Stab Magazine | World Champ And Pipeline Master Derek Ho Is In Critical Condition

Now Unlocked: Chippa Wilson Stars In "Zipper"

13 Views

World Champ And Pipeline Master Derek Ho Is In Critical Condition

The 55-year-old, four-time Triple Crown winner and perennial Pipe powerhouse reportedly in a coma on Oahu. 

news // Jul 18, 2020
Words by stab
Reading Time: 3 minutes

It is with the heaviest but most hopeful of hearts that we bring news that Hawaiian icon and beloved North Shore figurehead, Derek Ho—known for decades by surfers the world over as “Uncle D”—has been hospitalized and is in critical condition on Oahu. 

According to sources close to the family, Uncle Derek is in a coma, though the circumstances around his hospitalization are unclear. 

“Lahuai, please pray for Uncle Derek as he is on a ventilator in a coma,” Jason Magallanes wrote this afternoon on Instagram. “If anyone can pull out of this it’s Uncle D, him and Uncle Mike taught me and showed me and many others the ropes growing up. Please Lord be with Uncle Derek at this time and please keep his Ohana safe.”

Several reports claim Derek seemed in good health and high spirits leading up to his hospitalization. 

“I just saw him the day before yesterday at the bottom of Pupukea, and he rolled his window down and said “*redacted surf spot* right now, let’s go, it’s firing!”

One of the most decorated Hawaiians in competitive history, Uncle D won the World Title in 1993, the Pipe Masters in 1986 and 1993, and the Triple Crown in 1984, 1986, 1988, and 1990. 

Born in 1964, Uncle Derek has remained one of surfing’s most widely, internationally beloved figures, as well as a Pipe standout into his mid-50s. 

We will be bringing you regular updates as we get more information on the situation. Our most sincere love and positivity goes out to the Ho family and the thousands and thousands of surfers whose lives Uncle Derek touched over the years.

We’re all pulling for Uncle D today. 

Derek’s full entry from Matt Warshaw’s exhaustive Encyclopedia of Surfing is below: 

Derek Ho was born (1964) in Kailua, the son of a former beachboy and army enlisted man, and was second cousin to popular Honolulu nightclub entertainer Don Ho. He began riding waves at age three, following in the footsteps of his surf-obsessed older brother Michael, who went on to become one of the Hawaii’s best-known and most durable pros. Derek was a talented but indifferent young surfer, became a small-time criminal during his teenage years, and was arrested several times. At age 18 he spent 10 days in prison, after which he dedicated himself to a career in surfing. The following year he placed third in the 1983 Pipeline Masters, and finished the pro tour season ranked 30th.

For the next six years Ho climbed steadily up the ratings, all the way to runner-up in 1989; in 1990 he fell to sixth, however, and by 1992 he’d dropped all the way to 30th. His career at that point was already remarkable: he’d won the 1984 Duke Kahanamoku Classic (with brother Michael finishing second); won the Pipeline Masters in 1986 and finished second in 1991; and won the Triple Crown in 1984, 1986, and 1988. In 1985, Derek and Michael Ho became the first siblings to both place in the year-end pro tour top 16.

But following the 1992 season, it seemed obvious that Ho’s career had peaked. “He’s an artist who appears loath to butcher his style for a few decimal points more on the judges’ cards,” surf journalist Derek Hynd once said of Ho, finishing off by predicting the handsome 28-year-old Hawaiian had “no chance” at a world title. Kelly Slater of Florida had just won the first of what everyone assumed would be a long string of championships.

Ho was ranked fifth after nine events in 1993, with just the Pipeline Masters remaining. The final day of the contest was held in excellent six to eight-foot surf, and as the four contenders ahead of him were all eliminated after the quarterfinals, Ho smoothly won the contest and the championship, along with a fourth Triple Crown title. He was the first male Hawaiian to win the pro tour, and at 29 he was the oldest men’s pro tour winner up to that point. The 1993 Masters was his only win of the season, and the last pro tour win of his career. He dropped to 24th in the ratings the following year, and in early 1997 his world circuit career was ended by a knee injury.

The smallest male world champion at 5’4″, 125 pounds, Ho was quick-footed, with a sharp, angular, slightly formulated attack. Tuberiding was his strength, and in hollow waves, especially at Pipeline, he rode with sublime precision and elegance. Two-time world champion Tom Carroll was Ho’s equal at Pipeline, but the Australian’s approach was rougher and more power-driven, whereas Ho time and again drew perfect lines through the deepest part of the wave—updating the approach invented by ’70s Pipeline ace Gerry Lopez.

Ho was an intense, withdrawn, sometimes prickly surf world figure. He was quietly and justifiably critical of the surf press in 1994, as magazine reporters all but ignored the defending world champion and focused instead on Kelly Slater. “Put it this way,” Ho dryly told Australia’s Surfing Life magazine, “I haven’t been subjected to the overexposure a world champ normally gets.”

Ho appeared in more than 50 surf movies and videos, including Wave Warriors (1985), Shock Waves (1987), Surfers: The Movie (1990), Aloha Bowls (1994), TV Dinners (1995), and Side B (1997).

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

A Shallow Dive Into The Psychology Of The World’s Heaviest Rock Jumps

Between a rock and a bunch of dry people laughing.

May 3, 2024

2 Australian Surfers, 1 American Still Missing In Baja California, Mexico

Three suspects have been arrested, a truck was found burned, but the friends remain "missing".

May 2, 2024

Zipper Offcut: A Pacific Island Micro-Wedge

Chippa, Harry, Dion, a hazardous ramp, and a near fiberglass-vasectomy.

May 2, 2024

UNLOCKED: Chippa Wilson Stars In ‘Zipper’ — A Surf Film By Stab & Monster

Featuring Filipe Toledo, Harry Bryant, Bobby Martinez, Eithan Osborne, Taro Watanabe, and Dion Agius.

May 2, 2024

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
Advertisement