This summer has been the best in years for town surf. This contest was awesome. The surf and the surfing were way better than at J-Bay.

Flynn Novak : photo Bernie Baker
Macy's E-Series
presented by ASP Hawaii
ASP 1 Star WQS Mens event
South Shore Oahu, Hawaii
16 July 2008
Pro Series Ends on All-time HI for Summer Surf | Flynn Wins, Jaquias HI-scores
Surfersvillage Global Surf News, 17 July, 2008 : - -
Honolulu - Tagged as the greatest day ever for professional surfing on
the South Shore of Oahu, and one of the best days of the 2008 World
Qualifying Series Tour, the professional portion of the Macy's E-Series
presented by ASP Hawaii ended on an all-time high today. Haleiwa's
Flynn Novak was the victory, pocketing $2,500; second went to Bowls
local David Gonsalves (Honolulu); third was Jason Shibata (Haleiwa);
and fourth was veteran competitor Kaipo Jaquias (Lihue, Kauai).
Saving the best for the very last day of the nine-day holding
period, Bowls turned on and pumped out waves with machine-like
consistency. Wave face heights of six- to eight-feet stacked up before
barreling and walling off all the way through to the Waikiki boat
harbor entrance. The top of the swell peaked during the semi-finals
where the average scoring ride for all competitors across the board
came in at 9.25 points out of a possible 10 - a first for pro surfing
here in Hawaii.
But the surfer's paradise was a judge's hell as four surfers
at a time fired off a rapid succession of rides in heat after heat,
round after round. Three perfect 10-point wave scores were reserved for
Evan Valiere (Kauai, round three), Gonsalves (quarter finals), and
Novak (semi-finals). The highest two-wave heat total went to Jaquias:
19.65 points in his semi-final heat (9.85 and 9.8 points).
It was a memorable day for the finalists - Novak, 25, scoring
his first pro victory at a break he never surfs because none of the
local crowd will ever give him a wave; for 36-year-old Gonsalves, who
hasn't been in a final since 1995 but changed all that today riding his
15-year-old daughter's board; and for Jaquias, also 36, whose last
final was a decade ago. For 19-year-old Shibata, today was just one
more step in the direction of a stellar career that is rapidly
unfolding.

Kaipo Jaquias : photo Bernie Baker
Novak was the lone goofy-footer in the 30-minute final and
capitalized on the better waves by locking into lengthy tube rides
before systematically shredding his rides to pieces. The blistering,
vertical back-side attack of his rivals was barely kept at an arm's
length and Novak was just fortunate to secure the larger set waves that
tipped the scales in his favor. The final score-line showed 16.85 out
of 20 for Novak (9.1, 7.75); 15.1 for Gonsalves (8.5, 6.6); 15 for
Shibata (7.5, 7.5); and 13.3 for Jaquias (7.25, 6.05).
"It came down to surfing," said Novak. "I didn't battle with
anybody the whole time and usually I'm kind of a snake in heats. This
was nerve-wracking enough just seeing perfect waves go by and having
the chance to actually get them. Me being white and blonde, I can't
even surf out here unless it's over six or eight feet because that's
about the only time I can get a wave. I surfed out here once about a
week ago and I remembered why I never come out. This was just a treat.
"I've never surfed waves this good, besides maybe Pipeline.
It's not very often you get nines in every single heat you're in and
I've never gotten a 10 before. Every single heat was like a final in
itself." Flynn's average wave score from quarters through the final was
9.0.
For Gonsalves, leaving his daughter surfboard-less on the best
day of surf this year meant he had to make good of the opportunity. "I
order boards that work for the both of us - save money," said
Gonsalves.
"Before it came down to the final, in the early rounds, I was
thinking about me and Kaipo being in the final - and probably the
heaviest guys too! And the oldest on top of it! I kind of thought it
would happen and it did. I was stoked. For this size (of waves), it's
as good as it gets."
Putting the day's action into global perspective was full-time
touring professional ASP judge Dave Shipley: "This is the best day of
competitive surfing I've seen this year. The waves we've seen today and
the level of surfing is as good as anything you could possibly witness
in professional surfing."
This was the second and final men's
pro event of the Macy's E-Series. The third and final event of the
Series will be a Grade 1-Junior Pro that will be held at Kuhio Beach,
Waikiki, on August 18.
ASP Hawaii and Macy's collaborated to
produce the Macy's E-Series, giving Hawaii's pro surfing community a
much needed opportunity to win valuable WQS points at home breaks.
These points will count towards qualification for the 2008 Vans Triple
Crown of Surfing and the 2009 elite World Championship Tour.
RESULTS:
Surfers in each heat listed in order of 1st through 4th place.
Final:
1st: Flynn Novak (Haleiwa), $2,500
2nd: David Gonsalves (Honolulu), $1,000
3rd: Jason Shibata (Haleiwa), $800
4th: Kaipo Jaquias (Lihue, Kauai), $700
Semi-Finals: 3rd place =5th and $600, 4th place =7th and $500
SF1: Kaipo Jaquias (Lihue, Kauai), Flynn Novak (Haleiwa, HI), Randall Paulson (Honolulu, HI), Kekoa Cazimero (Waimanalo, HI)
SF2: David Gonsalves (Honolulu, HI), Jason Shibata Haleiwa, HI), Joel Centeio (Haleiwa, HI), Daniel Jones (Honolulu, HI)
Quarter Finals: 3rd place = 9th and $400, 4th place =13th and $300
QF1: Flynn Novak (Haleiwa, HI), Kekoa Cazimero (Waimanalo, HI), Dustin Cuizon (Ewa, HI), Makuakai Rothman (Haleiwa, HI)
QF2: Kaipo Jaquias (Lihue, HI), Randall Paulson (Honolulu, HI), TJ Barron (Haleiwa, HI), Edrick Baldwin Jr. (Honolulu, HI)
QF3: Daniel Jones (Honolulu, HI), Jason Shibata (Haleiwa, HI), Wesley Larsen (Lahaina, Maui), Brennan Boudreau (Kapolei, HI)
QF4: Joel Centeio (Haleiwa, HI), David Gonsalves (Honolulu, HI), Evan Valiere (Kilauea, Kauai), Kekoa Bacalso (Mililani, HI)
I finally figured out the only reason to be alive is to enjoy it.