| TRENT MUNRO
WINS RIP CURL PRO
Australia's Trent Munro today broke
through for his first World Championship Tour (WCT) competition
victory in four years, winning the historic 2005 Rip Curl
Pro at Victoria's Woolamai Beach on Phillip Island.
In clean but at times inconsistent 0.3 to 1 metre (one to
three foot) waves, Munro, the 20th seed, comfortably won today's
30-minute final over top seed and three-time world champion
Andy Irons, of Hawaii, to claim the US$30,000 first prize
and the right to ring the coveted Bell trophy.
Munro caught the opening wave in the final, scoring 6.17 (out
of 10), but Irons' first ride moments later was a very good
7.5. The pair then traded the lead a few times with average
rides, before the Australian caught the best single ride of
the decider at the halfway mark - an 8.57 - and was never
headed.
The 26-year-old from Scotts Head on the NSW north coast posted
a total heat score of 16.57 (out of a possible 20 points)
from his best two rides - an 8.57 and and 8.2 - with Irons
scoring a total of 15.07 from his best two rides, a 7.50 and
a 7.57.
Munro's victory today - only his 2nd WCT event win in five
years among the world's top 50 - also lifted him into the
top spot on the current world ratings, backing up his equal
third place in the year's first WCT contest in Queensland
three weeks ago.
Irons was disappointed to lose but content with the second
place cheque for US$16,000, with his quest for a fourth consecutive
world professional crown in good shape, his equal fifth placing
in Queensland and today's runner-up finish putting him in
third place on the latest world rankings.
Australia's Mick Fanning, who won the opening WCT event of
the year in Queensland, was beaten by Irons in today's Round
of 16, but hangs onto second place in the world rankings.
The 26-year-old Hawaiian's record in the Rip Curl Pro competition
over the past five years is outstanding - runner-up today,
semi-finalist in 2001 and 2004, and Bell-ringing champion
in 2002 and 2003.
Today Irons took out 9th seeded Floridian Damien Hobgood in
the quarter finals, before producing a blistering performance
in the semis - posting 18.96, the second highest heat score
of the event - to knock out his good friend and 14th seed
Cory Lopez, also from Florida and the lone goofy-footer (right
foot forward) in the final four.
On the opposite side of the draw, Munro produced two of the
three best total heat scores of the competition earlier today,
posting a sensational 19.00 in beating West Australian 6th
seed Taj Burrow in the quarter finals, and a brilliant 18.70
in the Round of 16, ending the run of Queensland WCT rookie
Bede Durbridge.
Equal third today went to Byron Bay's Danny Wills, the 16th
seed, and Lopez, who each pocketed US$10,000 for their efforts.
Equal fifth place went to Sydney's Richie Lovett, the 23rd
seed; 9th seeded Floridian Damien Hobgood; 28th seed Darren
O'Rafferty, of Bonny Hills in northers NSW; and West Australian
Taj Burrow, the 6th seed.
Incredibly, not a single heat of the 33rd Rip Curl Pro was
held at its traditional home base at Bells Beach ñ
a first in the competition's history that organisers are hoping
does not happen again for another three decades.
The decision to move to Phillip Island's Woolamai Beach, about
200 kilometres to the east, was forced on organisers earlier
this week when the first seven days of the event's 11-day
waiting period passed without a heat being run due to poor
surf at Bells.
On Monday, officials were faced with a forecast that only
promised contestable surf on Phillip Island on Tuesday, Wednesday
and today, with marathon days on Tuesday and Wednesday allowing
completion of an event that normally takes four full days
to run.
The next event on the Foster's World Championship Tour begins
in Tahiti in early May.
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