Pro/Am evolution
- Share via
Mike Sciacca
From humble beginnings it has grown into Orange County’s elite Pro/Am
surfing event.
But that metamorphosis is not yet complete, said Seth Matson creator
and director of the Huntington Beach Pro/Am Surf Series.
The series is coming up on the conclusion of its seventh year and
culminates this weekend with its two-day championship event at 1st Street
in Huntington Beach.
As this year winds down, Matson is already gearing up for the next
season and how it can be even bigger and better.
“We’re continuing to grow and anticipate bigger things in 2002,”
Matson said.
The 31-year-old local who went through the Huntington Beach school
system, attended Smith Elementary School, Dwyer Middle School and
graduated from Huntington Beach High School in 1988, debuted the series
in 1994 with Andy Williams and Everett Gesford, who are no longer with
the event. The trio started out with just three divisions of competition
-- boys, juniors and mens. But the event quickly expanded to accommodate
more local athletes who wanted to enter the competition.
There are now nine divisions of competition, with the addition of
super groms, masters, women, longboard, Pro/Am and the XS City Air Show,
which was added this past year.
In 2002 three more divisions will be added to the series, Matson said.
“We will be taking next year’s events to a completely new level,” he
said. “There will be four events held on the south side of the pier and
they will be World Qualifying Series rated, which will double the prize
money.”
The three new divisions fans can expect to see are pro longboards, pro
women and pro juniors, he said.
Each event will be televised and run from Thursday through Sunday, as
opposed to the current format of Saturday and Sunday.
“With a positive response from the city, our sponsors and the
competitors, we plan to build up a great structure for aspiring young
pros all around the world,” Matson said.
Matson has surfed since the sixth grade and was coached by Andy
Verdone at Huntington Beach High. He went on to compete in four or five
contests following graduation but the competition circuit didn’t suit
him. He calls himself more of a “soul surfer.”
“Seth was a strong surfer in high school who always wanted to do
things his way,” Verdone said. “He’s still that way and a very colorful
individual.”
Matson is quick to give credit to his sponsors, Hurley International,
Ron Jon’s Surf Shop and XSCity.com.
“I get a lot of support from them and those companies have helped this
series really take off,” Matson said. “The prizes the winners receive are
awesome.”
Ah, the prizes.
All nine divisions will crown champions this weekend. The first place
overall rated surfer in the Pro/Am division will receive a trip to
Indonesia, courtesy of Hurley International plus a $750 gift certificate
from Ron Jon’s Surf Shop. The first place overall rated surfer in the XS
City Air Show division winner will go to Hawaii, thanks to XSCity.com and
all seven amateur division winners will receive round-trip air fare to
Cabo San Lucas from the Huntington Beach Pro/Am Surf Series. The top four
overall rated amateur surfers also will win custom made trophies as well
as several other prizes.
The series certainly has come a long way since its debut seven years
ago. Matson once worked competitions put on by the Western Surfing Assn.,
which is now defunct.
“The WSA attracted a lot of surfers and in that regard it was much
like the National Scholastic Surfing Assn. competitions,” he explained.
“A couple of years after it folded I realized that there was no type of
competition for local kids to surf. It was then that we came up with the
Huntington Beach Surf Series.”
The series is United States Surfing Federation sanctioned and surfers
in the competition who finish among the top four overall rated are
eligible to surf in the United States Surfing Federation surfing
championships in July.
Jeff Deffenbaugh of the Pro/Am Division is the current ratings points
leader and is looking to wrap up another overall title and win that trip
to Indonesia. Deffenbaugh says he likes competing in the series for many
reasons.
“I grew up in this city and it’s great to have something like this in
my own backyard,” said the 28-year-old and father of two. “There is no
travel involved, I know the conditions out there and I have quite a few
friends who compete here.”
* MIKE SCIACCA is the education and sports reporter. He can be reached
at (714) 965-7171 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.