Field Notes From A Rocking Boat At Singing Sultans - Stab Mag

Live Now — Episode 3 Of Surf100 Challenge Series Presented By Pacifico

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TB, who made 3/3 finals in the single, twin and thruster divisions, delivered a masterclass when it mattered most. Taj was just 0.36 short of a perfect-20 heat in his semi-final against Jadson Andre, and finished the day with six waves in the 9+ point range. All photos by Jon Frank.

Field Notes From A Rocking Boat At Singing Sultans

Here’s how Taj Burrow took out his third Four Seasons Maldives Trophy yesterday.

news // Sep 2, 2024
Words by Chris Binns
Reading Time: 8 minutes

Taj Burrow today became the first ever three-time winner of the Four Seasons Maldives Surfing Champions Trophy, beating Mikey February in the grand final to cap off three radical days of competition in the best waves the event has ever seen. 

Burrow’s victory was hard fought. After finishing runner-up in all three divisions and surfing the maximum 10 heats, the 46-year-old Australian did his best to conserve energy on the final day. While being conservative with wave selection is counterintuitive behaviour for a surfer when the waves are four-foot and flawless, it was a wise call. Burrow’s six excellent wave scores on the final day proved that while he may have sacrificed quantity, the quality of his waves didn’t suffer in the least. 

Grey skies greeted competitors as they made their way out to the Sultans lineup this morning, but as an early tropical downpour dissipated it left a silky-smooth ocean in its wake. Slack winds and non-stop waves were the perfect recipe for the twin fin division to get underway, and Jeremy Flores came out all guns blazing. Unimpressed with his performances on the opening two days, and with no chance of winning overall, Flores was surfing for pride alone, but that was plenty. An 8.33 and a 7.17, both for beautifully ridden tubes, were warning shots to the field, and enough for a comfortable victory over Burrow and local wildcard Ahmed “Ammaday” Agil. 

J Flores finally found his groove, and the primal animal strolled into the bar right on happy hour. He marked the good waves and whacked the fuck out of them. Heaps of rawness about his surfing. It was also refreshing to see someone so nonchalant, just a good fella, enjoying life with the fam. Notable point: Jez thought this was all relaxed on entry, then realized he needed to prove a point. Some fire and ego kicks in, and you just wanna win something. His victory was pure passion. There was the old Jez, the one we love. The ‘animals’ still exist, just not on tour. You don’t wanna come home with a last place and a bunch of throwaways. Jez found that gear, paddling deep and free falling into the pit to enhance the theater. By the end of the opening semi, he had 17.77 points leaving Mikey February comboed on a twin fin – no one saw that coming. 

The second heat saw more fireworks from another passion-fuelled surfer, Jadson Andre. Going upside down on his backhand, as he has all event, Andre locked in an 8.33 and a 7.83 to move on to the next round in first. Mikey February advanced in second, while a valiant but fatigued Carissa Moore was eliminated.

After his strong opening round performance Flores stepped up further in the semi-finals against February, whose pair of sixes were no match for Flores’ 8.67 and 9.10. By now the tide was optimal, conditions had clicked, and the waves were impeccable. A 17.77 total for Flores saw him move on to the final with a head of steam after claiming the scalp of the most renowned twin fin artists in the game. 

Mikey Feb is considerably more impressive to watch in the flesh, of which all surfers agreed, they seemed genuinely in awe of him. Wave selection is one thing but his approach is a dance of liquid silk and cascading spray. You forget he’s 6’3, with the elasticity of an octopus.

In the second semi, Andre, who needed to advance to the twin fin final to remain in contention for the overall final, had no answer to Burrow’s all out assault. Opening with an incredible 9.67 for a deep tube complete with wild foamball ride, the West Australian was never headed. As he has all week Andre stayed busy catching waves the length of the point, whether banging out big backhand blasts at the top peak, or sneaking off to hunt tubes further down the line. 

While Andre’s two final waves were his highest scorers it was Burrow who had the last laugh with the event’s first perfect 10 coming in the dying minutes, thrown unanimously by the judging panel for a deep disappearing act. 

“It was a really fast, perfect cylinder,” said Burrow. “I knew it was a good one because there were some foamball moments in there, then it let me out and I did a nice roundhouse cutback. The whole week has been a blur of tubes but that felt like a 10 for sure.” Burrow’s near-perfect 19.67-out-of-20 total saw his MR x Mayhem California Twin Pin take him to his third final for the week. 

Taj plays off being old and fatigued (he was a bit under the weather) but when he sees good waves he’s like a golden retriever hunting geese, the grom springs to life. His joyful demeanor is as prominent on land as it is in the brine. He surfed more heats than anyone over the three days, and clearly loved every second of it. 

