
Nathaniel Curran : photo Aquashot/ASP Europe
Nathaniel Curran
(Ca, USA), 24, got one step closer to his ASP World Tour qualification
today leaving Lacanau with an impressive 1500 point lead on the
international ratings. Curran, who ended up winning in the last five
minutes of the final battle after chasing Atkinson all the way, brings
the crown back in the family after older brother and former ASP World
Tour surfer Tim Curran (USA) clinched it nine years ago.
"I
remember that look on the face of my brother when he won the event and
I cannot believe I made it", Curran said. "I have been having a few
good results in a row but I am trying not to pay any attention to the
ratings and take it one heat at a time."
Curran, who won the ASP
WQS 6-Star US Open of Surfing in July and placed equal 5th in the ASP
WQS 6-Star Yumeya Billabong Pro in Japan, has become the unstoppable
man of the summer with his result.
"I am overwhelmed at the
moment and just going to enjoy and keep having fun in my heats", Curran
said. "If I can make the ASP World Tour this year I will be just over
the moon. You get the best waves on that tour and this is what I am
thinking about, but it is a long way still."
Nathaniel Curran : photo Aquashot/ASP Europe
Curran, who surfed the same board that gave him the coveted
US Open of Surfing last month, brought progressive and radical surfing
all the way through to his victory against Atkinson.
Dion
Atkinson (AUS), 22, secures his best result to date with his second
place and keeps up the good work after several crucial results.
Atkinson, who led the battle until the last five minutes, was surfing
his first final ever in a main World Qualifying Series (WQS) event and
could not counter Curran's impressive tactics.
"I just made a
few critical mistakes in that last heat", Atkinson said. "I took off on
some waves I should have left and things went his way. We had a good
heat together and I stoked for Nathaniel (Curran)." Atkinson jumps to
No. 26 on the ratings, is slowly moving closer to the Top 15 and now
stands as a serious contender to any opponent.
"I am not looking
at any ratings at the moment and just taking the year as it comes",
Atkinson said. "It is a big result for me but you always want to win
when you make a final. I am still young, lots of events coming up, just
want to keep surfing well and hope things remain as good."
Massive
crowds stood at the water's edge to cheer both finalists during the
final and the impressive level displayed pleased all French people of
this summer Sunday.
Mike Losness (USA), 27, undoubtly the
outsider of the final four, started his Lacanau Pro campaign in Round 2
and got through six heats defeating big names including Dustin Barca
(HAW), ASP Top 45 surfer Leonardo Neves (BRA) and Michel Bourez (PYF)
before losing in Semifinals against fellow American Curran, en route to
his best result of the year
"I wish I could make the final to
improve my equal 3rd in the US Open of Surfing two years ago but I am
happy with that run", Losness said. "I am stoked, I could have lost
days ago and I am in the final day." Losness, who failed to defeat
fellow American Curran, will start in Round 1 of the next event with
great confidence.
"I am happy for Nathaniel and we had a great
heat together", Curran said. "It is not like we struggled, it all came
down to the best surfing, we both got the waves we wanted and it went
his way. In that conditions, I am stoked." Losness will now be one to
watch in all upcoming European events as his confidence boost and great
surfing in Lacanau has made him the "Giant Killer".
"I am not
thinking of any results, points or guys I surf against", Losness said.
"I am already focused on my heat tomorrow in Hossegor and it is the
most important thing from now on. I will be relaxed and take it heat by
heat."
Josh Kerr (AUS), former ASP Top 45 surfer, placed equal
3rd in the event today after offering some of the most progressive
surfing ever seen in Lacanau in years all week. Kerr, who posted two of
the three best heat scores of the week in Lacanau including an
impressive 19.40 point heat tally (out of a possible 20) in Round 6.
"I
am disappointed I did not make it through that one", Kerr said. "It
just did not happen during that semifinal and after such a good week I
was hoping to get another chance. I just cam up short." Kerr, who
attended five events this year on the ASP WQS, has not been thinking of
any ratings yet but was still happy with that 1875 point reward for his
run in Lacanau.
