Filipe Toledo conquers Pipeline
In Filipe Toledo’s own on-beach interview, the champ coolly told his interlocutor Strider Wasilewski, that “real waves” are what he looks for when “we come to Hawaii. Those are the conditions that we want.”

Filipe Toledo exorcises big-wave demons with flawless Pipe wave that leaves Barron Mamiya with mouth on floor!

“Oh wow! That was crazy!”

The two-time world surfing champ Filipe Toledo has left jaws on floor, mouths agape, etc, with an almost flawless ride at medium-sized, but difficult Pipeline, a few moments ago. 

Toledo, the almost thirty year old daddy of two, was in danger of another zero-point heat when he slid into a classic Pipeline pyramid for a four-pointer. 

Then, as local surfer Barron Mamiya who deposed John John Florence as the king of Pipe in a wild final last year was being interviewed on the beach, Toledo filled a small Backdoor drainer for an almost-perfect eight-point ride. 

“Oh wow! That was crazy!” said Barron Mamiya. 

 

In Filipe Toledo’s own on-beach interview, the champ coolly told his interlocutor Strider Wasilewski, that “real waves” are what he looks for when he hits Hawaii each year.

“Those are the conditions that we want.”

Toledo added, “A lot of years I start here with a poor result here. I have nothing to prove to anybody. I came to come here to enjoy myself. No pressure at all.” 

Toledo showed similar gusto at the Olympics last year when he completed what Chas Smith described as “the single greatest ride in surfing history” although that chimera was revealed the following day when Teahupoo turned into a “deadly paradise.”

As JP Currie wrote, “Yesterday, his demons had been vanquished, silenced and sent back to that dark chamber in the pit of his soul. Today, they are back upon his shoulder, wailing and cackling into the shot blood of his eyeballs.And I fear that when it’s all said and done, it won’t be two world titles and some of the most dynamic surfing ever done that is Filipe Toledo’s legacy, but simply a handful of waves he refused to paddle for.”

Is today a new dawn?

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Barron Mamiya ten point ride Lexus Pipe Pro 2025

Live Chat Day Three of the Lexus Pipe Pro!

Pleasure to burn.

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Moana Jones Wong at Pipeline 2025
To Moana’s credit, these were not conditions that suited her at all, but she kept grinding at it. Backdoor, turns, not her thing! | Photo: WSL/Tony Huff

Women surfers continue to overshadow “lacklustre” men at Lexus Pipe Pro

This edition of Pipe has felt like both the longest and the shortest ever: Schrödinger’s surf contest.

I will watch 10,000 ads. I will watch 10,000 ads for you during the Lexus Pipe Pro, because well, I’m stupid. Have you ever watched the replays on the World Surf League website? There’s an unskippable ad at the beginning of the heat, and yet another ad in the middle of the heat.

If you try to let it run while you cruise to another tab, it will stop. It knows! It knows you are cheating! No cheating allowed. You must watch all 10,000 hours of ads — Lexus, Cali Squeeze, and Apple+ — if you want to watch the surfing. It is not a good time, but I did it all for you. I did it, because I’m stupid.

We have reached the quarterfinals of the Lexus Pipe Pro for the women. As Chas rightly pointed out, it either takes ten days to run a surfing contest or 1.57 days. This edition of Pipe has felt like both the longest and the shortest ever: Schrödinger’s surf contest. The conditions have not inspired. Still, the show must go on.

Let’s start with a few good things. My favorite heat so far came during the round of 16, between Isabella Nichols and Gabriela Bryan. They had the highest scoring heat of the day, and one of the closest. Isabella won it with a clean backdoor tube that she rode out, easy like a week of Sundays. That wave earned her a mid-8, the highest single wave score of the day.

For her part, Gabriela came out swinging. Over the past few years, she’s quietly developed into one of the most consistent surfers on Tour. She threw down a series of hammer turns that earned her one of the highest single wave scores of the day. And in fact, Gabriela’s heat score was the second-highest of the day. Too bad for her that it wasn’t enough. Isabella moves on to the quarterfinals.

After her round of 16 heat, Caity Simmers gave her usual random interview. She was tired from paddling, out of position, and very sad in the lineup. But inside the final five minutes, she found a barrel, a neat double cover-up, and she threw hard into a turn to finish it. Caity also scored one of the few barrels on the opening day. A basic rule of surfing is: if there’s a barrel, Caity will find it.

