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A D V E R T I S E M E N T Details
| Americans Make the Most of 6.0 Lowers ProSan Clemente, CA, -- The 6.0 Lowers Pro wrapped over the weekend at Lower Trestles, with Hawaii's Fred Patacchia, 28, taking out defending champion Ben Bourgeois, 30, of North Carolina, in glassy 4-foot walls. For Patacchia, this 6-star PRIME WQS event served as a nice exercise. Though the ASP World Tour star has very little need to surf qualifying events this year (he's in little danger of missing the world tour cut in his current number four position) Patacchia took the opportunity of a break in his schedule to sharpen his blade in preparation for The Hurley Pro, the ASP's only stop in Mainland U.S., which takes place right back here at Trestles in September. "It's a good warm up," says Patacchia. "I just want to stay in contest mode. I'm having a fairly decent year this year so I just want to keep it going." For Bourgeois, who fell off the ASP World Tour last year, this was a solid step back to the big leagues should he decide he wants that. But the 30-year-old California transplant is busy working on a handful of other surf related projects this year, and getting back to the top, while certainly tempting, doesn't seem to be his first priority. "I'm doing a boat trip to Panama later this year, and just cruising at home in Carlsbad." So the real drama at Lowers was down in the trenches of the WQS rankings, among those trying to break through for the first time to the next level. There were a number of Americans hoping to make the most of the huge points on offer at this 6-star PRIME event. Dusty Payne entered Lowers in the number 16 slot' The young Yeomans has been enjoying plenty of success in WQS events of late. He became the first WQS surfer ever to threepeat at last year's Oakley Newport Pro. But unfortunately, none of those wins netted Yeamans many points, since they were only 2-Star events. He earned just 500 points for each of those 2-Star victories. In 6-Star PRIME events surfers who finish = 97th earn 525 points. That illustrates just how important these events are, and why Americans have been begging for an event of this weight on mainland shores for years. This was the first ever 6-Star PRIME event in California. "It's about time," says Bourgeois, last year's winner. "I'm really stoked Nike stepped in and turned this into an event that really matters this year. This is one of the best venues you can possibly have for a contest, so it should be." Another U.S. hopeful looking for a solid result was Brett Simpson of Huntington Beach. Simpson narrowly missed the world tour cutoff last year, something he's desperately trying to avoid this season. Entering the event ranked 4th on the WQS, it was so far so good. But Simpson had the unfortunate luck of running into super freaks Dane Reynolds and Rob Machado in Round of 48. Though his = 37th finish was a setback, the results on the rankings don't reflect it yet. He remains in the Top 5 for now, but the foundation he'd built up has weakened. Tanner Gudauskas and Dusty Payne, on the other hand, capitalized. Both advance all the way to the quarterfinals before being eliminated by world tour stars Tim Boal and Patacchia respectively. Gudauskas now finds himself rounding out the Top 10 on the WQS, while Payne is clawing even higher, all the way to number 7 in the rankings. Of course, Yeomans performance was the real justice served at Lowers. By beating stalwarts like Rob Machado and C.J. Hobgood en route to his semifinals appearance, he delivered when he had to. His equal 3rd place finish netted him 2625 points, rocketing him all the way into the number 6 slot on the WQS rankings. Post Lowers Pro, there are now three Americans in the Top 10, with Patrick Gudauskas and Austin Ware playing back up to them in the Top 20. While the season ahead is long, the American hopefuls can (and should) be content with their defense of the home front. Consider this battle won. Nate Yeomans Takes Oakley Newport Beach Pro![]() The Oakley Newport Pro wrapped up yesterday in clean 3 to 4 foot surf at 56th in Newport Beach with San Clemente's Nate Yeomans taking it for the third time in as many years. It's funny because just the other day Robo (John Robertson) called to tell me Cole's done with my 6'0" quad. I told him I couldn't pick it up for a couple days because I had to be at the Newport contest, and he asked how Nate was doing. I took it as a sign to keep an eye on Yeamons, and sure enough he won. The win puts him out in front for the Macy's California Trifecta (Oakley Newport Beach Pro, O'Neill Coldwater Classic at The Lane, and the Nike 6.0 Pro at Lowers) which he took last year. As far as the groms go, Malibu's Dillon Perillo won the Junior Pro as well as placing 2nd in the Pro, not bad. Here's some photos from the final day all taken by ...MORINformed except the action shot which is courtesy of Hilleman and the ASP: Nate and his big check.![]() wooooom! ![]() Dillon was almost a double winner. Channels: Surf First | < Previous | 1 2 | ||||||||||||







