Thursday, September 17, 2009 2:50pm PDT

Nothing is Over

By: Chris Mauro, GrindTV.com

Slater's Quest
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. -- The surfing world has known since 1992 that Kelly Slater is a freak. We'd been charting his rise for years, and the theories were validated that year when a 20-year-old Slater became the youngest world champion ever.

Today, some 17-years after winning that first title, 37-year-old Slater is still the defending ASP World Champion, having racked up 8 more titles since 1992, including five straight from 1993-1998, and a list of records that can fill a phone book.

To put his longevity into perspective, remember that 1992 is the same year Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan and Larry Bird did their whole Dream Team dealio at the Olympics. Slater went on to dominate the 90s's, winning five straight world titles from 1994-1998. Like Jordan, he stepped away at that point and played golf for three years. Came back in 2002, fought his way to the top again in 2005-2006, then did it again in 2008. Last year was the third time Slater had reclaimed a world title after surrendering it, and he's been in the books for years now as both the youngest and oldest world champion.

But it's his quest right now for a 10th world title that has some in the outside sports world finally taking note of this guy, as they should, after all, his records hold up against anyone in sports history. What's amazing is he still seems to be getting better. His world title run last year was statistically his best ever as a pro, and you won't find many 18-year veterans who can say that. Naturally, with 9-titles under his belt the a number 10 was too much for him to resist.

Yet his campaign got off to a horrible start back in March, as Slater fell victim to his own experiments. Like Tiger Woods a few years ago, Slater felt he had to change his approach in order to get past the threshold guardians only he could see. Tiger, you may recall, changed his grip in order to move forward, taking a temporary step back in the process. Slater took a similar step down, shrinking his surfboards first to logical, and then illogical extremes, while testing their limits.



As a result of his unproven equipment his 2009 season began with three early round flame-outs. Meanwhile, Australian Joel Parkinson won three of the first five events on the ten-stop tour. Slater won just once.

This week the Hurley Pro at Trestles has kicked off the second half of the season. Trestles is one of the best waves in California, and it's also known as Slater-town. He won his debut as a pro here back in 1990, and he's won this event three of the past four years.

Last week the task of catching Parkinson seemed hopeless in August. But Parkinson lost early this week to Wild Card Rob Machado (one of Kelly's closest friends) on Tuesday, and Slater seems ready to pounce.

If Slater can hold serve at Trestles the pressure for Parkinson to clinch during the three-event European leg will be huge, because the final event of the year is at Pipeline, where Slater's won six times.

For the record, Parko has only won in Europe just once back in 2006, and he's never won at Pipeline. But he did do something worse as far as Kelly's concerned. He played a huge role in helping Andy Irons defeat Slater in their famous 2003 world title showdown by holding Slater off a wave he desperately needed.

Right about now Kelly's holding onto that memory.

This season is hardly over.




FEATURED NEWS

"Record" for Largest Wave Ever Ridden Trivializes Big-Wave Surfing

"Record" for Largest Wave Ever Ridden Trivializes Big-Wave Surfing

A return to old-school measuring techniques is in order

Consider two representations of two very big waves, below. The first is a photograph of Mike Parsons at Cortes Bank. The second is a video of Garrett McNamara near Nazare, Portugal. Now take out some measuring tape and make the distance of one foot between your hands. That's the amount, according to the Billabong XXL committee, that McNamara's wave is bigger than Parsons's wave.

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