It does, however, require nerves of steel to be a Caity fan. As she pointed out in her interview, she fell a lot and for most of her heat, she trailed Moana Jones Wong. To Moana’s credit, these were not conditions that suited her at all, but she kept grinding at it. Backdoor, turns, not her thing!

 

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In fact, the opening day sent Moana to the elimination round. She fought her way out, sending new girl Bella Kenworthy home. Then Moana met Caity in the round of 16 and came close to beating her. Thanks to her magical attraction to the barrel, though, Caity won and heads for the quarterfinals.

After Lakey failed the make the cut last year, she was understandably demoralized. It was perhaps a needed wake-up call. She took a hard look at her surfing and decided to put in the work over the off-season. Lakey’s super power is her rail surfing, yes, but also she’s just really fucking strong, and in recent clips, she seems to be putting those things together in an interesting and dynamic way.

Having the Lexus Pipe Pro contest transform into a turn-fest at Backdoor was a gift for Lakey and she’s put it to use. She finished second to Tyler in her opening round, which was enough to jump over the elimination round. Then she beat Tati Weston-Webb to make the quarters. To be sure, Tati had a bit of a shocker. When the wheels come off for Tati, they tend to come all the way off. But Lakey put her experience to use, stayed unruffled, and got her scores. She meets Isabella in the quarters.

I have heard a lot of talk about how Erin Brooks is going to win everything, all the time. I don’t think it’s especially fair to weigh her down with quite so many expectations in her rookie year. But I am just a girl on the internet. No need to listen to me.

So, how’s Pipe going for Erin? Well. She got sent to the elimination round by Gabriela and Sawyer Lindblad. She escaped by beating Sally Fitzgibbons and placing second to Bettylou Sakura Johnson, but in truth, none of her wave scores was anything special.

On the whole, poor conditions often favor experience over pure talent. Women who have been on Tour for a while learn how to spin shit into gold. Caroline Marks is amazingly good at winning clutch heats in bad waves, which is a compliment, I promise. It’s an art form.

Against Molly Picklum in the round of 16, Erin never really got it going. One turn waves yielded a series of low scores. It was a low-scoring heat overall, but Molly predictably ripped a few solid turns. There was one nifty combination where she air dropped off the lip before shimmying around the section to hit the close-out. It was a high six, and kept Erin scrambling to make anything work. Molly moves on, while Erin takes a ninth.

In her heat against Brisa, Vahine Fierro really wanted to get barreled. She managed to find a couple of cover-ups at backdoor, but it wasn’t enough. Over the past few seasons, in particular, Brisa has become a remarkably consistent heat surfer. She’s smooth and steady and she relied on her turns to carry her. It was enough to take a narrow win over Vahine. Brisa meets Molly in the quarters.

After her performance at Pipe last year, it was a surprise to see Bettylou go out early. Overall last season, Bettylou seemed to find her rhythm on Tour and she’s added some much-needed strength to her turns.

But in her opening round heat, she looked surprisingly lost for a local girl. She only surfed two waves and lost to Molly and Vahine. In her elimination heat, she left it until late — like super late — and only advanced after scoring a seven-point ride inside the final 30 seconds to send Sally home.

Luck didn’t find Bettylou when she met Sawyer in the round of 16. Sawyer has a wicked backhand and she looks to have gotten stronger over the off-season. It’s hard to call the Rookie of the Year underrated, but Sawyer keeps catching me by surprise. Her backhand definitely slaps and she put it to use at Backdoor to send Bettylou home. The quarterfinal between Sawyer and Caity should be a very good time.

It feels like Caroline has been on Tour forever, but she’s still only 22. She’s got a world title and a gold medal to her credit already. Caroline has slid through this Pipe contest on the strength of her consistency and smart heat surfing. Caroline rarely makes mistakes and in mediocre conditions, she’s extremely good at winning. Her only weakness is big barrels, which hasn’t held her back all that much.

At Pipe, she’s had a relatively easy draw. She beat new girl Bella and wildcard Nadia Erostarbe in the opening round. Then in the round of 16, Caroline drew Nadia again and quite honestly, smashed her to bits. Caroline advances to the quarterfinals and begins her next world title pursuit.

Tyler also has experience on her side, and like Lakey, she has thrived on this turns at Backdoor edition of the Lexus Pipe Pro. Tyler won her opening round and beat Luana Silva in the round of 16. Luana’s put in some work over the off-season and her turns looked sharp in her opening round win. Against Tyler, though, she struggled to put together a winning heat. Tyler meets Caroline in the quarterfinals.

