Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Sunday, December 22, 2024 74° Today's Paper


Hawaii News

Epic Eddie

1/2
Swipe or click to see more
COURTESY WORLD SURF LEAGUE
2/2
Swipe or click to see more

DENNIS ODA / DODA@STARADVERTISER.COM

John John Florence got some air on a wave during the second round at the Quiksilver in Memory of Eddie Aikau big-wave surf contest Thursday.

The waves at Waimea Bay rose like angry, 60-foot monsters Thursday, ripping surfboards from their leashes and sending spectators scrambling out of the wash as the Quiksilver in Memory of Eddie Aikau finally went off for only the ninth time in 30 years.

After teasing surf fans with a false start two weeks ago, the “Eddie” delivered.

“Oh my God, it was awesome, brother,” said Elton Yu, 39, of Kailua, who took his three “straight-A” daughters — ages 9, 13 and 15 — out of their Kailua public schools to try to see their first Eddie for the second time this month.

It was worth it, Yu said.

“It was breathtaking,” he said. “Exciting. An epic experience. Oh my God, I’m so excited I can’t even think of the words.”

“It was unbelievable, a lot of good waves coming in. I’m just so stoked to be surfing in it, and to end it like this is amazing. I can’t believe this day.”

John John Florence
Before being called onstage to accept his winner’s check for $75,000

Aikau’s younger brother, Clyde, addressed the crowd that packed the shoreline. “Today has to be one of the best days I’ve seen in 40 years,” said Clyde Aikau, who won the tournament in 1986. He then entered the water for his last “Eddie” at age 66 and took a nasty tumble on his first wave.

Haleiwa’s John John Florence, 23, one of the youngest competitors in the contest, won in a come-from-behind victory after trailing Ross Clarke-Jones and Shane Dorian in the first of two rounds. Competing with 27 other big-wave surfers, Florence flirted with the lead in the second round, temporarily falling behind Dorian but charging back with scores of 88 and 89 out of 100.

“We’re on the limits of what’s possible for Waimea,” said Jodi Wilmott, general manager of the World Surf League Hawaii, marveling at the waves.

The National Weather Service said North Shore waves ranged from 40 to 55 feet. But Strider Wasilewski spent the day on the water on a personal watercraft as part of the World Surf League’s broadcast team and described the avalanche-size waves as “60-foot faces and sometimes bigger.”

Several waves “closed out” Waimea Bay, meaning they broke along the entire length of the bay at once and were unridable.

Wilmott estimated the crowd at Waimea Bay at 25,000.

“It’s max packed,” she said.

Uncounted others lined Kamehameha Highway, causing traffic to crawl across the North Shore.

Honolulu police spent all day urging pedestrians to keep moving along Kamehameha Highway, instead of stopping to take pictures of the action in the water.

Part of the adventure

Just staying dry on shore proved tricky.

Julie Negron of Kapolei, her husband, Keir, and their three friends arrived at midnight, waited for Waimea Bay beach park to open at 5 a.m. and then got tossed by a wave while watching the meet along the shoreline, losing three iPhones and a pair of slippers in the process.

“It’s all part of the adventure,” Julie Negron said.

Soaked, the group walked back to their car to regroup but planned to return.

“Oh, yeah,” Keir Negron said. “I took two days off (from work) for this.”

Lifeguards repeatedly told spectators to watch their children, be prepared to run to higher ground and to get out of the area near the mouth of the Waimea River as huge waves rolled onto shore.

Aikau’s siblings — sister Myra and brother Solomon — asked the competitors over the public address system to look out for one another in the pounding surf.

“Safety first,” they both said.

Hawaii’s Mark Healey later told the World Surf League that he got “hogtied” by his leash during one wipeout that caused a welt on his calf and forced him to activate a CO2 cartridge that inflated his safety vest.

Healey held the fingers of both hands together to describe the size of the welt.

Honoring Brock Little

The invitation-only meet always stirs emotions regarding Eddie Aikau, the original North Shore lifeguard who was never found after jumping onto a surfboard to find help for his crew mates when the voyaging canoe Hokule‘a capsized off Molokai in 1978.

Aikau’s sacrifice gave birth to the legacy that lives on today, “Eddie Would Go.”

But Thursday’s meet also honored another North Shore lifeguard and big-wave rider, Brock Little, who died of cancer Feb. 18.

Event organizers referred to Thursday’s surf as “The Brock Swell.”

Little was 19 when he was invited to the first Eddie in 1986, and later finished as runner-up in 1990. A surfboard that Little rode in the single-day 1990 competition was placed near a monument to Eddie Aikau at Waimea Bay.