A battle between two of the WSL Championship Tour’s greatest ever performers was always going to be a closely fought affair, no matter the surfboards being ridden. After five minutes Burrow sat with priority on his preferred corner of the reef, while Flores headed up the line to chase the bigger top peak. Somehow the next set delivered gems to both men, Flores the first to pull into a huge tube, exiting in time for Burrow to hear the crowd erupt as he paddled into a gem of his own. 

“That was so fun!” said Burrow, of the back-to-back barrels that ensued. Flores earned a 9.67 for his bigger first pit, Burrow a 9.77 for his deeper tube behind. Like that, we had a final on our hands as the two surfers scoured every inch of the lineup looking for waves. In the end it was Flores who found a better second score, a 7.27 the reward for his last wave, a tight tube followed by a long wall that allowed him to unleash his arsenal of powerful open face carves and under the lip laybacks.

“It was crazy, it looked like the swell was dying then suddenly it turned on again,” said Flores. “I was a bit angry today, I’d been cruising at first, yesterday I was a bit bummed, but today I really wanted to win something. And I did! Still got it!” 

What made this year special was the winners of each fin combo really wasn’t expected. It was assumed Mikey would smash the twin, yet Jez stepped up. Jaddy on a single rudder wasn’t expected either. Mikey winning thruster, same deal. Then oddly Taj wins the GF on a 2+1. Such a mixed bag of results. Bookies would have been scratching their heads. 

With the twin fin division decided, the grand finalists were locked in. Burrow kept his rash vest on to surf his third straight 33-minute heat, and fourth for the day, while February had spent the previous hour relaxing in an airconditioned cabin on the Kuda Princess, the luxury yacht that has been the surfer’s locker room all week. While fatigue was starting to play a role, there was no way Burrow wanted to lose his rhythm. He opted against taking any form of break and rolled straight on to the title-deciding bout, merely pausing for a second to add a third small trailer to his twin fin set-up, given the grand final allows for any equipment to be used. 

February remained atop his beloved Channel Islands twin fin, as another insane tube duel commenced. February caught seven waves to Burrow’s four, and both men had three excellent scores to their name at final’s end, but with a 9.10 and a 9.03 it was Burrow who led throughout. An 8.67 and a 9.10 ensued February was never far from first, and with a few minutes to go a storm loomed large on the horizon. Suddenly the wind turned stiff offshore, and even after a week of big barrels, suddenly they’d never seen wider. 

M Feb, about to get compressed.

Burrow’s final pit for the week was a gem, but an 8.00 was no help to him. He kicked out in the channel leaving February alone in the lineup chasing a 9.04. As the buzzer went February snuck into one last long wall. The crowd seemed to be paying little attention as the South African flew through section after section in the tube. Burrow was worried but he needn’t have been, as the resulting 8.17 fell short. Bottles began popping on the back of the Princess as Burrow’s 18.13 scoreline narrowly shaded February’s 17.77 two-wave total.

“I almost feel guilty for winning,” said Burrow afterwards. “Mikey was the best surfer here this week. He looks beautiful on any board but especially that twinny. His turns were looking so perfect, he was on point and ripping and I knew he was the one to beat. 

“But I know how to surf a heat, and I knew how I could do it. I patiently sat on my spot, got a couple of drainers, did a few turns of my own. Even at the end I knew he could get me, and then the storm hit! The wind ripped in hard offshore, the waves were so groomed and I got maybe my roundest tube for the week. I thought I’d done enough at that point, then Mikey caught another wave on the buzzer, and was in the barrel for ages. I didn’t think it was the score, but you never know, and finally it was read out that’d I’d won.

“I was staring down the barrel of a bunch of seconds, and that led me to dig deep for the final. I was very tired and running on adrenaline, but I knew my formula and the ocean delivered. That might be one of the funnest finals I’ve ever surfed. I don’t know if I’ll ever wear a jersey again … unless I get invited back! I got so tubed, with friends, staying at the Four Seasons, there’s no way you can better that. The pinch-me moments have been non-stop all week.”

All competitors had young groms, plus Riss has one in the oven. She was feeling a little rough (perfectly valid given she’s preggers) in the morning, but put on a brave face and had a crack. As always, a pleasure to be around. These are hot, long days on a rocking boat – a legit trooper.

Twin Fin Division Results 

1. Jeremy Flores (FRA) 1000pts
2. Taj Burrow (AUS) 900pts
3. Jadson Andre (BRA) equal with Mikey February (ZAF) 800pts
5. Carissa Moore (HAW) equal with Ahmed “Ammaday” Agil (MDV) 700pts

2024 Four Seasons Maldives Surfing Champions Trophy Leaderboard

1. Taj Burrow (AUS) 2700pts
2. Mikey February (ZAF) 2600pts
3. Jadson Andre (BRA) 2500pts
4. Jeremy Flores (FRA) 2500pts

5. Carissa Moore (HAW) 2200pts
5. Ahmed “Ammaday” Agil (MDV) 2200pts

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