Trent Munro deafeats Andy Irons & takes out Rip Curl Pro



Trent Munro 2005 event champion : photos ASPWorldtour/Karen


    

Rip Curl Pro
SPC Fruit Pro

ASP WCT Mens Event 
ASP WCT Womens Event
Bells Beach, Victoria, Australia
March 21-April 1, 2005

SPC Pro - Live Scores/Results/Photos etc
Rip Curl Pro - Live Scores/Results/Photos etc

TRENT MUNRO WINS RIP CURL PRO

Surfersvillage Global Surf News, 31 March 2005: - - WITH brilliant form that repeatedly defied comprehension, Aussie power nugget Trent Munro blew all contenders from the Woolamai Beach waves to win today’s final of the Rip Curl Pro. Before taking reigning world champion Andy Irons in the 35-minute final, Munro was like a steaming locomotive, racking up nine point rides right throughout the day to end up with not only the revered Bells trophy, but the best wave score and aggregate heat score of the event.

Racing time and tide, the swell beleaguered Rip Curl Pro finally got to its final day on Phillip Island today after having to be transferred from the famous Bells Beach late last Monday, after a week of the waiting period had produced no swell behind that sufficient to finish the parallel SPC Fruit Pro women’s event.

The event finally started on Tuesday, finishing one and a half rounds on both of the first two days of dawn to dusk competition, and then began before dawn this morning with the final 16 surfers competing from round four, into the quarters, semis and ultimately the final in clean 1.5-3’ (0.5-1m) waves.

Coming from the bottom side of the draw, after finishing second behind CJ Hobgood (USA) in round one, Munro then beat his close mate Lee Winkler (AUS) in round two, and then Kalani Robb (HAW) in the third round yesterday.

He went into overdrive today mowing through Foster’s Men’s World Tour rookie Bede Durbidge (AUS), Taj Burrow (AUS), Daniel Wills (AUS) and finally Irons. He comboed both Durbidge and Burrow today, leaving the talented duo in need of two waves.



Andy Irons (left) & Trent Munro : photos ASPWorldtour/Karen


After mustering 18.70 out of a possible 20 points in round four against Durbidge, Munro’s incredible heat score tally of 19.00 was locked in against Burrow in their quarterfinal early this afternoon.

Munro’s last WCT victory was as a rookie in the year 2001 when he won the Rio Surf International in Brazil. That is recallable, but nobody in pro surfing circles can recall anyone having banked as many nine point rides as Munro did today, especially on a beach break.

His 9.20 and 9.5 against Durbidge, as well as his 9.17 and 9.83 against Burrow, all featured top shelf wave choice. Each gem he selected was then duly carved with tight high speed arcs or decimated with numerous upside-down cracks and slams.

Munro’s sustained performances and seemingly invincible form had his peers bewildered.

“He’s surfing as though it’s four to six foot, top to bottom and square as it gets,” commented Jake Paterson.

“Munro has been unbelievable today. When it’s lefthanders two foot or under, Munro is the best backhander on tour, the man to beat for sure,” said Shane Beschen.



Trent Munro : photos ASPWorldtour/Karen


“I couldn’t believe how good he’s surfing – ripping for sure,” said Burrow. “I couldn’t imagine anyone surfing those sized waves any better really”

“To be honest, I thought he was going to win! He’s been in ridiculous form all day,” confessed Andy Irons after the final. That is an incredible statement from the world’s most confident and acclaimed surfer of this millennium.

The arena for the final shifted from the long lefts that had been surfed all day to a high tide inside bank that dealt repeated rights for the Foster’s Expression Session that was held before the Rip Curl Pro final.

The shift initially looked like it might favour Irons, but it was to remain a predominant left, and Munro hung tenaciously to his rhythm.

“I thought it would work for me because there were some rights, but the rights kind of didn’t happen as the tide came in. They filled in! In 15 minutes it turned into a different spot. Good on Trent, he has his opportunities and capitalised on them all,” said Andy.

Munro opened the scoring after four minutes, heading left to yield a 6.17 on a wave that took a while to get going.



Andy Irons : photos ASPWorldtour/Karen


Looking calm and collected, Andy went right on his first, complimenting a snap with two great floaters, one lateral, one vertical, and paddled back out with a 7.5. he supported that to take the lad with a 5.5 three minutes later, leaving Munro wanting 6.51.