Along Kamehameha Highway outside Sts. Peter and Paul Mission, broken surfboards were lined up and hand-painted with letters to read, “BROCK ON.”

Worth the wait

Previously, the Quiksilver in Memory of Eddie Aikau has been run eight times and was last held Dec. 8, 2009.

Event organizers will hold an Eddie only when the waves are consistently clean and at about 40 feet during the daytime for at least six to eight hours.

The Eddie got its last green light Feb. 10 but was quickly called off when Eddie-worthy waves failed to materialize and wind conditions were less than ideal.

Danica Quevedo, a 21-year-old nursing senior at the University of Hawaii, and her cousin Jeremy Garo, 23, both of Mililani, were disappointed when they came out to Waimea Bay to see their first Eddie on Feb. 10.

They returned Thursday because the Eddie represents “one of my life goals,” Quevedo said. “It was amazing. It was more than expected. The waves just got bigger and bigger. It was worth the wait.”

Yu, the dad who pulled his three daughters out of school to see their first Eddie, described the sound and force of the punishing waves as “earth-shattering.”

He knows that other parents might not agree with his decision to spend a school day with his kids on the North Shore, but he felt justified.

“Even though people may look at it negatively,” Yu said, “this experience as a family only happens once in a lifetime. It’s all about the ocean, the free spirit and honoring a Hawaii legend.”

Staff writer Nick Abramo contributed to this report.

14 responses to “Epic Eddie”

  1. manakuke says:

    For many a ‘once in a lifetime’ event.

  2. Tita Girl says:

    Congratulations to John John and all of the Eddie participants. Special shout out to Clyde Aikau. At 66 years old, your skills are still amazing many of us. What an inspiration!

  3. Kakolika says:

    Elton Yu = Great Dad. School or a maybe once-in-a-lifetime Eddie? To me, the decision is a no-brainer. His daughters would never remember what they would have done if they went to school yesterday, but they’ll always remember seeing an epic Eddie.

  4. Maipono says:

    Great event! Amazing rides and the spirit of Eddie and Brock was alive and enjoying the day. John John’s win was amazing, saw the one wave where it closed out and he became engulfed in tons of ocean, only to emerge, still standing. That’s not humanly possible, he had to be helped by Eddie and Brock.

  5. leino says:

    The Eddie is such a special event for so many reasons not the least of which it demonstrates how important the ocean is in our lives. So many people connect with the energy and life in the ocean in so many different ways and the contest pulls these people together to celebrate. Including TV links the Triple Crown got 15 million people connected. Lets get 25,000 people together for an Island wide beach clean up!! …. Or think big how about cleaning up the Pacific ocean.!!

  6. KWAY says:

    For those Hindsight Harry’s who criticized Quiksilver for all the no-go’s in Jan/Feb, I hope you didn’t get to see the event. More out of a sense of poetic justice than just being mean, all of your smug vitriol and childish impatience made you undeserving of witnessing what took place at Waimea yesterday. Kudos to contest officials for not bending to all the idiots that took shots at you for sticking to the high level criteria that Eddie himself wouldve never allowed be compromised. Mahalo.

  7. maafifloos says:

    Any bathrooms??!!

  8. Racoon says:

    Thank you Mr. Dennis Oda for all those beautiful photos. It takes hard work to haul all that camera equipment all over the bay patiently waiting for the perfect shots so far away on a cloudy overcast day with dim lighting. You brought the real exciting experience to all of us who worked, went to school, or didn’t want to fight the traffic. I watched the show on sports TV, and it was sooooo boring waiting for the ridable waves to arrive. Lots of entertainment with interviews and super wide angle lens showing the entire bay full of colorful people. Mahalo to all of you wonderful folks for your efforts to share the experience.

  9. latenightroach says:

    This 2016 Eddie was purely magical. Those of you who surf or really know this sport know exactly what I mean. The strict criteria is what keeps the mystique and prestige of this event so special and meaningful to honor Eddie Aikau. Definitely worth the wait. Such an honor just to be invited. Win it & you’re on top of the surfing world and become a legend with your place in history. Congrats to John John, bringing home the win. This kid can shred a 2 foot wave to pieces or go out and make surfing giant waves look too easy. So much talent. Big kudos to Kelly Slater who was on a mission to get barreled in honor of Brock Little and pulled it off. And Clyde Aikau…66 years old and surfing out there at gigantic Waimea. What a blessing this Eddie was, it just doesn’t get any better than this.

Leave a Reply