National Post (National Edition)

New Canadian Brooks focuses on riding Olympic wave to Paris 2024

Surfer looks to punch ticket in Puerto Rico

- NEIL DAVIDSON

Having won her Canadian citizenshi­p battle, teenage surfer Erin Brooks now looks to book her ticket to the Paris Olympics.

Brooks is one of six Canadians competing at the 2024 ISA World Surfing Games, the final Olympic qualifier, which opens Saturday and runs through March 3 in Puerto Rico.

Brooks is joined by Tofino, B.C. sisters Sanoa and Mathea Dempfle-Olin.

The Canadian men competing are brothers Cody and Levi Young and Wheeler Hasburgh.

The competitor­s will surf the reef breaks of Margara and the twin breaks of El Pico and Rastrial in Puerto Rico.

The top eight women will qualify for the Olympics.

Sanoa Dempfle-Olin is already provisiona­lly qualified by virtue of her win at last year's Pan American Games in Chile. She will make it to the Olympics as long as the other two Canadian women don't beat her and finish in the top eight.

And the Canadians could qualify all three if they finish as the highest-ranked team.

“We'd be popping bubbly, definitely,” Surf Canada executive director Dom Domic said from Puerto Rico.

The Canadian men need to finish in the top six for Olympic qualificat­ion.

“We've been here (in Puerto Rico) for a month … We've been putting in a lot of preparatio­n here in all conditions and we're definitely one of the countries to watch,” said Domic.

The Olympic surfing event is set for July 27 to Aug. 4 in Tahiti, French Polynesia.

It marks the second time surfing has been part of the Olympics. Canada did not have a surfer at the Tokyo Games although Cody Young came close. The Hawaii-based athlete got a lastminute call-up to the Tokyo games due to a COVID-related opening but was unable to make it to Japan in time to compete.

The 16-year-old Brooks was born in Texas and grew up in Hawaii but has Canadian ties through her American-born father Jeff, who is a dual American-Canadian citizen, and her grandfathe­r, who was born and raised in Montreal.

She turned heads by winning a silver medal at the ISA World Surfing Games in El Salvador last June and gold at the ISA World Junior Championsh­ips in June 2022.

Her applicatio­n for Canadian citizenshi­p was initially rejected. But Immigratio­n Minister Marc Miller had a change of heart after a December ruling by Ontario's Superior Court of Justice that it is unconstitu­tional for Canada to deny automatic citizenshi­p to the children of foreign-born Canadians who grew up abroad.

The Brooks family then refiled their applicatio­n under a hardship status, based on the recommenda­tion of the Immigratio­n Department, to accelerate the process.

Erin Brooks was sworn in as a Canadian citizen last month.

“It was weird not having her at world juniors in Brazil back in November-December and, of course, at the Pan Am Games (in October), as well,” Domic said. “Having her back in the family just feels right.”

Brooks' mother, who has been battling cancer, and her father are with their daughter in Puerto Rico.

The Brooks family home in Lahaina on Maui burned down during last year's wildfires. The family has called Tofino home when not on the road nine to 10 months a year with their daughter.

Competitio­n in Puerto Rico will be tough. The 266-athlete field features 27 of the 40 Olympians who competed in Tokyo, including women's gold medallist Carissa Moore (U.S.) and bronze medallist Amuro Tsuzuki (Japan) and men's silver medallist Kanoa Igarashi (Japan).

 ?? DOM DOMIC/SURF CANADA / THE CANADIAN PRESS / HANDOUT ?? Teen surfer Erin Brooks, here at last year's ISA World Surfing Games in El Salvador where she won silver in the women's
shortboard event, is aiming to qualify for the Paris Olympics at this year's ISA World Surfing Games in Puerto Rico.
DOM DOMIC/SURF CANADA / THE CANADIAN PRESS / HANDOUT Teen surfer Erin Brooks, here at last year's ISA World Surfing Games in El Salvador where she won silver in the women's shortboard event, is aiming to qualify for the Paris Olympics at this year's ISA World Surfing Games in Puerto Rico.

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