Stab Magazine | Interview: How To Dominate A Cyclone Swell, With Jack Freestone

Now Live: Best Surfing I've Ever Seen With Nate Lawrence

743 Views

Interview: How To Dominate A Cyclone Swell, With Jack Freestone

“I’ve never seen a swell last that long, that big, and be that consistently good in my life. So to get MVP of that swell is pretty cool.”

news // Feb 27, 2019
Words by stab
Reading Time: 6 minutes

Yesterday Stab got busy sliding into the DMs of the biggest names who threw their hat in the Cyclone Oma ring last week.

Our objective? To find out who won ‘Best on Ground’ during the multi-day swell system that lit up every right-hand point from the Northern Rivers to Noosa, and beyond.

We hit Mick Fanning, Joel Parkinson, Jack Freestone, Mitch Crews, Tai Graham, Brenno Dorrington, The Hazzas, heads we saw (and are still seeing) disappearing into sand pipes and reappearing again on social media. 

The verdict? The Gold Coast’s very own super-dad and CT re-qualifier, Jack Freestone in first, with special mention going to young Toby Mossop, the Burleigh local who put it all on the line and stayed standing in one of the wildest tubes of the week.

During Oma, Jack wherever the best waves were, Jack seemed to be. If the tide and wind shifted preferentially, if the crowd lulled, Mr Freestone moved into position – respect to Alana, who looked after their little man, Banks, during the entirety of the swell.

On Thursday, Jack rode through one of the longest, dreamiest Kirra tubes we’ve seen for some time, clocking over ten seconds in the shade in one section (there were three). The wave went viral, with 115k plays on Stab’s Instagram alone. 

The following days Cyclone Oma got angrier, and he, Mitch Crews and their photog entourage rolled around to Burleigh for a swing. Once again Jack found another bomb, a little larger, a little spookier. The man was unstoppable.

Having GC royalty of the Mick and Joel caliber calling you the best surfer of one of the wildest swells of the decade, you’re doing something right. 

With the cyclonic dust settling, Stab got Jack on the line to hand him his MVP title, to hear a little on the program he was running, the hours he and his crew put in, what he rode and what the marathon tube fest has done for his CT confidence.

JACK SKI

Jack and Mitch Crews, Oma’s most efficient ski team?

Stab: Jack! How’s your body feeling?

Jack Freestone: I’m actually fine, a little bit sore, but okay overall.

We’ve been throwing some DMs around, and by all accounts, you’ve been named the MVP of Cyclone Oma. How does that sound?

[Laughs] That’s gonna have to go on my resume. That’s so funny.

You’ll have to update your Instagram bio, throw a little trophy emoji on there.

I will, ‘2019 Oma swell MVP’!

Looking back, when you saw Oma on the charts, what did you expect? Did it match the hype?

I glanced at it, I didn’t want to get my hopes up. Forecasting can be frustrating.

So I glanced at it and thought ‘ok I know there’s swell, I know the winds are going to be really good, I’m just going to get up and go out every single morning’. And pretty much every day it just got better and better.

I feel like people get caught up with forecasts, trying to pick the best place can be leave you chasing your tail. We just had our minds already made up and it was pretty cool.

Yeah, sometimes it’s best to just keep your sights on the local and commit to the one zone.

Yep, we had Kirra for three mornings, then I heard Burleigh was good, so I said ‘we’re going to Burleigh,’ and we did, and we scored.

But in saying that, every fricken point was good. I don’t think there was any way anyone could’ve lost in that swell.

How do you compare it to other big swell events over the years?

Man, to tell you the honest truth, I’ve never seen a swell last that long, that big, and be that consistently good in my life, on the Gold Coast.

So to get MVP of that swell was pretty cool.

That’s some prestige right there.

I never even knew there was such a thing as an MVP of a swell, that’s so funny.

There is now. I know you guys were doing some crazy hours. Tell us about the daily program you were running.

