4 February, 2013 4 February, 2013

Twiggy Baker Announced As Finalist For Oakley Big Wave Awards

Grant ‘Twiggy’ Baker is never far from the headlines in the big wave surfing world, and he’s just been announced as a finalist in Australia’s most prestigious big wave surfing competition.

His massive, slabbing barrel at West Oz’s infamous and downright scary slab called ‘The Right’, is in the running for ‘Biggest Slab’ award at the Oakley Big Wave Awards. Twiggy faces off against four other crazy rides, unsurprisingly all from the same location – The Right.

Check out the other finalist here>>

Twiggy's wave at 'The Right' in Western Australia, which could see him claiming his share of the AUS$35 000 in prizemoney.

Twiggy’s wave at ‘The Right’ in Western Australia, which could see him claiming his share of the AUS$35 000 in prizemoney.

Press Release, Sat 2 February 2012 – Australia’s most prestigious huge-surf challenge is once again up for grabs, along with $35,000 in prizemoney, as the finalists have been announced in Surfing Life’s Oakley Big Wave Awards.

Huge, crazy rides have been thrown into the mix from renowned big-wave chargers like former Awardees Tyler Hollmer-Cross and Marti Paradisis, South African international Big Wave hero, Grant ‘Twiggy’ Baker and rising paddle-in star, Jeff Rowley. But these well-known watermen are facing stiff opposition from underground hell-men like the West Australian trio of Chris Shanahan, Chris Ross and Cale Grigson, not to mention a man who goes solely by the name of Camel!

Grant ‘Twiggy’ Baker, one of the world’s top mega-surf hunters, secured his Biggest Slab entry at the infamous break known only as The Right, miles off the South-West Australian Coast. “I flew in from South Africa just to try and surf it this wave, but on the day, everyone else had pulled out, saying it was going to be too big and windy. When we arrived it looked massive and, to me, totally unsurfable, as I have never seen a wave like it before… but then that wave came through, a massive dark line on the ocean. It was pouring with rain by now but we knew immediately that it was by far the biggest set we had seen all day. The wave itself is a blur. All I could do was get as much speed as possible and aim for the shoulder. I was going so fast it took everything I had just to stay on the board and set a rail. The view for those few seconds in the barrel was almost comical. It’s by far the biggest barrel I have ever looked out of and the heaviest single wave I have surfed.

“I fell on my next wave as I was coming out of the barrel at full speed and it felt like I had broken my neck and had both my arms ripped off. I had to pull the cord on my inflatable wetsuit to come up just before a two-wave hold down.”

Paul ‘Antman’ Paterson, Baker’s West Australian tow partner for this session, was the next to catch a wave. This wave would also thrust ‘Antman’ into contention for the Biggest Slab Award, but almost kill him in the process.

Baker explains, “Paul fell on the next wave I towed him into, which was even bigger than mine. The whole thing shut down on him. He didn’t have an inflatable wetsuit and the wave following also broke directly on top of him before he could make it up. He only came up in the swell of the third wave. He was totally delirious and unable to swim or acknowledge me. I had to pull him onto the sled and repeatedly scream at him to hold on as we made for the channel. I firmly believe that if the third wave had been more than just a swell, he would have drowned out there in the middle of the ocean.”

From international flights, jet-ski trips to far-flung reef breaks and near drownings, to a man known solely as ‘Camel’ who has never tow-surfed in his life, yet has a monstrous nomination in both the Biggest Wave and Biggest Paddle-In categories for the same wave.

‘Camel,’ full name Jeffree Goulden, is a man who has put his whole existence into surfing. From year’s spent in the jungles of Indonesia hunting perfect tropical barrels, to living out of the back of his car chasing uncrowded, and notoriously sharky surf along Australia’s coast, to this solo session at a deep-sea bombie, far off the West Australian coast.

“It was only Jamie (photographer) and I out there, trying to get some waves before the wind came up. I like the isolated waves, things get a bit crazy if you’re in a crowded place. I wish I’d had a better shot at this spot though; I wanted to be deeper… I want to better it for sure!”

Considering the enormity of Camel’s entry and its strong presence in two of the three award’s categories, we can only wait with bated breath for him to better an entry as crazy as this.

This year’s finalists have again been decided through a surfer poll in which every surfer who’s ever registered for an Award entry was asked to vote for the top few rides in each of the three divisions: Biggest Wave, Biggest Slab, and Biggest Paddle-in Ride. This voting method is endemic to Surfing Life’s Oakley Big Wave Awards and provides the surfers with the power.

“We felt the surfers themselves were the best judges of each other’s performances,” explained event coordinator Nick Carroll. “They know these wild surf zones better than anyone else and they have a clear view of the challenge involved. We were stoked with the way they responded! They’ve come up with an epic group of finalists, that’s for sure.”

Biggest Wave, Biggest Slab, and Biggest Paddle-In rides are now in the hands of the finalist judges – an elite international panel of big wave maestros – and they’ll be stretched to pick the winners out of an unprecedented range of entries.

A number of impressive sessions in a year of consistent swell has seen a colossal total of 50 entries, which have now been whittled down to 14 entries between 13 surfers across the 3 categories.

The Awards have come to highlight a side of surfing that’s way beyond both the recreational mainstream and the professional competitive arena – a zone where seemingly normal people take seemingly outlandish risks, with seemingly little concern for fame or renown.

Surfing Life’s Oakley Big Wave Awards will be presented at a super, spectacular, celebrity-studded evening at Simmer on the Bay, Dawes Point, Sydney on February 13th, 2013.

www.bigwaveawards.com.au/

 

FINALISTS:

BIGGEST WAVE
• Tyler Hollmer-Cross, Shipstern Bluff –  Video: Laif Johansan, Image: Andrew Chisholm, Image: Andrew Hoult, Image: Dave Otto
• Marti Paradisis, Pedra Branca – Video: Mikey Brennan, Image: Andrew Chisholm
• Jeff ‘Camel’ Knight, Cow Bombie – Image: Jamie Scott
• Paul ‘Antman’ Paterson, Cow Bombie – Image: Russell Ord
• Danny Griffiths, Pedra Branca – Image: Andrew Chisholm

BIGGEST SLAB
• Paul ‘Antman’ Paterson, The Right – Image: Russell Ord
• Grant ‘Twiggy’ Baker, The Right – Image: Russell Ord
• Chris Ross, The Right – Image: Spencer Hornby
• Cale Grigson, The Right – Image: Russell Ord
• Chris Shanahan, The Right – Image: Chris Ross

BIGGEST PADDLE-IN
• Leroy Rust, Papatowai – Video: Ted Whitaker
• Jeff Rowley, Albatross – Image/Video: Minnie Vuong
• James Hick, Secret Spot South Australia – Image: Jacob Wooden
• Paul Morgan, Cow Bombie – Image: Russell Ord
• Jeff ‘Camel’ Goulden, Cow Bombie – Image: Jamie Scott

1 Comment

  1. Craig-O
    4 February, 2013 at 6:00 pm · Reply

    Camel surfs big/bigger (doesn’t get massive) G Land really well and has it wired! No wonder he’s charging these other big wave spots.
    Craigo

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