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SBBC Surf Series #6 Presented by Spyder: King of the South Bay

King of the South Bay Shortboard Men's winner, Matt Pagan. photo by Mike Balzer
King of the South Bay Shortboard Men’s winner, Matt Pagan. Photo by Mike Balzer

“There was a rumor on the beach of a Dennis Jarvis sighting”

Lack of surf forced the postponement of the sixth and final South Bay Boardriders Club contest, which had been scheduled for last May. But as it turned, out moving the contest to last Saturday at the Manhattan Beach pier worked out better than that day in May with its lake-like swell, unbearable heat, and no parking.

  On Saturday, surfers were treated to 2- to 3-foot waves, sunny conditions kissed by Santa Ana’s, and the tightest competition in recent memory grappling for the title of King of the SouthBay. An onshore wind added texture by the afternoon, but nothing drastic with overall good conditions all day.

The person to beat, male or female, long or short board, was Natalie Anzivino. The pier has been her playground since she was a cute, little, surf grommette riding her bike from Torrance with a thruster underneath her arm. She’s now full grown, surfed a Pipe event, bounced around a few six star QS events, and lays claim to heavy pier, local status. Her solid wave selection assured her retention of her last year’s title as Open Women’s Queen of the SouthBay.

Placing second and third in the women’s open were Mira Costa riders Sara Kohrogi and Rachel Tominaga. The two placed one and two in the girls’ under 18 division.

Photo
Photo

 The Open Men’s saw a some upsets, namely Jamie Meistrell and Kent Nishiya going down in the early rounds.

Throughout the season, Dane Zaun, Shawn Burrell, and Matt Pagan have been trading places at the victory podium. With Zaun and Burrell no-shows, the One4LA.com mastermind Pagan took to the incoming mushy high tide waves in the finals with his trademark shrediabilty to retain his crown as King of the SouthBay.

But despite his win, Pagan didn’t have the points to overtake Burrell to retain his King of the SouthBay title. Burrell narrowly lost out to Pagan last year. In addition to bragging rights, the King of the SouthBay title comes with for two to Fiji, board Air Pacific.

Dayton Silva was hungry for a result since last placing 5th a few contests ago. He took home second with his lightening, “footloose” feet feeling the nooks and crannies of tiny surf for bursts of speed like a deranged gamma ray.

Longboard winner Mike Siordia Hangs Ten Casual through the crowd as fifth place finisher Hudson Ritchie looks on. Photo
Longboard winner Mike Siordia Hangs Ten casually through the crowd as fifth place finisher Hudson Ritchie looks on. Photo

  The 14 and under division winner Will Reid, looking tough on shore in his Dizm specs, put on his big boy pants and used the 2- to 3-foot foot waves to his advantage to place 3rd. Fourth place finisher Spyder teamrider Chris Broman stood out all through the event but just couldn’t find the right wave in the finals.

The Longboard Division was a throwback to the mid-late ’90s when surfers from the ’60s like Mike Purpus (who’s still winning events), Chris Bredesen Sr., John Joseph, Dru Harrison and Daryl Dickie were still aggressively competing in events like the Aloha Days. As there were then, on Saturday, there were brews and smiles on the beach and snarls and “encouraging” banter in the breakers.

What has been a repeat battle in the long board division — one fin or three, heavy or light, modern, postmodern, classic, retro — might have been answered, or not?

Four traditionally, though modern styled single fin boards surfed against two modern, ’90s three-fin boards.

Ironically, the under-40 crowd was on designs inspired by 1966. The over-40 crowd was on designs inspired by 1996. With one of the closest and hottest heats in the contest and in SBBC longboard division history, it came down to last year’s King of the South Bay Mike Siordia and his bag of nose antics, versus longboard ratings leader  Dave Schaefer, a whirly bird specialist. Siordia took a set wave off the pier  “can-canning” on the nose edging out Schaefer and his “Special Op” helicopters for repeat victory.

Queen of the South Bay, Natalie Anzivino blasts off the lip. Photo
Queen of the South Bay, Natalie Anzivino blasts off the lip. Photo

 Over the season, the 40-49 divisions lost a few of its competitors to old age, yet welcomed a few more to the middle age club. While waiting to chase the SBBC Big Wave Challenge, Chris Rodriguez armed with his Pat Ryan shaped stick, placed 2nd in his first forties foray. A finalist in three events, Tom Seth, with the endurance of a 20 year old, took home fourth. Scott Whitmer, owner of one of the finest ding repair businesses in the SouthBay, Whitstick Fiberglass Repair, took third. Former South African Pro Warren Kushner took home his second 40-49 division title.

During this season, the legends division welcomed a new class that included surfers like Ted Robinson. One may pity poor Purpus, putting him poised to go out like the first generation iPod. Turning 65 in November, Purp still has the competitive fire to burn down the San BernardinoNational Forest and has a smooth style on his Davenport competition model to cool it down. He took home third with his switch stances and the balls to shoot the pier. The battle was between Derek Levy and lifeguard Roddy Williamson, who won the event last year. It was close the entire heat, but Levy described by a spectator as “going off” won his first SBBC legend’s title.

An empty peeler. Photo
An empty peeler. Photo

Kudos to Spyder Surfboards for bringing in their 30 years of experience to sponsor a kick ass event with the South Bay Boardriders Club. There was a rumor on the beach of a Dennis Jarvis sighting. It was great seeing Jani Lange in and around the sponsors’ booths. Thanks to Waterman’s for providing lunch, Spy Optics with refreshments and swag from Hurley, Creatures of Leisure, Nixon Watches, Future Fins, Globe, Sol Republic, Sector Nine and Waterman’s Applied Science.

