Shida Point kept bringing the goods as top seeds, such as local surfer Hiroto Ohhara, made their debuts in dominating fashion at the Gotcha Ichinomiya Chiba Open QS 6,000
Top seeds made their highly-anticipated debuts at the Gotcha Ichinomiya Chiba Open Men's QS 6,000 powered by Gravity Channel and elevated competition to new heights with incredible surfing. A marathon day of action completed the final two heats of Round 1 and all 24 heats of Round 2 before the final buzzer sounded.
But, amid dominating performances, early upsets shook up the ranks throughout the day with a few hefty eliminations.
QS Elite Deliver
Jadson Andre - WSL / Kawana
Former Championship Tour (CT) competitor Jadson Andre is fighting for a spot back among the Elite 34 and showcased just a portion of that drive today. Andre's signature innovation and progression continues to show the next generation that he's still very much a threat. The Brasilian blasted an event best 17.04 (out of a possible 20) heat total and single-wave score, an 8.77 (out of possible 10), to set the bar early on.
"We usually surf waves below this on the QS so I'm really excited that we had some swell to start the event," Andre said. "It was really fun yesterday and I wish my heat was then, but it's still fun out there. I'm really happy to surf well and get things started the way I did. You had to surf really smart and I just tried to go for it, and give it my best."
Ryan Callinan - WSL / Damien Poullenot
Former CT competitor Ryan Callinan went to work and nearly matched Andre's incredible performance with his own. The Australian delivered two excellent scores, an 8.33 and 8.23, with a combination of vicious rail game and innovation -- landing an impressive alley-oop. Callinan continues to try and find his way back to the Dream Tour, and a win here would prove vital in that campaign.
"It was pretty challenging out there with it shifting around, but I had fun getting a few," Callinan said. "The guys went over to the other peak, which was a predominant peak in the earlier heats, but I was happy to stick to where I was. This wind is pretty dreamy for air sections and I've just been training with Jack Freestone and Mitch Crews, watching all the boys go after it so it's been really fun."
Shocking Upsets to Top QS Ranks
Seth Moniz - WSL / Kawana
Scattered upsets littered Round 2 despite the majority of top seeds performing brilliantly. It began with Seth Moniz's last-second heroics in Heat 3 to jump from fourth-place to first and claim a heat win alongside runner-up and good friend Benji Brand. The two eliminated former event winner, and current QS No. 4 Evan Geiselman. South African powerhouse Beyrick De Vries also fell victim to Moniz's buzzer-beater, dropping from second to third and was sent packing.
"I just had to stay composed on that last wave," Moniz said. "I got on the beach and didn't hear the score, but they ran the next heat's horn so I thought I lost. But, my friends were looking at live scores down the beach claiming I won so that was insane. Benji [Brand] and I are good friends, and we're staying together here, so I'm stoked to make it through that heat with him."
Upsets continued as Costa Rican talent Noe Mar McGonagle did his part in eliminating Seth's older brother Joshua Moniz.
Reef Heazlewood - WSL / Kawana
But, perhaps the most notable came from Reef Heazlewood's big performance in Round 2 Heat 12 after eliminating recent CT spoiler and current QS No. 2 Mikey Wright. Fellow Aussie Matt Banting (AUS) solidified Wright's elimination with a well-surfed heat as he looks to re-qualify following a season-long absence last year.
"There's a few spots you can sit on with the rip in different areas and I just picked my spot so I'm happy to get some clean waves," Heazlewood said. "To have a heat with those guys was nuts, especially a guy like Mikey [Wright], but you have to push that out of your head and surf your best no matter what."
Also out early is South Africa's newest emerging talent, and current QS No. 6, Matthew McGillivray who will look to regroup as he heads back to his home country for a string of events.
Japanese Contingent Dwindles
Shun Murakami - WSL / Kawana
Japan's own Shun Murakami made his countrymen proud with a terrific showcase of local knowledge and quick, powerful technique. The young Japanese competitor spends plenty of time surfing the beachbreaks of Chiba and helped eliminate top seed competitor Aritz Aranburu and Hawaiian charger Kiron Jabour.
"There were a lot of closeouts with the tide and it was difficult to choose the waves, but I focused on finding ones with some shape," Murakami said. "You can capture the wave over on the left that would let you get two maneuvers in a tight space. I was able to concentrate on keeping priority which kept me in position and kept the competitors on the right side of me."
However, only Hiroto Ohhara and Kaito Ohashi remain alongside Murakami to keep this year's event title on home soil after beginning with 25 contenders.
Tomorrow's 6:30am JST call will determine a start for Round 3 action at the Gotcha Ichinomiya Chiba Open QS 6,000 Powered by Gravity Channel.
Ichinomiya Chiba Open: The Upper Echelon QS Debuts
Andrew Nichols
Top seeds made their highly-anticipated debuts at the Gotcha Ichinomiya Chiba Open Men's QS 6,000 powered by Gravity Channel and elevated competition to new heights with incredible surfing. A marathon day of action completed the final two heats of Round 1 and all 24 heats of Round 2 before the final buzzer sounded.
