Doheny falls in quarters
Barry Faulkner
One of the things surfers love about their sport is its spontaneity.
From one day to the next, as each set, even each wave, ripples
shoreward, the product of forces generated as far as a continent
away, there exists the promise of perfection.
So too, however, exists the more routine offshore offshoot that
cursed competitors Friday afternoon at the Surfing America USA
championships just south of the Huntington Beach Pier.
Upon waves that provided barely enough propulsion to lift
shore-break waders off the sandy bottom, surfers staked their contest
survival.
So it was that just two days after earning Wednesday’s only
perfect single-wave score of 10 -- in any division -- Newport Beach
resident Andrew Doheny failed to advance out of the quarterfinals of
the under-14 division.
Competing with three other rivals in a 15-minute heat, the
12-year-old Doheny aggressively pursued even the slightest hint of
the smallish foamy crests that most recreational surfers would
routinely dismiss as unridable.
He was the first rider up in the heat and accrued the second-most
“rides” among the four combatants, who were vying for the top two
spots to advance to the semifinals later in the afternoon.
But each “ride” was brief and allowed little more than one turn
off the lip to impress the judges.
His top score, on that aforementioned first wave, was 4.75 (the
average compilation from all judges, with the highest and lowest
marks thrown out). Only one wave in the heat generated a higher score
-- a 5.15 collected by Luke Davis of Capistrano Beach.
But both Davis and Fisher Heverly, from Emerald Isle, N.C.,
matched Doheny’s 4.75 score .
Davis’ 5.15 and 4.75 gave him a total of 9.90 (only the top two
waves for each competitor count) to win the heat.
Heverly added a 4.15 to total 8.90, while Doheny’s second scoring
wave produced a 3.90 score, leaving him with a total of 8.65, third
in the heat.
Clint Richard from League City, Texas, produced just two scoring
rides, the highest of which was 2.0, to finish fourth.
Doheny’s elimination left him with an empty feeling and no desire
to divulge his thoughts in a brief interview moments after he left
the water.
“I’m just bummed,” said the tanned, blond-headed pre-teenager, who
finished second in the Explorer Menehuene division of the National
Scholastic Surfing Association national championships last week.
Davis was sixth in the same division at NSSA nationals.
Doheny’s father, Mike, said the conditions accentuated the
serendipitous nature of competing in timed heats, before a panel of
judges whose scores often reflect vast subjective disparity.
“I have no qualms,” Mike said of the scoring totals. “But with
small waves like this, it makes it tough for all the kids.”
Mike said his son, who will enter the seventh grade at Ensign
Middle School next fall, has no competitive events on the horizon.
“Rest and relaxation,” Mike said in response to a query about
what’s on tap for Andrew in the recent future.
Doheny’s perfect 10 on Wednesday helped him compile 14.25 points,
good enough to win his heat.
Newport Beach resident Sheila Huber was scheduled to compete in
the women’s open division Wednesday, but did not show up, a contest
spokesman said.
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