For more photos and complete results go to easyreadernews.com. ER 

Siordia and his "can-can" improve dance takes noseriding into uncharted territory. Photo by Mike Balzer
Siordia and his “can-can” improv dance takes noseriding into uncharted territory. Photo by Mike Balzer

     Over the season, the 40-49 divisions lost a few of it’s competitors to old age yet welcomed a few more to the middle age club. When not chasing the SBBC Big Wave Challenge, Chris Rodriguez armed with his Pat Ryan shaped stick placed 2nd in his first forties foray.  A finalist in three events Tom Seth with the endurance of a 20 year old, took home fourth. Scott Whitmer, owner of one of the finest ding repair businesses in the South Bay, Whitstick Fiberglass Repair, took third. Former South African Pro Warren Kushner took home his second KOSB.

Chris Rodriguez slices back on his backside. Photo
Chris Rodriguez slices back on his backside. Photo

    During this season, the legends division welcomed a new class that included surfers like Ted Robinson. One may pity poor Purpus putting him poised to go out like the first generation ipod.  Turning 65 in November, Purp still has the competitive fire to burn down the San Bernardino National Forest and has a smooth style on his Davenport competition model to cool it down. He took home 3rd with his switch stances and the balls to shoot the pier. The battle was between Derek Levy and Lifeguard Roddy Williamson who won the event last year. It was close the entire heat, but Levy described by a spectator as “going off” won his first KOSB.

Purpus contemplates shooting the pier a second time. Photo by Kiyo Okada
Purpus contemplates shooting the pier a second time. Photo by Kiyo Okada

The Open Men’s saw a few upsets namely Jamie Meistrell and Kent Nishiya going down in the early rounds. 14 and under division winner Will Reid, looking tough on shore in his Dizm specs, put on his big boy pants and used the 2-3 foot waves fully to his advantage by placing 3rd. Fourth place finisher Spyder teamrider, Chris Broman, stood out all event but just couldn’t find the right wave in the finals.

Dayton Silva cutbacks into the juice. Photo
Dayton Silva cutbacks into the juice. Photo

Dayton Silva was hungry for a result since last placing 5th a few contests ago. He took home second with his lightening “footloose” feet feeling the nooks and crannies of tiny surf for bursts of speed like a deranged gamma ray.

Uber-grom Will Reid stakes in claim in a final with the competition 10 years his senior. Photo
Uber-grom Will Reid stakes claim in a final with the competition 10 years his senior. Photo

The entire season, Dane Zaun, Shawn Burrell, and Matt Pagan have been trading places at the victory podium. With Zaun and Burrell a no-show, the One4LA.com mastermind, Pagan took to the incoming mushy high tide waves in the finals with his trademark shrediabilty to retain his crown as King of the South Bay.

Unidentified surfer cheers Pagan on during his speed check turn. Photo
Unidentified surfer cheers Pagan on during his speed check turn. Photo

Kudos to Spyder Surfboards for bringing in their 30 years of experience to sponsor a kick ass event with the South Bay Boardriders Club. There was a rumor on the beach of a Dennis Jarvis sighting. It was great seeing Jani Lange in and around the sponsors’ booths. Thanks to Waterman’s for providing lunch, Spy Optics with refreshments and swag from Hurley, Creatures of Leisure, Nixon Watches, Future Fins, Globe, Sol Republic, Sector Nine, and Waterman’s Applied Science.DZ

Pagan repping One4LA.com Photo by Mike Balzer
Pagan reppin’ One4LA.com Photo by Mike Balzer

Jimmy Surf Fiesta

The annual Jimmy Surf Fiesta will be held Sunday, Oct 13 at 42nd street in Manhattan Beach. Competitors are rated and assigned to teams and must surf from a selection of boards, but not their own boards. JS will have a large quiver of demo boards. Heats start at 8 a.m. and continue through the day. A post contest party will be held at Verandas, on Rosecrans, at Highland Ave. To register visit JimmMillerFoundation.org

SBBC South Bay Surf Series #6 – Spyder Results 9.28.13

Open MensOpen WomensJuniors (18 & under)
1stMatt Pagen1stNatalie Anzivino1stWill Reid
2ndDayton Silva2ndSara Kohrogi2ndJack Rowan
3rdWill Reid3rdRachel Tominaga3rdCodee Stamis
4thChris Broman4thSue Wilkinson4thCody Purcell
5thTom Seth5thMaddie LaMonaco5thPeter Healey
6thCodee Stamis6thSarah Foley6thKyle Brown
Boys (14 & under)Groms (12 & under)Micro-Groms (9 & under)
1stWill Reid1stZane Booth1stJake Rosenberg
2ndJack Rowan2ndSam Reichel2ndFinn Bertino
3rdKyle Beatty3rdLuke Snyder3rdMiles Gaffney
4thCody Purcell4thSebastian Kuhr4thJoey Samuelian
5thRon Sannes5thKieran Walls5thMatthew Hahn
6thPeter Healey6thBilly Atkinson6thKelly Murphy
Open Longboard (all ages)Masters (40 – 49)Legends (50 +)
1stMike Siordia1stWarren Kushner1stDerek Levy
2ndDave Schaefer2ndChris Rodrigues2ndRoddy Williams
3rdTom Seth3rdScott Whitmer3rdMike Purpus
4thJeremy Porfilo4thTom Seth4thMark Silva
5thHudson Ritchie5thSteve Howe5thJohn Ward
6thEd Solt6thDonny Wilson6thDoug Smith
Junior Girls (18 & Under)Assisted Micro-Groms
1stSara Kohrogi1stWilliam Slay
2ndRachel Tominaga2ndKai Kushner
3rdMaddie LaMonaco3rdJake Chandler
4thJordan Wible4thAustin Moseley
5thChloe Klineman5thGriffin Fields
6thKyralai Duppel6thCallie Rosenberg

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