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kizza into main event supwt

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Created by tha dogman > 9 months ago, 2 May 2011
tha dogman
NSW, 2912 posts
2 May 2011 6:29PM
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just snooped a bit on the net and saw kieran taylors name in the main event at the naish la torche pro stand up world tour event

go the aussie!!!!!!!!

he must have smashed his way thru the trials to get a spot in the big show

if any of you guys find some info about him smash it up here for us to jerk and lurk over

yewwwww kizzzzza!!!!!!!!!!!rock on

laceys lane
QLD, 19803 posts
2 May 2011 6:39PM
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is that the same guy who tore up the roar comp a couple of years ago?

tha dogman
NSW, 2912 posts
2 May 2011 6:45PM
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thats the dude

angourie local

and gets on here very rarely with some wise words of wisdom

laceys lane
QLD, 19803 posts
2 May 2011 6:48PM
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tha dogman said...

thats the dude

angourie local

and gets on here very rarely with some wise words of wisdom


and he surfs a sup the closest to a shortboard i've ever seen

rip, tear, lacerate and bring it on

CMC
QLD, 3954 posts
2 May 2011 7:33PM
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laceys lane said...

tha dogman said...

thats the dude

angourie local

and gets on here very rarely with some wise words of wisdom


and he surfs a sup the closest to a shortboard i've ever seen

rip, tear, lacerate and bring it on


Yep for sure Kieran will do damage, dont be surprised to hear much more of him after this one.

teatrea
QLD, 4177 posts
2 May 2011 8:33PM
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Hes the best ive seen on a sup , followed by James Watson that young fella and that longboard fella.Oh and that other fella who lives at LennoxAnd the pie eating dude further down the road

Casso
NSW, 3768 posts
3 May 2011 11:09AM
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And here is an interview I did with him a few years back:

Kieren Taylor
27 November 2009

By: Andrew Cassidy
Location: Merimbula

After hearing about his impressive win at the Roar Industries comp on the Gold Coast, Australian Paddle Surfer tracked Kieren down at the 2009 Mambo Merimbula Classic where he was living out of his van with his dog. We didn't see Kieren all that often out in the surf over the weekend but when we did, his silky smooth style sure turned a few heads.



Where did you grow up?
Angourie, Northern NSW.

Where do you live now?
Angourie. Just recently I moved back there. I've been all over the place. I lived in Saudi Arabia last year and I was up on the Sunny Coast until about four weeks ago and now I'm back at home again.

What were you doing in Saudi Arabia?
Working as a cloud seeding pilot, doing weather modification, helping them try to increase the annual rainfall by a couple of percent.

So you're a pilot?
Yep, that's my main job. I've been doing that since I was 23. I got my commercial licence then and I've been pretty much flying ever since.

Where do you work here back in Australia?
I've been working for a company on the Sunshine Coast called McDermott Aviation and I was the one fixed-wing pilot in the company doing logistic support for a helicopter operation. They have helicopters over in New Caledonia, one does heavy lift work and the other one is on standby for fire work and if a part breaks or something they get massive fines for not having that aircraft available so it'd be worth them sending the plane that I fly over just to bring a part. So, I was doing a lot of that and flying crews around the place. I do charters as well. I flew Clive Palmer (the fifth richest man in Australia) a few weeks back out to a mine of his. Mostly just charters and logistics for the helicopter operation.

What's your nickname?
Kizza (laughs).

What's your surfing background?
I started surfing at about seven. My dad's from Kauai so I've spent quite a bit of time over there as well. I started paddle surfing about two and a half years ago. My dad was into it, he's a friend of Laird Hamilton's, they're good mates from Kauai, dad's a good windsurfer and knew Laird from those days, so he got me into it and I've been sort of 70 percent stand up since then. I still get on a shortboard when it's good but it seems like it's more fun on the paddle board probably 70 percent of the time. It has to be good barrelling waves for me to get back on the shorty now.

So you haven't really been into longboarding at all?
No never - always shortboarding and now SUP.

Can you run me through your first SUPing session?
It was on the north shore of Kauai, out near the end of the road right in front of my dad's house. It was on a 12 foot Laird and you've got to paddle out through a lagoon to an outer reef, it's a right-hander, pretty good barrelling wave. I didn't really catch much, I was just learning to paddle the board around, it's a big 12 footer and pretty narrow. Even though I didn't get any waves, just the feeling of standing up was a whole new kind of thing and I pretty much got hooked right from the first session. I had two surfs over there on it and then came back to Australia and I've been doing it over here ever since then.

So what are you riding now?
I'm on an 8'6" by 26" by 4" and it's made by a good friend of mine, Woody Jack. He's from Angourie as well and it's an evolution of three boards. We started on a 9'2" and I've had another board since then. We have it on file and we just keep modifying it, just to suit me a bit better each time. It's pretty close to what I want now. It's really good. I'm enjoying it. It's a rounded pintail. I went away from the swallow tail just to get rid of some of the surface area from the back of the board. It's got options for up to five fins. I've ridden it as a quad, as a five fin and as a thruster and I've pretty much settled on the thruster. It just turns tighter; I think rounded pins are good in a paddle board.

What about your best session on a SUP? Where was that?
I've had many good surfs on a SUP. Ummm, the best as far as just having a great time I'd have to say was at a place near home. No one really surfs this place, you're pretty much surfing on rock, at low tide it breaks in about a foot of water and it's just cobblestone rocks but at high tide with the right swell direction you can take off deeper. It's not good for shortboarding, it's always the same ride: you take off, white water rebound, reo, go out for a cutback and then get into the real shallow bit, two reos, another cutback and then pull off, it's almost exactly the same every wave. But I've had one particular day out there when I was just the only person around and it was just a magic surf and a magic day.

