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TAJ WINS QUIKSILVER PRO

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It's all about the City of Melbourne.
Saturday 20th March at Queensbridge Square, Southbank.
This year we're setting up our purpose built 3 flat 5 double set, with kinked handrail, and flat hubbas right on the Yarra river next to the Casino in Melbourne. So if I were you I'd get to Queensbridge Square on Saturday 20th March to watch Australia's best skaters hammer it out for $5000 cash.
Be there or be squared!
Views: 27
Taj etched his name into the history books, claiming the inaugral 2010 Association Of Surfing Professionals WQS 4-Star, Breaka Burleigh Pro. Burrow exploded out of the gates with a blistering 9.10 (out of a possible 10), going on to register a combined two-wave total of 17.30 (out of a possible 20) to Kerr's 15.67, Wright's 14.60 and Payne's 8.73.
Views: 93
Views: 232
Boys and Girls actions from day 7 at the Billabong World Junior Championships
Views: 34
Highlights from day 5 of the Billabong World Junior Championships
Views: 37
Highlights from Girls Round 1 & Boys Round 1
Views: 60
Aussies Mick Fanning and Stephanie Gilmore may be the toast of the surfing world having wrapped up the men’s and women’s World Titles in Hawaii, but now the focus shifts to Australia’s fledgling junior stars to see if they can make history by claiming the world’s premier junior surfing event – the 2009 Billabong ASP World Junior Championships fuelled by Monster Energy – due to take place at Sydney’s North Narrabeen beach over eight days beginning January 9th.
Views: 159
Billabong Air & Style 09/II Highlights
Views: 197
With a building El Niño weather condition, surfers throughout the Hawaiian Islands have been anxiously awaiting the arrival of extra-large surf -- and today the Pacific Ocean delivered the biggest waves seen there in years.  At famous breaks like Waimea Bay on Oahu and Jaws in Maui, the world's top big wave riders challenged the mammoth swell, spawned by an intense low pressure system which formed northwest of the Islands over the weekend.  

At Waimea Bay, thousands of spectators jammed traffic on Kamehameha Highway as locals and tourists alike stopped to see surfers paddling in to towering 30 to 40 foot breakers on a gray and ominous day.  Meanwhile, big wave riders and onlookers in Maui were treated to a beautiful sunny day with even larger surf, well suited to tow-in surfing using jet-powered watercraft in waves reaching the 50-foot mark.
Views: 290