variety of peaks and family-friendly atmosphere.
Tefaafana hopes to defend his title at his home break, the place of his first WSL victory, along with Maui's Savanna Stone (HAW), who also earned her first professional win last year at Papara. The final day of competition will be broadcast live via Polynesia 1re on local cable channels in Tahiti and online at http://la1ere.francetvinfo.fr/polynesie/. Visit WorldSurfLeague.com for more information.
Savanna Stone
The North Shore native won both the Women's QS and Pro Junior
The Women's QS 1,000 completed Round 1 & 2 on opening day
The 16-year-old from Kauai, Hawaii, decimated both the Papara Pro Open Tahiti QS 1,000 and Pro Junior, defeating Savanna Stone in both
The 16-year-old dominated the field in a hard-fought day of competition to earn her second Papara Pro Open Tahiti title.
Wyatt McHale and Gabriela Bryan lead Hawaii/Tahiti Nui Pro Junior rankings and opening day of competition
Papara Pro Vahine Open Tahiti
Taumata Puhetini and Gabriela Bryan were victorious Thursday at the Papara Pro Open and Vahine Tahiti QS 1,000.
Kauai's Gabriela Bryan earns the event's first perfect 10 as the Papara Pro Open Tahiti QS 1,000 receives some proper swell.
Ocean Macedo and Keala Tomoda-Bannert Finish Runner-up
The competition is one day away from crowning two new event winners
The field narrowed in the peaky beach break at Papara.