You're pretty keen on the comp scene these days?
Yeah, I won the Malfunction two years ago. I also went in the last Malfunction that was held at Snapper. That was probably the one contest that I've been in that's actually had decent waves and I made it to the final. It was a six man final and I got fifth. My dad got third (laughs). My dad's a pretty good paddle boarder. Then I've been in the Malfunction every year since then apart from last year because I was in Saudi. I got back the day of the final so I watched the final that Billy Watson won. Yeah, I'm into the contest scene. It's a good bunch of people. I love it. Now I want to start getting into the open ocean racing stuff, but I haven't actually done any down winders yet (laughs). I really like the idea of being out there riding runners and linking up waves. So that's the next part of it.

What about board design in general, where do you think that's heading?
I don't think it's heading any shorter than say eight foot. I think that's the bottom end of the paddle boards. With the paddle in your hand I look at it like shortboarding and I try to draw lines similar to what you would on a shortboard. You can ride an 8'6" like you might be able to ride a 6'10" shortboard because of the fulcrum and the extended arm with the paddle in the water. If you use the paddle right everything comes together and it's just magic. It's all about the lines that you can draw with a paddle board that makes it unique. It's just something totally different than what you can draw with a shortboard or a longboard.

What about the popularity of the sport? Where's that going in the next two or three years?
One of the beautiful things about paddle boarding is the variety of stuff you can do on them. You've got guys white water rafting on them and at the other end of the spectrum is flat water paddling. On the high tides, I like to go up and just look in the mangroves at fish and all that sort of thing. I think the flat water side of it is going to grow a bit quicker than the surfing side of it.

How's the acceptance of paddle boards on the north coast of NSW?
Obviously, some people have a negative image in their minds about it already and it's hard to break that. I've definitely had some negative comments directed at me around my home town - but each to their own and all that. It happens with all new sports, like kite boarding when it first came out. You have to work yourself into the system. I think paddle boarding is just trying to find its place. It will eventually but I think it's being stifled a little bit right now by the negativity of certain people and the problem is that you get one person that doesn't care on a big board somewhere and they can just do so much damage to the sport. My main motivation is to go around and make people psyched on the sport by being a good ambassador for it, rather than just going out there and trying to get every wave. I just want people to go, "oh, that looks really cool".

Who do you draw on for inspiration in terms of SUP surfing?
Probably Woody Jack - he's a really good paddle boarder. Oh, and my dad, he's good on waves too. But I'd say Woody mostly.

Final question, what do you love most about paddle surfing?
The versatility of the sport and the amount of different areas in the sport that you can explore and the lines that paddle boards draw. There's nothing better than having a section that's not a total close out but it's crumbling a long way in front of you and you can drive the board around and use the momentum and get up onto the white water and just get around sections that you would never be able to make on a shortboard. Just drawing different lines I think, that's what really excites me about the surfing side of it.

Casso
NSW, 3768 posts
3 May 2011 4:43PM
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Looks like Kizza came 3rd in his Round 1 heat of the main event. He will have to get a 1st or 2nd in his repercharge tomorrow to make it into Round 3.

Here's what the draw looks like now:

Casso
NSW, 3768 posts
5 May 2011 11:33AM
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Here's some footage of Round 1 of the SUWT Main Event. No Kizza in this clip but the guy in red on the first wave (I think it's local Frenchman Antoine Delpero) is looking really good.

rahams
NSW, 544 posts
5 May 2011 6:45PM
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sounds like its on now can we watch it?

Casso
NSW, 3768 posts
7 May 2011 11:01PM
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Kai Lenny Wins Again

From www.standupworldtour.com:
The Finals ended in epic fashion here at the Naish La Torche Pro, presented by O'Neill: with two spectacular semi finals that saw Kai Lenny and Antoine Delpero oust Manu Portet and Xabi Lafitte and the other that saw Leco Salazar and Sean Poynter narrowly take out Robin Johnston and Carlos Bahia, the Final was set to be the climactic international showdown that the assembled crowd had hoped for - one American, one Hawaiian, one Brazilian and one Frenchman, the cultural mix had been assured!

As the half hour Finals kicked off, Kai Lenny shifted into overdrive with 2 of the highest scoring waves of the contest right off the bat, comboing all the other finalists within minutes. Leco Salazar then stepped up to put together a couple of great waves to catch up, but not enough to overcome Kai Lenny's impressive debut. Antoine Delpero failed to find the waves or the form from his semi final and quarter final heats, but nonetheless put together a couple of good waves - but again, not enough to overcome Kai's impressive heat total. And finally the American Sean Poynter failed to find the form he had through the event, but did manage to put together a couple of impressive moments through the heat.

So in the end, it was the World Champion and current World rankings leader that stole the show, followed by Brazilian Leco Salazar, France's Antoine Delpero and the American Sean Poynter. An epic close to an epic performance. The final award was the Air Tahiti Nui Biggest move award and in the end, it was Antoine Delpero's incredible boost from the quarter finals that earned the coveted Air Tahiti Nui award, and his free ticket to Tahiti. Congratulations to everyone involved and another chapter is written in the ever evolving story of the Stand Up World Tour.


Kai:


Antoine:


Leco:


Sean:



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"kizza into main event supwt" started by tha dogman