FOLLOW US

GrindTV Blogs RSS

Enter your email address to receive GrindTV blog updates:

Powered by FeedBurner

Edited by Tom Morin

Edited by Chris Mauro

Edited by Lindsay Fraka

Edited by steve cox

Edited by Teddy Parker

Edited by MORINfocus

Edited by MORINstyle

Edited by Nate Hoppes

Tuesday, November 17, 2009 1:04am PST

The Ankle, Parko, and Pipeline

By: Jeff Mull

If you were to take a step back and closely examine the current state of the World Tour title race, you'd see all of the elements necessary for drama ripe enough to warrant itself a slot on daytime television. Joel Parkinson, who opened the year in an unstoppable form, laying waist to his World Tour counterparts with reckless abandon, has fallen by the wayside on the 99-yard line, a lame ankle biting into his title hopes with every top turn and rail laid. When news of Parko's injury first made its way into the media, his handlers attempted to assuage the hype, stating it was only a calf sprain.... We bought in.

The ensuing months bore witness to a softening of Parko's kung-fu grip on the World Tour. At Trestles, he didn't look quite right, and then at France, it was clear that something was amiss. That injury that was supposedly nothing more than a mild calf sprain had proven itself a nagging and somewhat severe ankle injury. Despite a strong showing in Portugal, Parko recently reported in his blog that the possibility of going under the knife and having pins put in his ankle is not outside of the realm of possibility.

"The last few weeks it's felt really good. Really good. I kind of got over that stiff injury phase, now I'm getting flexibility back in it, so it allows me to do a lot more on it," said Parko in an interview on his website. "When I get home from Hawaii I'm going to have another round of MRIs to find out if it's 100 percent. I've got one little test to do to find out how much movement I have between my tib and my fib, and if it has a lot of movement I'll probably have to get a screw in it, but if it doesn't then I should be right."

Parko went on to say that he's currently geared up to compete in all three events of the Triple Crown, despite a doctor's recommendations.

"The doctor the other day recommended I should probably pull out of Haleiwa, but I'm still surfing fine and surfing without pain. I'm fit and healthy so I said to him, 'I'm doing it, mate.' I love the Triple Crown, I love Hawaii. It's surfing."

If Parko were to secure his first world title while nursing an injury at Pipeline, it would undoubtedly be the stuff of legends. It also wouldn't be the first time an injured surfer proved his worth at Pipe come crunch time. In 1982, Michael Ho historically won the Pipe Masters with a cast on his wrist, pioneering the pig dog in the process.

Can Parko comeback and pull off a miracle? Stay logged on to GrindTV to see how the 2009 Triple Crown unfolds.

FEATURED NEWS

Jay Peak Owners Buy Burke Mountain

Jay Peak Owners Buy Burke Mountain

The Mountain has 260 acres of skiable terrain across 50 named trails with 2,011 vertical feet and 100 acres of maintained glades

Burke Mountain, in Northeast Vermont, has new ownership with strong ties to the region.
An ownership group made up of principals in Jay Peak Resort,Vermont has purchased neighboring Burke Mountain. Ariel Quiros, who along with Jay Peak president Bill Stenger bought Jay Peak Resort from Mont Saint-Sauveur Valley resorts in 2008, is heading the group, called Q-Burke. Stenger is involved as well.

"This is a separate company with the same ownership principals," says Steve..

1 Comments

 1 of 1

Kat Hoffman

Posted by Kat Hoffman November 18, 2009 05:53pm PSTReply | Report Abuse

Get Well Fast Parko!

Add a Comment

2000 characters left. 2000 total.