|
|
HOME EVENTS Event Reports Hennessey's International Championship: Mitchell Defends Title & Record SUP Field Anticipated
|
Hennessey's International Championship: Mitchell Defends Title & Record SUP Field Anticipated |
|
|
|
|
By: Jodi Wilmott
|
|
Wednesday, 16 July 2008 |
Turtle Bay to Waimea Bay, North Shore, Oahu,
Hawaii
Saturday, July 19th, 2008
Start Time: 11am
Distance: 7 miles
Prize Purse: $15,000
Defending
Champ: Jamie Mitchell (Australia)
HONOLULU -
(Wednesday, July 15, 2008) -- The
$15,000 Hennessey's International Paddleboard Championship will take place on
Oahu's North Shore this Saturday, July 19th. The 7-mile course will feature the
world's top prone and stand-up paddleboard (SUP) racers from the United States,
Australia, Japan, Europe and New Zealand. The race is an open-ocean, near-shore
course that parallels the North Shore's picturesque coastline from Turtle Bay to
Waimea Bay. A record field of 200 paddlers is anticipated.

This will be the fourth time that the Hennessey's
International has been staged in Hawaii, and the third time that it has been
held on the North Shore. The defending champion, Jamie Mitchell (Australia) is
once again the favorite, looking for a clean sweep of the Hawaii summer
paddleboarding season that has so far netted him three victories over courses
ranging from four to 17 miles.
The Hennessey's International is also an
important part of Mitchell's preparation for the long-distance finale to the
Hawaii paddleboard season: the 32-mile race from Molokai to Oahu the very next
weekend.
"This race is as important to me as any," said Mitchell, 31. "We
train so hard yet get to race so little. Four months of intensive training and
sacrifice goes into a season that offers maybe five or six races, so I really
love to race, whatever the distance. Once I'm on the starting line, they're all
important to me. I'm very easily motivated."
Along with Mitchell and the
hard-core, traditional paddleboarding crew, a burgeoning field of stand-up
paddle surfers are also anticipated for this race. Recent short-course races off
Maui and Oahu have each seen more than 100 SUP paddlers take to the water,
reflecting the exponential growth of this new branch of ocean paddling. Cash
prizes will be awarded to both prone and SUP division top finishers, courtesy of
Hennessey's, and C4 Waterman will award product prizes to the top SUP
paddlers.
A full report and results will be distributed at the conclusion
of the race.
A VNR will be delivered to local news stations.
Media contact:
Email:
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
|
|
Latest Event Reports
|
Day One Results: Duke Oceanfest Stand Up Paddle Competition |
HONOLULU - As
the Olympic games takes charge of the international sporting arena, Hawaii's
most famous Olympian and ambassador of Hawaii's greatest gifts to the world --
aloha and surfing -- is at the center of celebrations in his birthplace of
Waikiki: Duke Kahanamoku.
The Duke's OceanFest continued today with the
C4 Waterman/Honolua Surf Stand-Up Paddle (SUP) Surfing competition - a sport
Duke helped pioneer towards the end of his surfing days.
While the sport
first surfaced in Waikiki more than half a century ago, it took a second wave of
popularity for SUP to circle the globe and take center stage back where it all
began.
Today, reflecting the international appeal and dynamic growth of
SUP, the C4 Waterman/Honolua Surf event - part of Duke's annual birthday
celebrations, attracted a record field of 84 entries from as far afield as
Australia and Oregon for the opening day of competition
|
|
Read more...
|
|
|
QuickSilverEdition Molokai to Oahu Race: A first-hand perspective. (Part 1 of 3) |
To be perfectly honest as a life long surfer I never gave distance
paddling or paddle races much thought. Oh sure, I always saw the
occasional big wave charger paddle up and down the North Shore,
training for the winter surf. However, since I was not going after such
insanely big waves myself, I saw no need for such silliness, not to
mention hard work. It certainly did not look like much fun. If I was
going to surf some fairly large waves each winter, wasn’t surfing good
enough training for….er….surfing?
Well, how wrong I was! Little
did I know that this was truly a sport into itself and it took stand up paddle downwind racing for my eyes to be opened to this truly amazing and most
challenging sport. Throughout the summer I watched with increasing
interest many of the downwind races on Oahu. I attended several of
these events and each time came away a little more stoked about what I
saw. I listened with fascination and intrigue as many of my fellow SUP
surfers talked excitedly about doing downwind runs all over the
islands.
|
|
Read more...
|
|
|