The Gold Coast Bulletin

FIN.

SHARK-TAMING SURFING LEGEND MICK FANNING RETIRES

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GOLD Coast surfing great Mick Fanning has called time on his illustriou­s career, saying he no longer has the “drive to compete day in, day out”. “I’m just not enjoying it as much as I was in the past,” said Fanning, who will hold a mini farewell tour by competing at the Quiksilver Pro on the Gold Coast this month and the Rip Curl Pro Bells Beach in Victoria.

“I still love surfing, and I’m still super excited by it, but I feel that there’s other paths for me to take at this stage in my life,” he said. Aside from his exploits on a board, Fanning famously punched a shark while competing in South Africa in 2015 and five months later the world cried with him when he tragically lost his brother, Peter.

ANGEL ON HIS SHOULDER (1998):

ON a Friday night in Coffs Harbour in 1998 Fanning lost his older brother Sean in a car accident.

“Just that whole sort of numbing feeling came over (me). It was the hardest day of my life,” Fanning said in the film Defining Mick Fanning in 2013.

“I vowed I was never going to drive, I didn’t know if I was ever going to surf again and I didn’t want to walk outside or even talk to people.”

FIRST WIN (2001):

MICK Fanning won his first world tour event as a 19-yearold wildcard to the 2001 Rip Curl Pro Bells Beach.

With first place winning $59,900, it was the richest prize in Australian surfing history. He was the only the second wildcard ever to win a surfing World Championsh­ip Tour event.

QUALIFICAT­ION (2002): FANNING qualified for the world tour aged 22 where he finished fifth in the world and earned the Rookie of the Year award.

HAMSTRUNG (2004):

IN 2004, doctors told him he might not surf competitiv­ely again after ripping his hamstring off the bone surfing in Sumatra, Indonesia.

“I was pretty immobile for three months,” Fanning said.

“For the first six weeks I wasn’t allowed to do anything as I was on crutches. I couldn’t drive for about six weeks, or sit properly. I had to sit on an angle so the joint could mend.”

THE WIN IN BRAZIL (2007): WHEN Fanning won his first crown in Brazil in 2007 his first thoughts were of his late brother, Sean.

Fanning, then 26, said he felt the presence of his brother riding with him at Imbituba in Brazil, in the form of a dolphin.

“It was so cool with Joel (Parkinson) out there in the semi-final and there was a dolphin out there, I’m not sure if it was my brother or what,” Fanning said after the win.

JOINING SPECIAL CLUB (2009):

Fanning beat Joel Parkinson in the world title race to join an exclusive club in 2009 by becoming the fourth Australian man since the tour started in 1976 to win multiple titles.

He drew equal with greats Tom Carroll (1983, 1984) and Damien Hardman (1987, 1991) and behind only legendary fourtime Australian world champion Mark Richards (1979-1982).

After the win he paid tribute to his wife at the time, Karissa, for inspiring him to win his second world title in three years.

THIRD TIME’S A CHARM (2013):

Fanning won his third world title just 90 seconds from the finish of the quarter-final he needed to win in Hawaii in 2013.

“I just saw the set on the horizon, and I thought ‘all right, whatever’s going to come, I’m just going to try and pick the right one’,” he said.

“You dream about these sorts of things as a kid but you never really expect them to happen like this. That wave came and it was so beautiful.’’

THE NOAH’S ARC (2015): BEING attacked by a great white shark on live television in the final of the 2015 J-Bay Pro propelled Fanning on to the world stage like never before.

“He gave you a pretty good shove?” Mark Occhilupo asked Fanning during a podcast in 2016.

To which Fanning replied: “Oh yeah s*** yeah.”

LOVE THEM AND GIVE THEM A HUG (2015):

FANNING learned of his brother Peter’s death just hours before he paddled out to compete for his fourth world surfing title in December 2015.

He chose to compete in the event despite the devastatin­g news. He finished second in the world after being knocked out of the event by Gabriel Medina following emotionall­y charged heats.

“I knew I could find the strength to take part in the final event of the season because that’s what Pete would want,” Fanning said in an instagram post. “Tell the special people in your life you love them and give them a hug.”

RIGHTING A WRONG (2016): FANNING made a phenomenal return to Jeffreys Bay one year after his close call with the great white shark to win the World Surf League event in 2016.

“Having my semi final with Julian (Wilson) was a really special moment. I’m just stoked that I came back and was able to right the wrong for last year. That was always my plan,” Fanning said.

 ?? Picture: PIERRE TOSTEE/ASP ?? Mick Fanning, 19, exits the surf triumphant­ly after winning his first world tour event, the 2001 Rip Curl Pro at Bells Beach.
Picture: PIERRE TOSTEE/ASP Mick Fanning, 19, exits the surf triumphant­ly after winning his first world tour event, the 2001 Rip Curl Pro at Bells Beach.
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 ??  ?? Fanning after his first world tour win in 2001.
Fanning after his first world tour win in 2001.
 ??  ?? Mick Fanning celebrates his first world title in 2007.
Mick Fanning celebrates his first world title in 2007.
 ??  ?? Mick and Sean Fanning.
Mick and Sean Fanning.
 ??  ?? Fanning’s second world title.
Fanning’s second world title.

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