Munro took the lead at the halfway mark, notching 8.57 for another solid left that allowed more than his previous waves. He rode it to the sand, leaving Andy hunting 7.51.

Andy made a couple of mistakes in the final. Holding priority needing that 7.51, he let Munro take an inside ride thinking he needed better, but the Australian made the situation more difficult, improving his lowest score and increasing what Irons needed to 9.00.

Eventually going a right in need of that nine on a wave that only allowed a few speed trims before shutting down. Andy put up an alley-oop attempt but didn’t land it. All Munro had to do thereafter was hang on to priority.

“I can’t believe I’ve won the Bell, so stoked!” said Munro. “Look at all these names of past winners. Unbelievable. It’s been a dream all my life”.

Munro put his win down to a renewed attitude and a very special surfboard that is two years old, but had sat in the shop of his board sponsor Maurice Cole unridden.



Cory Lopez : photos ASPWorldtour/Karen


The board was a duplicate of a surfboard that Cole shaped, and Munro rode to victory in two six star World Qualifying Series events in France two years ago.

“I’ve been on the WCT tour for a while now, and not been happy with one year’s finish, so this year I just want to worry about myself and feel good, enjoy myself and just go surfing,” said Munro

“I’ve been riding a little 5’9” mermaid that we had in France a couple of years ago. The board is feeling great. It’s Maurice’s own ‘mermaid’ shape with a little swallow tail…like a little fishy kind of thing. It has a really flat rocker and perfect for how small it is out there. It’s like a little ironing board I guess. You can go really really fast!”

You could say that Munro ironed irons on his ironing board, but that’s probably pushing the puns too far. Munro pushed the limits all day though, so why not?

Third placed surfers in the Rip Curl Pro were Daniel Wills (AUS) and Cory Lopez (USA). Both semi-finals were tight.

Wills had been in stylish form thoughout the event, looking ripe to pluck his first victory since Japan in 1998. he defeated Joel Parkinson in round four and Darren O’Rafferty in their quarter-final.



Danny Wills : photos ASPWorldtour/Karen


“The waves were really weak, and Willsy just doesn’t fall on in waves like that. I’m hopeless in stuff that small. I can surf one footers, but not half footers,” commented Parkinson after his and Wills’ heat copped the smallest waves of the day on the ebb of the tide..

Needing an 8.74 against Munro, Wills fell on his final wave, one of the biggest sets of the day.

“I thought I could have got the score if I hadn’t fallen, but that’s okay. I had to go for it, but didn’t pull it off. I’m feeling good, stronger than ever, and looking forward to a good season,” said Wills.

“It was Trent’s day today. He looked unstoppable all day long, and now he’s leading the ratings. He’s got some confidence now – so look out!” added Wills.

For Lopez, it was his best result since making the semi-finals of the Boost Mobile Pro at Trestles last season, and as second result of the year, a marked improvement To his shocking run of 17ths and 33rds at the start of last season. Irons is his best friend.

“Yeah Andy is my best mate – and now he’s beaten me something four times straight. It’s beginning to hurt my ego!’ laughed Lopez.



Mick Fanning : photos ASPWorldtour/Karen


After a seesawing exchange in their semi-final, Lopez had led with minutes to go, only to witness Irons slam home a 9.33 in the dying stages for a rock solid assault from take-off to an inverted finish in the shallows.

Riding a 6’1” groveller board, and one of the lightest surfers on tour, Lopez had been a standout through the three days at Woolamai. Continuing his high speed run today he surfed by CJ Hobgood and Richard Lovett before his best mate ended his run.

Irons took Mick Fanning in their round four exchange before demolishing Damien Hobgood in their quarterfinal. The Hobgood brothers were both in great form, but ran out of juice today.

The in-form Fanning had looked a little lost yesterday. He related this morning that he was feeling flat because he had insisted on hanging on to the board he had ridden to victory in the first event of the year earlier this month on the Gold Coast, but it had lost its magic spark.

Guided by Rip Curl’s on-road ‘Pit Manager’ Matthew Griggs, Fanning had gone down the beach in solitude yesterday afternoon and surfed several boards hunting some new spark. On his second choice he found a keeper.

