Sebastian Ribeiro wins 7 heats in the wave doubles | DAY 8 | GKA MAURITIUS

Friday 13th proved lucky for Sebastian Ribeiro. After a disappointing early exit in round 2 of the single elimination against James Carew, the Brazilian powered through 7 heats in the doubles and now is ready to face James Storm Carew again in the semi-finals !

 



 

Sebastian Ribeiro puts in heroic performance in men’s doubles – Day Eight

Current discipline: Kite-Surf double elimination
Judging Criteria:
Pure wave – 18 minute heats / best 2 waves count from 15 possible waves
Wind: Sideshore 18 -25 knots
Wave conditions: Clean but also peaky, head high to double overhead and often closing out. Demanding at times, glorious at others!

Report: Jim Gaunt
Photos: Svetlana Romantsova 

Roll on Ribeiro
Sebastian bang on

Friday 13th!
Good evening from the Heritage Resort lagoon in Bel Ombre where the men’s double elimination has been rolling hot and heavy today. Friday 13th proved lucky for Sebastian Ribeiro. After a disappointing early exit in round two of the single elimination at the hands of James Carew, the Brazilian powered through seven heats in the double elimination and is lined up to get his chance at revenge: James Carew awaits the re-match tomorrow. Here’s how the last heat of the day went down:

17.40pm – One more scalp to Ribeiro = 7 wins today for the Brazilian!

GKA Kite World Cup Mauritius
In tune and on the right frequency all day

Last heat of the day – round 8: Heat 33
Oswald Smith V Sebastian Ribeiro
The sets looked strong at the start of the heat and Ozzie was the first to strike, a quick one-two combo on an uneven face; big punches from the South African. Looking on from out back Sebastian let a wave pick him up for a better view as he watched Ozzie’s form. He knew the scale of the task at hand, turned back to the horizon and let the big wall roll on by.

The Brazilian took the next wave, did his familiar foot switch, bringing his left foot forward to his favoured backside stance and dropped down. Almost immediately the wave turned into a freak, breaking towards him from both sides. He U-turned sharply to abort and just managed to drive backwards through the wave’s peak before it enveloped him.

A moment later he was dropping in again, this time flowing rhythmically up and down, showing the judges yet again this afternoon his super vertical combinations, extreme in his head-down backside pivot of his top turn – fins free almost every time.

Ozzie found a peak that pinched up oddly into a sharp triangle. He tried to pull under but had to abort, straight lining towards the reef as the face collapsed.

Sebastian had two good scores of 7.27 and 6.47 which gave him a solid 13.74 / 7.37 lead. This fight for the podium still had eight minutes left.

Ozzie wasn’t having any luck finding the longer more shapely rides, but remember Sebastian had been been out there since the morning. Having already ridden six 18 minute heats, he’d seen all states of tide and seemingly knew when to chance a run to the inside and when not to.

7 waves each with 7 minutes to go.

Ozzie, frontside, bailed on two waves in a row that just didn’t steepen up, he popped over the back and looked left to see Sebastian absolutely steaming in on a bomb, maximum pace – but would the peak throw over? No, he had to straight line it as it closed out behind him.

Yet again he found a good one, floated beautifully along a large stretch of white water, took a big drop and immediately banked hard, effortlessly smooth, leaving him to glide almost mechanically around yet another top turn two metres above the shallow reef.

He may only have got two big turns, but it’s his approach, speed control and timing that were making these waves perhaps look more useful than they are.

Friday the 13th, riding lucky heat number 7 of the day – all the headlines are his. Ribeiro raced along one more wave near the end of the heat and pulled in beneath a lip that started pitching. For a second we thought he’d somehow exit the white water like a hero again. But no.

Ozzie had a real good go on a couple at the end, but pushing super hard dropped down off a brutal lip smack and couldn’t stay on the board.

Like a warrior, Sebastian put the day’s final beast to bed, finding the cleanest face of the entire heat and cruised through a few lazy turns. He knew he’d done it and his legs were shot.

Looking over to the rapidly dropping golden sun, his thighs must have been burning hot. From round three onwards, he’d just ridden four consecutive 18 minute back-to-back heats with just a heat’s duration break in between each. He’s gonna need help to walk tonight and once back on the beach said in a complete daze that he’d had to massage his leg while going back upwind because it had stopped working during his last barrel attempt!

Ribeiro wins – 13.74 to 7.37 and will face James Carew next in the semi final. 

SEBASTIAN’S SCALPS

Round 8, heat #33: Oswald Smith
Round 7, heat #32: Jan Marcos Riveras
Round 6, heat #31: Pedro Matos
Round 5, heat #30B: Willow-River Tonkin-Shakes
Round 4, heat #29B: Jeremy Chan
Round 3, heat #27B: Charlie Wise
Round 2, heat #25A: Alessandro D’Ambrosio





 

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