Watch: The Evolution of Jake Marshall, in "Redline" - Stab Mag
687 Views

Watch: The Evolution of Jake Marshall, in “Redline”

Destined to be Southern California’s Next Big Thing, Jake Marshall’s left figuring out what’s, well… next.

cinema // Nov 11, 2017
Words by stab
Reading Time: 4 minutes

Jake Marshall’s been on a lot of people’s radar for a good, long while now. And up until recently, everything was going more or less to plan. Until it wasn’t.

The problems began when the age cutoff for pro junior events dropped from 20 to 18. Call it the “Gabriel Medina Effect” if you will. All of a sudden there were kids like Medina, who were already on the world tour, surfing down in the World Juniors. Teen over-achievers Ethan Ewing, Kanoa Igarashi and Leo Fioravanti offer similar examples.

“I know why they changed the age because guys like Gabriel are coming back from the world tour to do the world juniors, which is kind of frustrating if you’re a junior and you’re surfing against Gabriel. You’re kind of like ‘woah!’ It’s not that fun,” explains Marshall. 

In 2016, Marshall resigned himself to grinding through both the WSL Pro Junior and QS schedules. In 2017, he committed full-time to the QS. Working his way up the ratings, he found his campaign derailed by injuries.

 

 

untitled 07 2

“And all of these guys are big and strong, like men, and they’ve been on the QS for like ten years,” says Jake Marshall. “Everyone wants it just as bad as you. From Round 1 on, you have to be on your game or you’re going home.”

“This year was kind of a rough one for me for injuries, definitely. I don’t really want to do that again,” says Marshall. “I broke my foot to start the year, which sort of sucked. I surfed the World Juniors, my foot was better, but not really feeling that confident…which seemed like pretty much the story to my whole year. I surfed the entire year injured. Almost all the events I surfed in I was bouncing back from injury, so I would have been in the water for only a few days before the event started. I’m not going to make excuses for why I didn’t do well in a lot of the events, but at the same time, it was maybe more of a mental thing than a physical thing.”

A couple bouts of Staph and dislocating his shoulder, not once, not twice, but three times, added to the anguish.

“It started in April and not I’ve had surgery on it and am out of the water until January. I got it to feel pretty good, then I went to Chile for a three-star. We were surfing this slab kind of wave and I slammed onto the reef really hard,” explains Marshall. “It felt like I hit the reef it was going to come out, regardless, so I was kind of bummed about that. When I got home a couple people told me I should get the surgery because this was just going to keep happening.”

Marshall opted not to get surgery and instead kept surfing. With a long run of events on his schedule, he opted for rehabbing the injury and making do with what he had. But alas, a man can only fly on a busted wing for so long.

“It was fine all the way until the Prime in Portugal,” he admits. “The waves got pretty good before the event and I was surfing a pretty solid, barreling wave. I went over the falls and it came out again. I tried to surf the Prime, but it didn’t really work out so well.”

untitled 1190606

“This year was kind of a rough one for me for injuries, definitely. I don’t really want to do that again.” – Jake Marshall.

Resigned to his fate, after Portugal, Marshall headed home to Encinitas to have his shoulder operated on. He’ll now miss his second Hawaii season in a row as he takes his time recovering and hitting the reset button. A year into QS life, Marshall admits life amongst the wolves was a bit of an eye-opener.

“Going through the whole amateur ranks you think you’re just going to get on the QS, make a ton of heats and it’s not going to be that hard. Then you get on the QS and you realize that everyone rips and everyone can surf a heat. You don’t really ever come up against guys where you think it’s an easy heat. Everyone know how to surf,” he says. “And all of these guys are big and strong, like men, and they’ve been on the QS for like ten years. Everyone wants it just as bad as you. From Round 1 on, you have to be on your game or you’re going home.”

“You can get lost on the QS. You see so many gnarly guys that don’t have sponsors, and it really makes you appreciate what you’ve had your whole career. A lot of guys rip and make a lot of heats, they’re in the Top 30 consistently, and they still don’t have a sticker on their board. It’s pretty crazy,” adds Marshall.

He’ll spend the rest of ’17 at the physical therapist office, but Marshall’s already setting his sights on next year.

“I’d like to be back in time to do the Pipe Pro,” he says. “But we’ll see, the most important thing is to get back to 100 percent and see where we go from there.”

untitled 7537

“I’m not going to make excuses for why I didn’t do well in a lot of the events, but at the same time, it was maybe more of a mental thing than a physical thing.” – Jake Marshall

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

“There’s More Opportunity Than Ever In Surfing — You Just Have To Think Outside The Box”

Says the guy doing ad spots with Em Rata and starring in Nike posts.

Sep 20, 2025

Alex Knost, Mikey Feb & More Star In Non-Conformist Waveriding Demonstration ‘Choice Glance’

Where all great surfing variants collide.

Sep 20, 2025

Hossegor, Day One: Four Hours At The Quiksilver Festival 2025

A leisurely warm-up.

Sep 20, 2025

Kelly Slater Calls Out Surf100 Winner Eithan Osborne

And Eithan DGAF.

Sep 20, 2025

Can A Team Of CTers Beat Freesurfers, Poorly Slept Australians, And The Local Heavies In Hossegor?

This year's Quiksilver Festival is about to start. Here's what you need to know.

Sep 19, 2025

Watch: Chippa Wilson Wreaks Havoc On A Head-High Left, Signs 5-Year Deal With New Brand

Brixton, out. Who's in? Find out in 'Deadbeat'.

Sep 18, 2025

Eithan Osborne Is Officially $100,000 Richer After Winning Surf100 California

“I would say I’m finally gonna get a good nights rest, but… I don’t think…

Sep 18, 2025

The $100,000 Surf100 California Finale, Presented By Pacifico

Our six-figure, audience judged, 100-minute deathmatch.

Sep 18, 2025

What Not To Do With $100,000

How not to torch your cash with Albee Layer, Matt Meola, and Ryan Miller.

Sep 17, 2025

Mike Stewart Just Took One Of The Wildest Teahupo’o Drops In History — At 62 Years Young

A Stab Interview with surfing's pre-eminent tube theorist... and practitioner.

Sep 14, 2025

Two Kiwis Started A “Surf” Brand In London, Accidentally Collabed With Adidas

Always do what you should do...

Sep 13, 2025

Watch: Kael Walsh’s 2025 Stab Edit Of The Year Entry ‘Strung’

The 2022 champ might just win it again — but sorry, no Bitcoin this time…

Sep 11, 2025

Film Review: We Went To The “Yi-Wo” World Premiere

And Thomas Campbell has successfully increased our attention span.

Sep 11, 2025

The Surf100 x Pacifico $100k Finale — Everything You Need To Know

Watch & score the 100-minute finale on Wednesday, September 17th.

Sep 11, 2025

We Asked About Sharks, 3000 Surfers Answered

And the results show: you're full of contradictions.

Sep 11, 2025

Empty Set: How Do You Approach A New Spot And Get Waves?

Mason Ho, Tosh Tudor, and Kepa Acero share their tips.

Sep 10, 2025

“I Want To See The Winner Get Stretchered Off The Beach With A $5K Check”

Julian & Co. invite a 20 year-old carpenter to Stab High, courtesy of Bum Rush

Sep 9, 2025

Take Stab’s 2025 Audience Survey, Win A New Surfboard + Kit

Fins, boardshorts, and Premium subscriptions also up for grabs.

Sep 8, 2025
Advertisement