The program was pretty standard; we were just getting up super early, all meeting at Mitch Crews’ house. He’d make us all coffee, then we’d all go to the boat ramp, then everyone would flock to their spaces that they needed to be.

Every day we were putting in at least six-plus hours. So even though I got some good waves, I definitely spent my time out there looking for them.

Yeah, Mick told us that while there were some messed up waves, there was a lot of waiting and average ones in between.

Yep, because the swell was mostly east, the rips werent as strong.. There’d be a lot of paddlers. So when it’s like that, you definitely have to be a lot more patient.

If the swell’s south usually everyone’s really separated, you can just get the ski and step off – you know the kind of impatient way of surfing [laughs]. But I think we were being pretty respectful of everyone out there in the lineup.

Like I said, we put in our time and did a lot of waiting, and I just so happened to be in the spot to get a few good ones, for the first time ever, usually I’m the one looking at them.

Only took me 26 years to find them [laughs].

JACK JUAN

Non-Oma imagery alert! This one’s from D’Bah, when the charts began showing signs that something special was en route. Photo: Juan Medina.

With the ski situation did it get pretty congested out there? Is it getting pretty insane?

It definitely was. The last day of the swell it dropped off a fair bit in the afternoon and we went back out on the ski to the Alley. I counted 22 skis out. So that was fucking brutal, man.

What’s the culture like, do you wait in a line or something?

Mmm, it’s weird. On the big day at Burleigh there were 11 skis out and everyone was kinda ruthless. It was kind of like you were hassling but with skis.

It’s a lot more of a dangerous method of surfing, you’ve got these big fucking motors in the water, if you make the wrong mistake at eight to ten foot Burleigh you’re getting smashed. You’re putting not only your life in danger but someone else’s.

It is getting ridiculous, but at the same time, there is a sense of responsibility out there when everyone has a ski. You don’t see too many people acting like dickheads.

Then again, sometimes I felt like we were getting paddled around, but on a ski. You get a few locals crawling up your inside.

It’s like ten times more frustrating when you get snaked on a ski.

Talk us through your standout rides.

Well, there’s obviously the two, there was the one at Kirra and the one at Burleigh.

Sentimentally I think the Kirra wave was way better. I’ve had some really good barrels at Kirra, don’t get me wrong, but that one stands out more than anything I’ve ever had.

It was such a long ride and it was so perfect. I felt like I had the time to actually look around in the barrel and it was beautiful. I could also see all my friends on the ski.

When I came out of it, another reason it was so good was Joel (Parkinson) was right there, and you mightn’t have been able to tell, but I did a little Parko, no-claim, claim, right in front of him [laughs] It was really cool.

But I felt like the Burleigh one was more technical.

It looked like it got heavy towards the final days, any memorable beltings?

Yeah, I got two out Burleigh. The first wave I pulled into, it was a really mutant double up one, it just pinned me right on the sandbank and would not let me up. That was pretty scary.

The other one, I got greedy and tried to stay in the barrel too long and it just held me down for ages. It wasn’t too bad, but it was at the end of the session and I was so exhausted I felt like I couldn’t hold my breath for that long.

It was very shallow. On that first one, I hit the bottom straight away. Almost instantly. I was put off by it. I was thinking ‘shit, if that was a rock I’d probably be paralyzed by now.

I hit really hard, hard enough to smack my butt and get corked.

JACK BOARD

This doesn’t make the Pyzel Radius the MVP board of the swell, but at least we know the thing works in thundering tubes.

What was that board you were riding?

It was a six foot, round tail, Pyzel Radius.

Why did you choose it? Just a usual go-to?

Yeah, it’s just been my normal good wave board. I chucked the round tail in because it holds a little better in steeper waves.

It felt perfect. I don’t think I did a turn the whole swell. It’s pretty easy, especially if you have a ski. You don’t need the biggest of boards.

Just point and shoot?