"I am kind of having a part-time year on tour,
just chosing a couple of events here and there", Kerr said. "It will
still be great if I can finish the year in the Top 10. I like competing
and I feel like it is makable. I had some good results in Hossegor so I
am looking forward to it." Kerr will head two hours South to the world
famous beachbreaks of Hossegor and Seignosse with his new No. 15 rank.
Tiago
Pires (PRT), 26, finished equal 5th in the Sooruz Lacanau Pro going
down to Curran in Quarterfinal No. 1 earlier this morning. Pires, who
clinched valuable points and boosted his confiidence again after
becoming the only ASP World Tour member to defeat 8X ASP World Champion
Kelly Slater (USA) this year in the Rip Curl Pro Search “Somewhere”,
but failed to make any firther than Quarterfinals.
"I am pretty
bummed because I gave him that last wave that I thought would close
out", Pires said. "It was a big mistake and he got that score in the
last seconds which is kind of tough to accpet when you are winning the
whole way through." Pires, who made it through five rounds this week,
will climb up the international ratings and move confidently to the
upcoming ASP WQS 6-Star Prime in Hossegor.
"I had a really
tough start in Australia this winter and I am really needing results
now", Pires said. "I am happy with the things going on right now but I
will be looking for some strong results. On both World Tour and WQS."
Pires, rated No. 27 in the world and No. 62 on the WQS, has competed in
five WQS events only this year meaning every single points he gets in
the next two events will count for his overall total.
Final
Heat : Nathaniel Curran (USA) 15.43 pts Def. Dion Atkinson (AUS) 13.67 pts
Semifinals
Heat 1 : Nathaniel Curran (USA) 13.50 pts Def. Mike Losness (USA) 13.04 pts
Heat 2 : Dion Atkinson (AUS) 17.77 pts Def. Josh Kerr (AUS) 11.56 pts
QUARTERFINALS
Heat 1 : Nathaniel Curran (USA) 13.96 pts Def. Tiago Pires (PRT) 13.70 pts
Heat 2 : Mike Losness (USA) 11.60 pts Def. Joel Centeio (HAW) 11.57 pts
Heat 3 : Dion Atkinson (AUS) 15.34 pts Def. Yadin Nicol (AUS) 13.00 pts
Heat 4 : Josh Kerr (AUS) 14.53 pts Def. Greg Emslie (ZAF) 12.50 pts
WQS Ratings after the Sooruz Lacanau Pro
Surfersvillage Global Surf News)
| Curran,Nathaniel |
USA |
1 |
| Davidson,Chris |
AUS |
2 |
| Weare,David |
ZAF |
3 |
| Henrique,Pedro |
BRA |
4 |
| Nicol,Yadin |
AUS |
5 |
| Emslie,Greg |
ZAF |
6 |
| Gudauskas,Patrick |
USA |
7 |
| Paulino,Pablo |
BRA |
8 |
| Courtney,Drew |
AUS |
9 |
| Bettero,Hizunome |
BRA |
9 |
| Garcia,Sunny |
HAW |
11 |
| Kerr,Josh |
AUS |
12 |
| Yeomans,Nathan |
