He has been a BeachGrit fav since...forever! And
now he's number 4 in the world!
Since midway through 2011 til, like, right now,
Josh Kerr has become BeachGrit’s must-watch man on WT
webcasts. Why? ‘Cause he throws caution (and tail!) to the wind
with panache and is one of the few competitors who has Kelly Slater
shaking in his booties. Josh is the perfect balance of Australian
modesty and grit (he’s from the Gold Coast) with Cali jib steeze
(where he lives now). Though, those aren’t the only elements of a
dazzling surfer. Read on for the other ingredients that make Josh’s
surfing so great.
Wavepark: Pitstops, Lakey Peak, Macaroni’s or
Keramas. Just ’cause you’ve got time to set up for your manoeuvre
and you know where the section’s coming so it gives you time to
prepare and gives you time to think through what you’re gonna try.
It’s better for tech stuff to surf something more mechanical like a
reef, rather than a beachie.
Barrel spot: Shipsterns and Pipe or Tahiti. At
Pipe I’ve had my best ones during freesurfs. I never get through a
heat there so I don’t get to surf it much during a contest
(laughs). At Shipsterns, once you get over the ledge, it’s such an
enjoyable barrel. That’s what I always tell everyone. No one really
knows how enjoyable that wave is. I think it looks more
intimidating in photos because of what’s going on behind you. You
just gotta get over the ledge, pull up, put your hands above your
head and have a hell time.
Grab: It varies but, if I’m doing a straight
air it’s still just a big frontside grab. You have more control and
you can really huck it higher. For an air-reverse, I’ve been
frothing on stalefishes. I still do frontside grab air-revs during
freesurfs, but definitely a lot less than I would have before. When
you’re freesurfing, you wanna push yourself to do grabs that you
wouldn’t usually do. You wanna get consistent at those grabs so you
can bring them into the contest. The judges do recognise the
difference in difficulty of certain grabs, but it’s more the
section you’re doing the air off, the height of it and difficulty
of landing. They don’t really care that much what grab it is. You
don’t have to grab to get a 10 so long as it’s real lofty.
Rotation: I’d have to say on my frontside, a
full-rotation alley oop with a heelside grab is my favourite
rotation.
Flip: I’m gonna start trying whatever those
flips that Matt Meola’s been doing are. I froth on those – the grab
helps your rotation. I’m excited to start trying them.
Rail turn: The Tyler Wright turn. Two hands
back, Tyler Wright hook-down carve. That’s my favourite at the
moment. You dig your two arms behind then wrap the back arm around.
You’ve probably seen me doing them in contests, I’m either doing
airs or doing those turns (laughs).
Combo: I’d need three sections for the perfect
combo. I’d have to do a full-roter, heelside grab alleyoop,
straight into a little Tyler Wright hack into a stalefish
air-reverse.
All-round Sled: A 5’8″ pushed-in shortboard. It
used to be a 5’10” or 5’11” but now it’s shorter. Round tail. Sorta
similar to what Kelly rides but a bit less volume ’cause he’s got
way thicker legs than me and can push with more power.
Travel quiver: It’d be a 5’5″ Magic Thumb, a
5’8″ Kerr model and a 5’9″ Slacker. All the Rusty models. The
Slacker’s kind of a round, square version of the Joker, but has a
bit more drive. It’s sick. You can grovel on it or get drive out of
it.
Fins: I rock Future Fins. The Captain Fin ones,
at the moment. The Reynolds model, they’re good.
Wax: Not really. Everyone on tour has their
rituals, like they take their wax off and re-wax before every heat,
but I’m just scrounging around for whatever wax I can find. Maybe
some that the beach marshall has. I’m so unprepared.
Trunks: I’m just on and above the knee. Not
mega-short but I’m not over the knee. I used to be. I used to be
such a punk kid, always wearing baggy, over-the-knee shorts. But
now I’ve jumped on the short era and I’m the kinda guy I used to
bag out five or 10 years ago. Trending with the times.
Traction: Pro-Lite. Always with an arch, always
a three-piece.
Summer ensemble: Trunks, generally with no
shirt. Just bronze the rig up and I’m happy.
Winter ensemble: Well in Cali I’m in a 4/3
fullsuit with booties, gloves and hood. I’d like to be on the Goldy
in just a 2/2 fullsuit.
Inspiration: I should watch snow and skate vids
more. I do a bit and it definitely inspires me. But I just like
watching other surfers and what they’re doing. Like, on little web
clips, I love watching those.
Contest: Tahiti when we get waves, but if
there’s no waves, then Trestles, because it’s pretty much always
rippable.
Opponent: Oh, Kelly is f’sure my favourite guy
to surf against. I get beaten most the time but it’s fun knowing
that you have heaps of eyes on you, watching. It’s funny,
everyone’s got your back, everyone wants you to beat that guy
(laughs). It’s fun to go against the top guys and know that, no
matter what, if you get beaten by them it’s not that big of a deal
because you’re getting beaten by one of the best surfers in the
world.
Heat strategy against Kelly Slater: No
strategy, I just go for it. That’s the attitude I have to have when
I surf against those guys.
Surfer: My all-time favourite would have to be
Kelly. But I have so many guys that I enjoy watching right now. I
enjoy it all. From Chippa (Chris Wilson) to Dane (Reynolds), all
those guys are insane. I froth on the technical side but also the
raw power of people, y’know?
Session time: I don’t mind, but I don’t like
doing airs in the morning. I like getting barrelled in the morning,
then doing airs in the afternoon.
Big waves: I really wanna surf The Right in WA.
I’d love to whip-in there. It looks like there’s so many things
going on at once, it looks fun. And, not every wave’s the same,
which is always fun. You’re always negotiating new lines.