Mexico’s Jhony Corzo Crowned Men’s ISA World Champion at 2017 ISA World Surfing Games, Joan Duru (FRA) wins Silver, Pedro Henrique (POR) Bronze, Jonathan González (ESP) Copper

Ver Noticia en Español

Biarritz celebrates France’s Team Gold Medal, Team Portugal earns Silver, Spain Bronze, Mexico Copper

ATTENTION MEDIA: For daily photos, video highlights and video news releases, visit http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/media/

To view full results, visit: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/results/

For full team ranking, visit: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/pdf/team-points-wsg-2017-finals.pdf

A historic week of competition at the 2017 ISA World Surfing Games in Biarritz, France concluded on Sunday as an edition to go down in the record books. Mexico’s 18-year-old prodigy Jhony Corzo earned the Gold Medal in the Open Men’s Division, the first-ever individual Medal for Team Mexico that also propelled his team to their first Medal in history with the overall Copper.

IMG_8728_crop
Mexico’s Jhony Corzo soaks in the pride of being crowned ISA World Champion. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans

2017 ISA World Surfing Games Gold Medalist, Jhony Corzo said:

“It’s an amazing feeling to be crowned World Champion! I don’t have words for it. This is something that I wanted ever since I was young and started surfing. This is my first time competing in the ISA World Surfing Games and I got the Gold. It’s a dream come true.”

Rounding out the podium for the Open Men’s Division were France’s Joan Duru with the Silver Medal, Portugal’s Pedro Henrique with the Bronze Medal, and Spain’s Jonathan González with the Copper Medal.

Team France got off to a blazing start in the week-long competition with the dominant Gold and Silver Medal performances of Pauline Ado and Johanne Defay in the Women’s Division on May 22. The French Men also dominated their side of the competition, complementing their Gold Medal that was clinched after Saturday’s competition with the individual Silver Medal of Duru and Semifinal finish of Jeremy Flores.

Closing_Ceremony_ISA_Ben_Reed-43
The host country France claims the Gold Medal after an excellent performance from all their surfers in Biarritz. Photo: ISA / Ben Reed

Team Portugal earned the Team Silver Medal for an impressive third consecutive year. Team Spain finished their solid run in the event with the Bronze Medal and Team Mexico took the Copper, their first time standing on the medal podium in the event’s history.

ISA President Fernando Aguerre, said:

“Congratulations to the Team Gold Medalist, Team France, and the individual Gold Medalists Jhony Corzo and Pauline Ado. Jhony and Pauline will stake their names in history as ISA World Champions crowned in Biarritz along with legendary surfer Tom Curren. As all the other ISA competitors, they surfed in true Olympic spirit, for the honor of representing their countries.

“Forty-seven nations came together from around the world to surf in this record-breaking ISA World Surfing Games for a phenomenal week of surfing and team camaraderie. We are watching the sport grow before our eyes, with excellent surfers coming from all five continents and many new nations joining the international Surfing family. In three years’ time, we will look back on this moment and remember which Olympians in Tokyo 2020 competed in this edition of the event.”

Sunday morning kicked off with waist to chest high waves and clean conditions at Grande Plage. The Open Men’s first Semifinal took to the water where Mexico’s Jhony Corzo ignited his run for Gold. After falling behind early, Corzo found a combo of waves that gave him a heat total of 13.70 and sent him into the Final along with Portugal’s Pedro Henrique. France’s Jeremy Flores was unable to find waves with scoring potential and finished fourth in the heat, bowing from the competition along with Spain’s Vicente Romero.

In the second Semifinal the European surfers prevailed, as Jonathan Gonzalez’s (ESP) 13.90 and Joan Duru’s 13.17 sent them through to the finals, eliminating Morocco’s Yassine Ramdani and USA’s Jordy Collins, who both had inspiring performances deep into the competition.

The final got underway as the tide approached its lowest point, drastically changing the shape of the wave at Grande Plage. Jhony Corzo notched an impressive ride in the excellent range, which when coupled with a solid back up score of 6.33, launched him into first position. In the dying minutes of the heat France’s Joan Duru landed an air reverse in a last-ditch effort to catch Corzo, needing a high seven-point ride that came up short as a 7.23. Team Mexico let out a sigh of relief and stormed out into the tide to greet their World Champion. Portugal’s Pedro Henrique followed in third place with the Bronze Medal and Spain’s Jonathan Gonzalez less than a point behind Henrique with the Copper Medal.

MEX_Jhony_Corzo_Sean_Evans-2-2
Jhony Corzo busts the lip on his back side en route to winning the Gold Medal. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans

To cap off the week of competition, the athletes from the top eight countries from the 2016 ISA World Surfing Games in Costa Rica competed in the ISA Aloha Cup, a tag-team style competition featuring four men and one women on each team. Each athlete rode a total of two waves during the 45-minute-long heats, where the waves from all five team members were summed to get the total team score.

The Semifinals and Finals of the ISA Aloha Cup took to the water after the finish of the Open Men’s Final. Peru and France advanced through the first Semifinal, setting up for a final showdown with Portugal and USA, who advanced through the second Semifinal.

In the Final, Team France emerged victorious in front of the crowd at Grande Plage, giving them another spot atop one of the event’s podiums. Team Portugal challenged France until the end of the Final, but couldn’t match high scores from the powerful French surfers, finishing with the Silver Medal. Peru earned the Bronze and USA finished with the Copper.

Team Rankings
1 (Gold) – France
2 (Silver) – Portugal
3 (Bronze) – Spain
4 (Copper) – Mexico
5 – Japan
6 – Peru
7 – USA
8 – Brazil
9 – Costa Rica
10 – South Africa

View complete team rankings: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/pdf/team-points-wsg-2017-finals.pdf

Open Men Medalists
Gold – Jhony Corzo (MEX)
Silver – Joan Duru (FRA)
Bronze – Pedro Henrique (POR)
Copper – Jonathan Gonzalez (ESP)

Open Women Gold Medalists (Women finished on May 22)
Gold – Pauline Ado (FRA)
Silver – Johanne Defay (FRA)
Bronze – Leilani McGonagle (CRC)
Copper – Bianca Buitendag (RSA)

ISA Aloha Cup
Gold – France
Silver – Portugal
Bronze – Peru
Copper – USA

To replay past days’ webcasts, visit: http://isaworlds.com/wsg/2017/en/live/

The International Surfing Association (ISA), founded in 1964, is recognized by the International Olympic Committee as the World Governing Authority for Surfing, StandUp Paddle (SUP) Racing and Surfing, Bodysurfing, Wakesurfing, and all other wave riding activities on any type of waves, and on flat water using wave riding equipment. The ISA crowned its first Men’s and Women’s World Champions in 1964. It crowned the first Big Wave World Champion in 1965; World Junior Champion in 1980; World Kneeboard Champions in 1982; World Longboard Surfing and World Bodyboard Champions in 1988; World Tandem Surfing Champions in 2006; World Masters Champions in 2007; and World StandUp Paddle (SUP) and Paddleboard Champions in 2012.

ISA membership includes the surfing National Governing Bodies of 100 countries on five continents. Its headquarters are located in La Jolla, California. It is presided over by Fernando Aguerre (Argentina), first elected President in 1994 in Rio de Janeiro. The ISA’s four Vice-Presidents are Karín Sierralta (PER), Kirsty Coventry (ZIM), Casper Steinfath (DEN) and Barbara Kendall (NZL).