USA |
13 |
| Boal,Tim |
FRA |
14 |
| Lipke,Marlon |
DEU |
14 |
| Monteiro,Raoni |
BRA |
16 |
| Simpson,Brett |
USA |
17 |
| Atkinson,Dion |
AUS |
18 |
| Robertson,Adam (Vic) |
AUS |
19 |
| Muscroft,Nic |
AUS |
20 |
| Ware,Austin |
USA |
21 |
| Sedley,Leigh |
AUS |
22 |
| Gossmann,Shaun |
AUS |
23 |
| Kling,Gabe |
USA |
24 |
| Melling,Adam |
AUS |
25 |
| Cansdell,Shaun |
AUS |
26 |
| Centeio,Joel |
HAW |
27 |
| Cuizon,Dustin |
HAW |
27 |
| Barca,Dustin |
HAW |
29 |
| Bacalso,Kekoa |
HAW |
30 |
| Bourez,Michel |
PYF |
31 |
| Khodr,Jihad |
BRA |
32 |
| Romao,Simao |
BRA |
33 |
| Dornelles,Rodrigo |
BRA |
34 |
| Hedge,Nathan |
AUS |
35 |
| Bombaci,Rhys |
AUS |
36 |
| Zubizarreta,Gony |
ESP |
37 |
| Pires,Tiago |
PRT |
38 |
| Flintoff,Kirk |
AUS |
39 |
| Sodre,Yuri |
BRA |
40 |
| Gudauskas,Dane |
USA |
41 |
| Silva,Andre |
BRA |
42 |
| Wilkinson,Matt |
AUS |
43 |
| Hall,Glenn |
IRE |
44 |
| Andre,Jadson |
BRA |
45 |
| Losness,Mike |
USA |
46 |
| Coutinho,Odirlei |
BRA |
47 |
| Savalli,Hugo |
REU |
48 |
| Wright,Warwick |
ZAF |
49 |
| Beven,Patrick |
FRA |
50 |
| Fahrenfort,Damien |
ZAF |
51 |
| Thompson,Jay |
AUS |
52 |
| Ward,Shaun |
USA |
53 |
| MacDonald,Phillip |
AUS |
54 |
| Duru,Joan |
FRA |
55 |
| Barron,T.J |
HAW |
56 |
| Collazo,Hodei |
ESP |
57 |
| Galvao,Renato |
BRA |
57 |
| Miranda,Bernardo |
BRA |
59 |
| Ziems,Corey |
AUS |
60 |
| Neves,Leonardo |
BRA |
61 |
| Toth,Brian |
PRI |
62 |
| Silva,Jean da |
BRA |
63 |
| Bastos,Leandro |
BRA |
64 |
| Souza,Adriano de |
BRA |
65 |
| Howse,Jarrad |
AUS |
66 |
| Geiselman,Eric |
USA |
67 |
| Thornton,Blake |
AUS |
68 |
| Wilson,Blake |
AUS |
69 |
| Dantas,Wiggolly |
BRA |
70 |
| Riou,Alain |
PYF |
71 |
| Rothman,Makuakai |
HAW |
72 |
| Ohno,Masatoshi |
JPN |
73 |
| Bortoletto,Antonio |
ZAF |
74 |
| Laulhe,Romain |
FRA |
74 |
| Rebiere,Eric |
FRA |
76 |
| Spencer,Sterling |
USA |
77 |
| Alves,Heitor |
BRA |
78 |
| Campbell,Ryan |
AUS |
79 |
| Cardoso,Willian |
BRA |
80 |
| Padaratz,Neco |
BRA |
81 |
| Page,Sam |
AUS |
82 |
| Payne,Dusty |
HAW |
83 |
| Hansen,Bobby |
NZL |
84 |
| Coleborn,Mitchel |
AUS |
85 |
| Fisher,Paul |
AUS |
86 |
| Gonzalez,Jonathan |
CNY |
86 |
| Perry,Jack |
AUS |
88 |
| Gudauskas,Tanner |
USA |
89 |
| Palmboom,Rudy (jnr) |
ZAF |
90 |
| El Harim,Abdel |
MAR |
91 |
| Quinn,Jay |
NZL |
92 |
| Waring,Chris |
USA |
93 |
| Logie,Travis |
ZAF |
94 |
| Sullivan,Jarrad |
AUS |
95 |
| Roberts,Gavin |
ZAF |
96 |
| Estienne,Jean Sebastien |
BLM |
97 |
| Lopez,Cory |
USA |
98 |
| Gillette,Gavin |
HAW |
99 |
| Santos,Robson |
BRA |
100 |
(
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