Team USA Wins ISA Aloha Cup Gold at VISSLA ISA Juniors

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 Japan and USA race for Gold comes down to final day

France earns ISA Aloha Cup Silver, Japan Bronze, and Hawaii Copper 

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Team USA earned the ISA Aloha Cup Gold Medal in dramatic fashion on Sunday at the 2018 VISSLA ISA World Junior Surfing Championship presented by Visit Huntington Beach.

Team USA celebrates an ISA Aloha Cup win. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans
Team USA celebrates an ISA Aloha Cup win. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans

Team France earned the Silver, Japan the Bronze and Hawaii the Copper.

Fresh off winning the first Gold Medals of the event, USA will look to carry their momentum into the final day of competition and maintain their lead atop the team rankings, aiming to earn back-to-back Team Gold Medals. A win for USA would be their third in four years.

Japan closely trails USA by 245 points, setting the stage for a showdown to decide the Team Gold Medal on the final day of competition at Huntington Beach Pier.

USA still has seven surfers remaining in the event, a slight advantage over Japan who has six. The Gold Medal is wide open for the taking for whichever nation brings their top performance to Sunday’s competition.

Team Hawaii is trailing in third and Australia in fourth, vying for the Bronze and Copper Medals.

Captain of Team USA Cole Houshmand anchored their strong showing in the Repechage Rounds. His performance helped the team reclaim the lead atop the team rankings after briefly falling behind Team Japan on Friday.

Hawaii's Summer Macedo takes off on her leg of the ISA Aloha Cup Final. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans
Hawaii’s Summer Macedo takes off on her leg of the ISA Aloha Cup Final. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans

Houshmand battled through two rounds of tough Repechage in clean conditions on Saturday. Housmand’s 16.5 and 16.13 heat totals were the highest of the day among the boys.

USA’s Alyssa Spencer, the 2017 Girls U-16 Gold Medalist, posted the highest heat total (17.07) and wave score (9.07) of the day for the girls, but her hot streak came to an end as she fell in the Repechage Semifinals.

USA's Kade Matson is seeded in the Boys U-16 Repechage Final, hoping to help Team USA reach the Gold. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans
USA’s Kade Matson is seeded in the Boys U-16 Repechage Final, hoping to help Team USA reach the Gold. Photo: ISA / Sean Evans

The ISA’s unique Aloha Cup capped off the day of competition. In a team relay format, the ISA Aloha Cup features two boys and two girls per team, with each surfer earning points towards their teams’ overall score on their leg of the relay.

The semifinals took place on Friday afternoon featuring the top eight nations from the 2017 edition in Hyuga, Japan, with France, Hawaii, Japan, and USA qualifying for the Final.

The Aloha Cup was tight until the end, however USA’s anchor Jett Schilling earned a clutch 7.9 on his final ride that put USA’s score out of reach from the competitors.

“After not making the ISA Aloha Cup Final last year, this is great redemption,” said USA’s Cole Houshmand. “We have a super amazing team and I am stoked that we could clinch it.

“We all worked really well together. We felt comfortable with our relay order and it worked out.”

Portugal’s lone surfer remaining in the event Afonso Atunes represented the rest of his team well and advanced into the Boys U-16 Main Event Final.

“It feels really good to advance this far in the event in my second VISSLA ISA Juniors,” said Atunes. “I am super proud of myself and it would mean a lot to win a medal.

“Before the event I wasn’t expecting too much. I just wanted to go heat by heat and see what happened, so I have definitely exceeded my expectations.

“Winning the Gold would be the happiest day of my life.”

Alfonso Atunes is the last competitor to carry the Portuguese flag left in the event. Photo: ISA / Ben Reed
Alfonso Atunes is the last competitor to carry the Portuguese flag left in the event. Photo: ISA / Ben Reed

ISA President Fernando Aguerre said:

“This is what we have been waiting for. Months, or even years, of hard work and dedication will culminate in a single day as we get ready to crown the world’s next Junior World Champions.

“We could very well see the top surfers qualify for next year’s open teams, and therefore have a great shot at qualifying for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.

“The ISA Aloha Cup has provided us with a great afternoon of excitement to prepare for a historic day of junior surfing here in Huntington Beach.”

November 4 – Competition at Huntington Beach Pier south side, 8:00am – 5pm
November 4 – Closing Ceremony after competition

*Schedule subject to changes. All times in Pacific Standard Time.

To see the full schedule of activities, click here.

The 2018 VISSLA ISA World Junior Surfing Championship will be streamed live on www.isasurf.org October 27 – November 4.

ISA Aloha Cup results:

Gold – USA
Silver – France
Bronze – Japan
Copper – Hawaii

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 104 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).