Exactly. Once you’re on the wave you don’t need that much length. Just enough to maintain all variables at speed, hold and that sort of thing.

So, with the Quik Pro coming up, are you feeling ready? How’s your headspace?

Yeah man, I feel so good. I’m so excited for the start of the year.

I hope we get another swell so I can be MVP of the Quikky Pro [Laughs].

Comments

Comments are a Stab Premium feature. Gotta join to talk shop.

Already a member? Sign In

Want to join? Sign Up

Advertisement

Most Recent

Is Nat Young’s 4.03 A Symbol Of Surf Judging Demise, Or A Harmless Scoring Aberration?

World champs, super coaches, WSL commentators and more sound off on the state of surf…

May 1, 2024

How Stretch And Nathan Fletcher SpaceX’d Surfboard Design Into The Future

“I brought the boards to Hawaii and everybody laughed at me. Everyone except Michael Ho…

Apr 30, 2024

Doug Silva Is The Skullet-Locked 12x World Party Champ Working Wonders For Seth Moniz’s Tour Trajectory

Here's how he uses EDM + storytelling to snap talent into 'infected alligators'.

Apr 30, 2024

Marti Paradisis On The New Shipsterns Safety Initiative + The Laziness Of Bandwagoning Swell Carnivals

Before calling Shipsterns Bluff and getting flexed, read this. 

Apr 28, 2024

Full Frame: A 15-Minute, One-Wave Pipe Session

"Oh shit, that was kind of nuts, I think I think I'm just gonna go…

Apr 27, 2024

Want Half-A-Brain? Keep Calling Helmets Lame

Kai Lenny surfs hideous Jaws + Mavs + Waimea, joins esteemed list of surfers to…

Apr 27, 2024

80 Men And 48 Women Enter The CS Gauntlet — Only 15 Will Survive

Your 2024 Challenger Series x Gold Coast Pro preview.

Apr 26, 2024

The Best Surfing I’ve Ever Seen: Nate Lawrence

Kolohe, Cola Bros, Luke Davis, Crane, and "the most magical 3 weeks ever had in…

Apr 25, 2024

Snapper To Return To The CT In 2025(!) + WSL Announces Season Wildcards

Next year is looking up. Here's what we know...

Apr 25, 2024

Kelly Slater Will Surf In Tahiti And Fiji CT Events — And He’s Bringing A Secret Weapon With Him

What's it like to coach an 11x champ? We asked Glenn "Micro" Hall.

Apr 24, 2024

Watch: A Masterclass In Belated Drops At The Teepee Capital Of The World

And the rest of the O’Neill team sticks the landing in Hawaii.

Apr 24, 2024

How Sophie McCulloch Broke Her Back At The Box Three Days After Being Cut From The CT

The untold brutal side story of finals day in WA.

Apr 24, 2024

The Cut Wasn’t The Surf Fans’ Idea — But It Might Be Our Fault

Psychoanalyzing surfing’s highly sadistic audience (us!).

Apr 23, 2024

How Surfers (And Skiers/Snowboarders) Could Be Using Buoys Better

Snow in Japan = waves at Pipe = snow in Utah, @PowderBuoy told us.

Apr 22, 2024

How Did Sydney’s Hottest Landscape Architect Stack So Many Clips Less Than 10Kms From Centrepoint Tower? 

Fraser Dovell is a man of culture, taste and jabbing North Av lefts in the…

Apr 22, 2024

Full Frame: The Other Side Of Nazaré

The death of a wave, and the birth of an entire genre of surf. 

Apr 21, 2024

Jack Robbo Double Beats Double John At Margies, Gabriela Bryan Dodges Dolphins For Maiden Win

The cut is finished - WA finals recap.

Apr 21, 2024

Watch: A Leisurely Day With Fingal’s-Most-Wanted Foamball Wrangler

Lungi Slabb and filmmaker Beren Hall offer insight into the exact specs which bring GoPro…

Apr 20, 2024
Advertisement