Daily Dispatch

Waxed for Olympic surfing

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Like a wave originatin­g thousands of kilometres out in the deep ocean before crashing onto a distant beach, so surfing’s inclusion in the Olympic family has had a long fetch.

What began with a ripple of interest when Hawaiian surfing icon Duke Kahanamoku first advocated the sport’s Olympic inclusion, has become a reality with it debuting in Tokyo in 2019.

Inspired by Kahanamoku’s legacy, the Internatio­nal Surfing Associatio­n’s (ISA) charismati­c president, Fernando Aguerre, has been the driving force behind the sport’s inclusion.

And the 62-year-old Argentine believes those Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) members who made the decision to open a once-locked door at the 2016 vote, following a failed attempt to win a spot at the Beijing Games in 2008, will not be disappoint­ed.

Aguerre said surfing will ring “positive bells” for an Olympic movement trying to ride a wave of millennial­s with a vast appetite for cool lifestyle sports far removed from old staples such as weightlift­ing and fencing.

“It took a long, long time. But eventually things changed in the world and inside the Olympic movement,” Aguerre, who has been president since 1995, said from his La Jolla base. “Many doors that were locked were opened, allowing for a renewal of the Olympic programme.

“You don’t want to be presiding over a movement that is bigger, but not healthy. It needs a more human scale.”

Skateboard­ing, often described as sidewalk surfing, also makes its debut in Tokyo, as does sport climbing – evidence of the IOC’s evolution, according to entreprene­ur Aguerre who, with brother Santiago, founded the Reef beachwear brand in the 1980s.

“The IOC has been very clever,” he said. “It’s a great selection. It’s like the Olympic Games dinner table needed a good salad and the salad is made of action sports.

“We were in the right place at the right time. We were ready and waxed and preparing for the wave.”

But what exactly does a sport in which the vibe is as, if not more, important than winning, have to do with the old Olympic motto of “faster, higher, stronger”?

“I haven’t heard one top surfer saying any kind of bad comments about the Olympics,” Aguerre said.

“The vast majority look at the Olympics as a new wave. It doesn’t take anything away from the wave we surf every day on every beach. Of course competitio­n adds a hard edge. But unlike sports like tennis or fencing, which are confrontat­ional, with action sports like surfing it’s the other way around. They are activities first and foremost.

“And the ocean is free. No tickets, no tools, you can be the son of the janitor or the son of Bill Gates and it doesn’t matter.”

With recent Olympics, such as Rio de Janeiro in 2016 and Sochi two years earlier, criticised for waste and white elephant venues, Tokyo 2020 organisers have vowed to make their Games green and sustainabl­e.

The athletes’ village will be hydrogen-powered, while 60% of the venues will utilise existing facilities.

So eco-friendly surfing, which needs just a beach and hopefully some waves, appears a perfect fit, especially since the competitio­ns will take place on popular Tsurigasak­i Beach, 64km from Tokyo, rather than in a man-made wave park which had originally been considered.

While a wave park would have guaranteed the schedule, Aguerre says that would have shortchang­ed the fans.

“We have extra days if needed. The important thing is this is not just a surfing competitio­n, this is the arrival of surfing in the Olympic family. You don’t get a second chance to make a first impression.

This is not just a competitio­n, this is the arrival of surfing in the Olympic family. You don’t get a second chance to [impress]

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