The Daily Telegraph

British doctor punched shark in the face to escape attack

- By Jonathan Pearlman in Sydney

A BRITISH surfer who escaped from a shark in Australia by punching it in the face said his feat was inspired by a Youtube video of a profession­al surfer who had successful­ly fought off an attack.

Charlie Fry, 25, a doctor who moved to Australia two months ago to work, was surfing at Avoca Beach, north of Sydney, when a shark leapt out of the water and bit him.

He said he heard a “massive thud” and initially thought it was a friend playing around. “I turned to the right and I saw a shark’s head come out of the water with its teeth and I just punched it in the face,” he told Nine News.

“[I] got back on my board, shouted at my friends who were there and then managed to catch a wave in. So it was a bit of a close call.”

Dr Fry said he learnt of the technique from an interview on Youtube with Mick Fanning, an Australian who famously punched a shark to survive an attack during a surfing competitio­n in South Africa in 2015. “Me and my friends have just started surfing, and

‘We saw the Youtube clip of Mick Fanning saying he punched a shark in the nose. If you are watching or listening, Mick, I owe you a beer’

we saw the Youtube clip of Mick Fanning saying he punched [a shark] in the nose,” he said. “So when it happened I was like, ‘Just do what Mick did, just punch it in the nose.’” He added: “If you are watching or listening, Mick, I owe you a beer. Thank you very much.”

Dr Fry suffered minor scratches and bite wounds from the “hectic” encounter and was driven to hospital by his fellow surfers, who were also doctors.

A rescue helicopter service later spotted a 10ft shark near the site of the attack – a section of the beach known as “shark tower”.

“I didn’t feel the teeth going in, it felt like I was smacked, it felt like a hand, a hand grabbing me, shaking me,” Dr Fry said. “All I was thinking was ‘I’m about to die’, and I was just ... thinking about getting in [to shore] as fast as possible. You just ride the wave as long as you can and start paddling for your life.”

Dr Fry said he would take the week off and was “racing” to return to the water but might choose a different spot. Authoritie­s closed the beach at Avoca and said surroundin­g beaches would be “closely monitored”.

 ??  ?? Charlie Fry suffered just minor scratches and bite marks
Charlie Fry suffered just minor scratches and bite marks

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