On Friday, it’s all boys, all day. There’s a pile of men’s heats to finish, and not all that much time left to do it. It either takes ten days or 1.57 days. I don’t pretend to understand it.

Look for finals day of the Lexus Pipe Pro to take place on Saturday.

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Donald Trump and transgender surfer Sasha Jane Lowerson
Donald Trump and inspirational transgender surfer Sasha Jane Lowerson.

Kelly Slater bandmate Peter King lauds President Trump for ending “atrocity” of transwomen in sport

“PROMISES MADE. PROMISES KEPT!”

The former pro surfer, photographer and bandmate of Kelly Slater, Peter King, has cemented his anti-trans gals in women’s sports stance following an executive order by Donald Trump to ban T-Girls from gal’s divs.

Scrawled across a photo of Trump signing the historic decree Peter King writes, “What a HERO this man is…why did it take him to right this atrocity?”

Donald Trump signs decree ending participation of biological men in women's sport
Donald Trump signs decree ending participation of biological men in women’s sport.

You’ll remember when the WSL tentatively opened the door to trans-women competing so long as they’ve been a gal for at least twelve months and their hormone levels are real low ie less than 5 nanomoles per liter continuously for the previous 12 months (biological men hover between 10 and 35, bio-gals under three), although the WSL admitted they wouldn’t be doing the testing and would rely on each athlete supplying their own supporting documents.

“The WSL is working hard to balance equity and fairness and it’s important for a policy to be in place,” the WSL’s newly anointed Chief of Sport Jessi Miley-Dyer told the oft-controversial adult learner surfer website The Inertia, at the time.“We recognize that the policy may need to evolve over time as we get feedback and see new research in the field.”

King, a man celebrated by Stab magazine as “surfing’s most powerful journalist”, had reacted poorly, you might say, to the WSL’s decision to allow transwomen in sports.

“Stay out of women’s sports where you miraculously win after being an average performing man. Women’s sports is not a backup plan where you can’t win a trophy (And $) in the men’s division. Leagues like WSL and sponsors like Red Bull will you now stand up to this now instead of harming women’s sports?”

Kelly Slater had added, “Make a trans division and we don’t have this confusion.”

The furore was about one gal, pretty much, the the inspirational transgender longboarder Sasha Jane Lowerson.

Lowerson, a svelte forty-six year old with terrific arms and an impossible to ignore come hither look, had transitioned into womanhood in 2020 shortly after winning the men’s longboard div as Ryan Egan.

“Trans-girls aren’t going to take over the world, we just want to be included, we’re humans too,” Lowerson said at the time. ‘I’ve been hiding in this male shell up… for 42 years. To still be made to be that guy that I’m not, it’s shattering.”

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Griffin Colapinto (pictured) mentally solving equations. (Photo by Brent Bielmann/World Surf League)
Griffin Colapinto (pictured) mentally solving equations. (Photo by Brent Bielmann/World Surf League)

Greatest World Surf League mystery deepens as Lexus Pipe Pro reaches conclusion!

Professional surfing, at its highest level, can take eight entire days or two entire days to fully conduct.

The Lexus Pipe Pro is off today, again, deepening the greatest World Surf League mystery. As the surf fan knows, event windows on the Championship Tour are generally ten days (non-pool). Now, the aforementioned “Global Home of Surfing” can, and often does, use many of the ten days, basically sun up to sun down, to run the required heats. Forty-seven thirty-ish minute affairs for the men, half that for the women.

Basically thirty-eight hours of surfing.

Now, and once more, this time can be spread over many sun up to sun down days or, as will happen at the Pipe Pro, can be condensed into two days.

How does the maths math?

Overlapping heats account for some time savings but not that much leaving, simply, the greatest World Surf League mystery flapping in the wind unsolved.

Professional surfing, at its highest level, can take eight entire days or two entire days to fully conduct.

Wild and maybe akin to the “geographic oddity” experienced in Oh Brother Where Art Thou?

Regarding the current competition, WSL Deputy Commissioner Renato Hickel said, “The swell dropped a notch from yesterday. Not much, it’s definitely clean, and there’s nice, running right-handers out there, but with the cards we have on hand with this new NW swell filling in tomorrow with the expectation to be in the eight-to-12-foot range and then six-to-eight-foot the following day, we made the option to give the surfers the opportunity to surf real Pipe and finish the event in awesome waves.”

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