But, amid dominating performances, early upsets shook up the ranks throughout the day with a few hefty eliminations.
QS Elite Deliver
Jadson Andre - WSL / KawanaFormer Championship Tour (CT) competitor Jadson Andre is fighting for a spot back among the Elite 34 and showcased just a portion of that drive today. Andre's signature innovation and progression continues to show the next generation that he's still very much a threat. The Brasilian blasted an event best 17.04 (out of a possible 20) heat total and single-wave score, an 8.77 (out of possible 10), to set the bar early on.
"We usually surf waves below this on the QS so I'm really excited that we had some swell to start the event," Andre said. "It was really fun yesterday and I wish my heat was then, but it's still fun out there. I'm really happy to surf well and get things started the way I did. You had to surf really smart and I just tried to go for it, and give it my best."
Ryan Callinan - WSL / Damien PoullenotFormer CT competitor Ryan Callinan went to work and nearly matched Andre's incredible performance with his own. The Australian delivered two excellent scores, an 8.33 and 8.23, with a combination of vicious rail game and innovation -- landing an impressive alley-oop. Callinan continues to try and find his way back to the Dream Tour, and a win here would prove vital in that campaign.
"It was pretty challenging out there with it shifting around, but I had fun getting a few," Callinan said. "The guys went over to the other peak, which was a predominant peak in the earlier heats, but I was happy to stick to where I was. This wind is pretty dreamy for air sections and I've just been training with Jack Freestone and Mitch Crews, watching all the boys go after it so it's been really fun."
Shocking Upsets to Top QS Ranks
Seth Moniz - WSL / KawanaScattered upsets littered Round 2 despite the majority of top seeds performing brilliantly. It began with Seth Moniz's last-second heroics in Heat 3 to jump from fourth-place to first and claim a heat win alongside runner-up and good friend Benji Brand. The two eliminated former event winner, and current QS No. 4 Evan Geiselman. South African powerhouse Beyrick De Vries also fell victim to Moniz's buzzer-beater, dropping from second to third and was sent packing.
"I just had to stay composed on that last wave," Moniz said. "I got on the beach and didn't hear the score, but they ran the next heat's horn so I thought I lost. But, my friends were looking at live scores down the beach claiming I won so that was insane. Benji [Brand] and I are good friends, and we're staying together here, so I'm stoked to make it through that heat with him."
Upsets continued as Costa Rican talent Noe Mar McGonagle did his part in eliminating Seth's older brother Joshua Moniz.
Reef Heazlewood - WSL / KawanaBut, perhaps the most notable came from Reef Heazlewood's big performance in Round 2 Heat 12 after eliminating recent CT spoiler and current QS No. 2 Mikey Wright. Fellow Aussie Matt Banting (AUS) solidified Wright's elimination with a well-surfed heat as he looks to re-qualify following a season-long absence last year.
"There's a few spots you can sit on with the rip in different areas and I just picked my spot so I'm happy to get some clean waves," Heazlewood said. "To have a heat with those guys was nuts, especially a guy like Mikey [Wright], but you have to push that out of your head and surf your best no matter what."
Also out early is South Africa's newest emerging talent, and current QS No. 6, Matthew McGillivray who will look to regroup as he heads back to his home country for a string of events.
Japanese Contingent Dwindles
Shun Murakami - WSL / KawanaJapan's own Shun Murakami made his countrymen proud with a terrific showcase of local knowledge and quick, powerful technique. The young Japanese competitor spends plenty of time surfing the beachbreaks of Chiba and helped eliminate top seed competitor Aritz Aranburu and Hawaiian charger Kiron Jabour.
"There were a lot of closeouts with the tide and it was difficult to choose the waves, but I focused on finding ones with some shape," Murakami said. "You can capture the wave over on the left that would let you get two maneuvers in a tight space. I was able to concentrate on keeping priority which kept me in position and kept the competitors on the right side of me."
However, only Hiroto Ohhara and Kaito Ohashi remain alongside Murakami to keep this year's event title on home soil after beginning with 25 contenders.
Tomorrow's 6:30am JST call will determine a start for Round 3 action at the Gotcha Ichinomiya Chiba Open QS 6,000 Powered by Gravity Channel.
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Ichinomiya Chiba Open
Heritage and electric form keep all eyeballs on the current world #2 QS surfer from Hawaii.
Alex Ribeiro (BRA) winning his Quarterfinal heat at the Gotcha Ichinomiya Chiba Open QS 6,000.
The Australian earned an emotional, first-ever major Qualifying Series win over Hawaii's Seth Moniz.
Intense Quarterfinal heats got underway at Shida Point; just four surfers remain to vie for 6,000 vital points.
An incredible day of surfing went down at Shida Point and the event's first Perfect 10 went to the high-flying Hawaiian.