All amped again, Fanning surfed well this morning, and had Irons on the ropes with minutes to go, but made a very basic and silly error when, holding priority, he went for a wave he should have let pass.



Taj Burrow : photos ASPWorldtour/Karen


Instead of waiting, Fanning went for it. The wave closed out almost instantly, and Irons got priority to surf the following wave and get the score he needed.

“I couldn’t believe it!” said Irons of that moment when Fanning went for the wave in question.

“I was actually doing some sucker paddles seeing if he’d flinch, but I didn’t think he’d even think about it – but then he went. I just said ‘Oh My God’, and then the next wave was a little more open and that was the ball game,” said Irons.

“I just made a mistake and that cost me. I went a wave I should not have. I just didn’t think!” confessed Fanning, none the less consoled that he and Luke Egan, who lost to Richie Lovett in round four, are going to get doubled around the Phillip Island Grand Prix track on Superbikes on Saturday.

Pray for surf! / Paul Sargeant

ROUND FOUR RESULTS:
(1st>QtrFinals; 2nd=9th, USD$5300/600 pts)

H1: Richie Lovett (AUS) 13.76 def. Luke Egan (AUS) 13.34
H2: Cory Lopez (USA) 16.44 def. CJ Hobgood (USA) 14.54
H3: Damien Hobgood (USA) 15.93 def. Dean Morrison (AUS) 13.40
H4: Andy Irons (HAW) 14.50 def. Mick Fanning (AUS) 12.34
H5: Daniel Wills (AUS) 16.03 def. Joel Parkinson (AUS) 12.83
H6: Darren O’Rafferty (AUS) 13.70 def. Jake Paterson (AUS) 11.10
H7: Trent Munro (AUS) 18.70 def. Bede Durbidge (AUS) 15.73
H8: Taj Burrow (AUS) 16.43 def. Troy Brooks (AUS) 11.47

QUARTER-FINAL RESULTS:
(1st>Semis; 2nd=5th, USD$8000/732pts)

Q1: Cory Lopez (USA) 17.20 def. Richie Lovett (AUS) 16.43
Q2: Andy Irons (HAW) 17.77 def. Damien Hobgood (USA) 13.50
Q3; Daniel Wills (AUS) 15.83 def. Darren O’Rafferty (AUS) 15.70
Q4: Trent Munro (AUS) 19.00 def. Taj Burrow (AUS) 15.07

SEMI-FINAL RESULTS
(1st>Final; 2nd=3rd, USD 10,000/876pts)

S1: AndyIrons (HAW) 18.96 def. Cory Lopez (USA) 17.13
S2: Trent Munro (AUS) 17.23 def. Daniel Wills (AUS) 14.67

FINAL RESULT
(1st=Winner, USD$30,000/1200pts/ 2nd=runner-up USD$16,000/1032pts)

FINAL: Trent Munro (AUS) 16.57 def. Andy Irons (HAW) 15.07


Ratings after Event #2 Rip Curl Pro: 
1    Trent Munro    AUS    2076
2    Mick Fanning    AUS    1800
3    Andy Irons    HAW    1764
4    Chris Ward    USA    1442
5    C.J. Hobgood    USA    1332
5    Damien Hobgood    USA    1332
5    Richard Lovett    AUS    1332
8    Daniel Wills    AUS    1286
8    Tom Whitaker    AUS    1286
10    Joel Parkinson    AUS    1200
10    Troy Brooks    AUS    1200
12    Kelly Slater    USA    1142
12    Taj Burrow    AUS    1142
12    Mark Occhilupo    AUS    1142
12    Darren O'Rafferty    AUS    1142
16    Cory Lopez    USA    1101
17    Luke Egan    AUS    1010
17    Phillip MacDonald    AUS    1010
17    Dean Morrison    AUS    1010
17    Fredrick Patacchia Jr    HAW    1010
17    Bede Durbidge    AUS    1010
22    Nathan Hedge    AUS    825
22    Jake Paterson    AUS    825
22    Bruce Irons    HAW    825
25    Sunny Garcia    HAW    820
25    Michael Lowe    AUS    820
25    Taylor Knox    USA    820
25    Neco Padaratz    BRA    820
25    Marcelo Nunes    BRA    820
25    Shane Beschen    USA    820
25    Victor Ribas    BRA    820
32    Peterson Rosa    BRA    635
32    Kalani Robb    HAW    635
32    Greg Emslie    ZAF    635
32    Travis Logie    ZAF    635
36    Paulo Moura    BRA    450
36    Tim Curran    USA    450
36    Lee Winkler    AUS    450
36    Raoni Monteiro    BRA    450
36    Toby Martin    AUS    450
36    Shea Lopez    USA    450
36    Luke Stedman    AUS    450
36    Tim Reyes    USA    450
36    Kirk Flintoff    AUS    450
36    Renan Rocha    BRA    450
46    Bernardo Pigmeu    BRA    0
46    Guilherme Herdy    BRA    0




