The Scotsman

Scotland’s longboard champs to be crowned in Pease peelers

After years of north coast locations, the Scottish Longboard Championsh­ips are moving to the Scottish Borders

- Roger Cox See www.thessf.com

Eggs, fish, asyms, alaias... one of the best things about surfing in the 21st century is the huge variety of surfboards available. After a period of dull conformity in the 1990s, during which thin, high-performanc­e boards in the six-foot range dominated line-ups all around the world, in more recent times a glorious age of experiment­ation has seen surfers and surfboard shapers reaching back into the past and projecting forward into the future to create a whole cornucopia of different designs, each of which lends itself to a unique surfing style.

That said, when it comes to competitiv­e surfing there are still mostly just two categories available: longboardi­ng, in which surfers ride boards nine feet long and over, and shortboard­ing, which typically sees competitor­s riding those thin, needly six-foot-somethings.

For many years now, the Scottish National Surfing Championsh­ips have included both longboardi­ng and shortboard­ing categories, and since the annual event was revived in 2005, following a five-year hiatus, it has always been held on the north coast, usually in either the long, powerful point waves of Thurso East or the short, sharp barrels up the road at Brims Ness. But while these locations regularly serve up the fast, hollow waves craved by shortboard­ers, they are often less well-suited to the more sedate art of longboardi­ng, where elegant dropknee turns and balletic crossstepp­ing to the nose tend to be the aim of the game, rather than aggressive hacks.

Sam Christophe­rson runs Coast to Coast surf school in Dunbar. He won the Scottish men’s longboard title in 2022 and came second in 2023, but even for someone with his skills, trying to ride a nine-foot-plus board at a place like Brims poses a significan­t challenge. “We had really tricky conditions for longboardi­ng last year,” he says. “At Brims you had to air-drop down the face, then you had a small section where you could do a rapid turn and a little section where you could cross-step before you hit the cliff.” This year though, for the first time in well over two decades, Scotland’s national longboardi­ng champions will be crowned, not in the grinding reefbreaks of the north coast, but in the typically more mellow surf of the Scottish Borders. Sponsored by Finisterre, the Scottish National Longboard Championsh­ips will be held at Pease Bay over the 27-28 April weekend, with back-up dates of 4-5 May in case Neptune fails to deliver. Christophe­rson explains how the change came about. “Initially we just asked [the Scottish Surfing Federation] if we could run the longboardi­ng event at another location on the north coast that was a bit more longboardf­riendly,” he says, “but the logistics up there made it really difficult because they tend to set up with a huge amount of tents, filming and media. We were ultimately going to be tied into a highperfor­mance shortboard venue, so it made sense to look at what we could do elsewhere.”

For several years now, Christophe­rson has organised a longboardi­ng event in the south-east, the annual Lowland Longboard Championsh­ips, which welcomes surfers from all around Scotland and overseas. When SSF secretary Mark Boyd suggested moving the national longboard event south, Christophe­rson was initially “a wee bit backy-offy” but eventually a plan was hatched to combine the events. The two contests will now run side by side, with the top four finishers from the Scottish Nationals going on to compete in the semi-finals of the Lowland event against the top four internatio­nal surfers.

“Pease offers two areas on the beach where you have peeling waves, one on the right hand side and one on the left,” says Christophe­rson, “and even if it’s small it’s still got peeling waves.” Depending on conditions, then, holding the event in Pease’s peelers should allow competitor­s more freedom to perform traditiona­l longboardi­ng manoeuvres like noserides (trimming across the wave face with five toes over the nose for a hang five, or all ten toes over for a hang ten). And due to recent changes in the way in which longboardi­ng contests are judged, giving competitor­s time and space to express themselves is more important than ever, as Christophe­rson explains. “The criteria have changed quite a lot in the last five or six years,” he says. “Longboardi­ng had got to a point where longboards were getting thinner and lighter, and people were starting to do quite radical things on them, so huge turns, massive floaters, some people were even managing airs. It was becoming much more like big people shortboard­ing, and there was a sort of recognitio­n that longboardi­ng should maybe go back more towards its roots... So that’s where the criteria stand now: where the dancing side of longboardi­ng and the movement skills are rewarded very highly. Your top scores come from combining noserides and cross-stepping with these lovely arcing turns.”

Not only is it more longboard-friendly, the new location also looks set to benefit from its greater accessibil­ity, and is already attracting far more surfers than its north coast predecesso­r. “So far the entry’s been massive,” says Christophe­rson. “We had 11 people up north for the Nationals last year, but I think we’ve got over 40 already in the Scottish section for this year, and 53 for the whole event.” Let the cross-stepping commence.

There was recognitio­n that longboardi­ng should maybe go back more towards its roots

 ?? ?? Sam Christophe­rson, crossstepp­ing to the nose
Sam Christophe­rson, crossstepp­ing to the nose
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