Photos: Rip Curl Cup // Warm Up

Reigning Rip Curl Cup champion Clay Marzo

By Stu Nettle (stunet)

Last week, an expansive low in the Indian Ocean put surfers in Western Australia and all of Indonesia on notice.

Thursday morning saw very large waves at select bommies down south, though there was only a short window of good winds. Besides core strength, the low extended far up into the northern reaches of the Indian Ocean, almost to tropical latitudes, assisting delivery to NW WA and Indonesia, the eastern end in particular.

With the swell ticking the size box, the organisers of the Rip Curl Cup at Padang Padang started asking the hard questions.

However, in the face of great conditions, forecaster Craig Brokensha demurred:

"While most of the charts showed the swell peaking in Bali on Saturday, the reality of the timing was that the swell was due to kick strongly on Friday afternoon, peak overnight, and then ease steadily Saturday while going more south in direction."

"With big midday high tides, the window for a full day of competition was never going to co-operate."

He gave it the thumbs down and the organisers followed suit. As it happened, late on Friday the swell reached 10ft+ late at exposed reefs. Around the corner at Padang, the sets were 4-6ft and sparkling in the late arvo light; the tide was draining, while the trades airbrushed clean the sets.

By Saturday morning, however, the swell was already on the wane, and with the tide coming in and swell swinging more south, that was all she wrote at Padang Padang. A great swell, but unfortunate timing for the contest.

There was some salvation with a three-hour warm up session at Padang, featuring 18 of the 24 invitees split into three hour-long sessions. 

The swell forecast remains active, however the next possible Padang swell isn't likely till late next week. Working as the comp forecaster, Craig's watching it closely and will give updates as the date draws nearer.

14-year old Dylan Wilcoxen leans into the bowl

Kailani Johnson

Rather than a fade or stall to link barrel sections, Koa Smith hit the open face

Lidia Kato

Classic style from Made 'Bol' Adi Putra

Mason Ho

Miguel Blanco hard off the bottom

Taj Burrow

Comments

Sprout Monday, 7 Aug 2023 at 12:08 pm new

Tincan Monday, 7 Aug 2023 at 05:45 pm new

Koa Smith acts like a schoolgirl. “Omg, omg” ad nauseam

quokka Wednesday, 9 Aug 2023 at 06:19 pm new

Fuck he's annoying

Joshy Moore Monday, 7 Aug 2023 at 02:47 pm new

Craigos the guru!!!

Craig Monday, 7 Aug 2023 at 03:31 pm new

I think the hardest calls forecasting are these kind of calls.

Where everything is saying it'll be a goer, but when looking at the source of the swell, alignment, timing, and the particulars for the break like tide and angle, it's not as good as one would think simply looking at the charts and virtual buoys.

Everyone can see a large, pumping swell coming, but to point out the cons is the hard bit.

Stoked, thanks.

Sprout Monday, 7 Aug 2023 at 04:05 pm new

Full moon tides don't help! 0.25m low in Fiji was sketchyyyyy.

Lanky Dean Tuesday, 8 Aug 2023 at 04:37 am new

Sounds like a tough gig,

Queef Jerky Tuesday, 8 Aug 2023 at 07:03 pm new

Even though Padang2 is one of the most famous waves in Indo, it's a fickel bitch to predict!
This consistency is rare!

zenagain Monday, 7 Aug 2023 at 02:49 pm new

Watched the Koa Smith vid last night- Marzo's tube a 5:12 is insane.

dandandan Monday, 7 Aug 2023 at 03:03 pm new

Such an incredible tube rider. Seeing him surf that part of the board, you know he must have been flying. And given the tubes I've seen him get without giving himself a little clap at the end, I imagine it must have felt really good tood!

Lanky Dean Monday, 7 Aug 2023 at 10:37 pm new

Parang seems like it breaks properly 5 times a year ?

canetoad Tuesday, 15 Aug 2023 at 02:21 pm new

OMG OMG OMG
OOOOOH AAAAH
OMG OMG
YEAH
NAH
GOOSE

udo Friday, 2 Aug 2024 at 09:07 pm new