Spectator crowd : photos ASPWorldtour/Karen



THE RIP CURL PRO BEGINS BEFORE THE DAWN

IT’S a rare day when a Foster’s Men’s World Tour event starts before dawn, but that’s exactly what we did this morning at Phillip Island’s Woolamai Beach as the first heat of round four of the Rip Curl Pro took to the water at 6.30am. The swell has maintained at 1-2’+ (0.5-0.75m), perhaps dropping just marginally, but conditions remain thoroughly contestable with more clean conditions under clear skies.

We’re looking at a mid-morning low tide, and as long as that doesn’t affect the swell too much, we could be heading all the way to the final today. “It’s a good probability, but we’re not positive we’ll be finishing today. We’ll be taking it a heat at a time,” said Contest Director Damien Hardman.

We have 12 Australians, three Americans and one Hawaiian contesting the eight heats of round four. The most anticipated match-up of the round will obviously be that between reigning world champion Andy Irons and current ratings leader Mick Fanning.

While Irons remains typically focussed, Fanning appeared quite listless yesterday, but the blond speedster form the Gold Coast has turned up at Woolamai Beach this morning bright eyed and bushy-tailed, as we say here in Australia. We’ll tell you why in a later press release. Both the champs’ are ready to rock!

ROUND FOUR HEATS:
(1st>QtrFinals; 2nd=9th, USD$5300/600 pts)

H1:     Luke Egan (AUS) vs. Richie Lovett (AUS)
H2:    Cory Lopez (USA) vs. CJ Hobgood (USA)
H3:    Damien Hobgood (USA) vs. Dean Morrison (AUS)
H4:    Mick Fanning (AUS) vs. Andy Irons (HAW)
H5:    Joel Parkinson (AUS) vs. Daniel Wills (AUS)
H6:    Darren O’Rafferty (AUS) vs. Jake Paterson (AUS)
H7:    Bede Durbidge (AUS) vs. Trent Munro (AUS)
H8:    Taj Burrow (AUS) vs. Troy Brooks (AUS)


 

         
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Previous reports:
# 1 : Mick Fanning heads to Rip Curl Pro as current world No 1
# 2 : Jamie O'Brien awarded wildcard to the 2005 Rip Curl Pro
# 3 : Womens surfing returns to Bells Beach with the SPC Pro
# 4 : Junior surfer Gilmore hopes for a 2nd WCT win at SPC Pro

# 5 : All star lineups for Rip Curl Pro and SPC Pro official launch
# 6 : Young guns win wildcrd entries in Rip Curl Pro & SPC Pro
# 7 : Rip Curl Pro/SPC Pro Bells postponed again on Thursday
# 8 : Beachley sets the pace at Bells as the SPC Pro kicks off
# 9 : World Champion Sofia Mulanovich wins the SPC Fruit Pro

# 10 : Rip Curl Pro postponed at Bells Beach for Easter Sunday
# 11 : Rip Curl Pro moved to Phillip Island for 7AM Tuesday start
# 12 : Rip Curl Pro Search/Move to Woolamai Beach pays off
# 13 : Round 3 completed at Rip Curl Pro: Final set for Thursday

More Australasian Surfing News available here
Check the latest Australasian Surf Reports and Forecasts

Gary Dunne
gdunne@ripcurl.com.au
Dane Sharp
dsharp@ripcurl.com.au
Paul ‘Sarge’ Sargeant
sarge@aspworldtour.com  

WCT Contests - Surfersvillage





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