Dag 4 van de KA op Mauritius en het waait prima want het is alweer tijd voor de freestyle finales.
The day started at the quarter final stage for the men, while the women had already progressed to the semis.
Discipline: Freestyle
Judging Criteria: Pure freestyle (4 tricks from 4 different trick families count from 7 attempts. Riders take turns to perform one trick in a minute) Two riders advance from each heat.
Wind: 20 – 25 knots
As well as being packed with incredibly high trick and heat scores throughout, there was also tragedy and heartbreak.
Stefan Spiessberger is one of the longest-standing freestyle competitors that the sport has seen. He re-dislocated his shoulder at the start of the second quarter final when the bar pulled him forward and he caught a rail. In a rather more freak accident, reigning champion Carlos Mario injured his knee during the warm-up for his semi-final…
We wish them both well, but Mario’s sudden withdrawal offered the chance to this year’s new tour leader, Maxime Chabloz, to really capitalise on points.
The Men’s semi finals lined up like this:
SEMI-FINAL 01
L Whaley (ESP) / P Martinez (DR) / V Rodriguez (COL) / C Mario (BRA – out injured)
SEMI-FINAL 02
N Delmas (FRA) / A Guillebert (FRA) / A Corniel (DR) / M Chabloz (CZE)
In truth, the Freestyle competition takes some getting to know. The tricks are of course very technical, often with very little obvious differences between each trick to those not ‘in the know’, but if you were stood on the beach here in Bel Ombre there was no chance to say that new school freestyle was done at low altitude today. The first semi final was one of the best heats of freestyle kiteboarding we’ve ever seen in recent years.
Riders were attacking their tricks with furious venom, each throwing their trick on their first run out in their allotted minute, usually in the first 15 seconds, such was their focus. You got the impression they all knew that as soon as they took their foot off the gas, the others would pounce, sensing the loss of momentum.
Posito Martinez scored the day’s joint highest trick score with a 9.9 for a heart attack 7 (Liam Whaley got the other 9.9), but the Domincan would finish in third, agonisingly just 0.27 off qualifying for the final in second.
Liam Whaley’s 9.6 for a KGB7 on his penultimate trick had moved him into first, where he finished, just ahead of a battered Valentin Rodrigues who survived the biggest front edge wipeout you can imagine, coming down from the stars on trick six.
You can read the heat notes HERE. Man on man competition and high calibre peak performance riding, trick after trick, doesn’t get any better.
The second semi-final would have been the heat of the event, had it not been for semi-final 01. The scorecard was littered with high eights and one nine point score (Adeuri), but the headline story was the final point tally of the top three:
Adeuri Corniel: 33.93
Nicolas Delmas: 33.9
Maxima Chabloz: 33.17
A Guillebert: 22.03
Adeuri beat Delmas by 0.3, while Maxime Chabloz was left to rue the chance to extend his lead at the top of the championship by missing a good take-off and getting a really low trick score on his final attempt, missing out on the final by 0.7 points!
The margins are so tight and the judges are called on with great pressure to separate them.
I often sit in the judge’s tower when making notes and head judge Mallory de la Villemarque constantly keeps the judges focused on the scale, reminding them of the other same tricks that heat: “Remember what you scored Valentin for his heart attack 7 – scale against that everyone.”
So yeah, the scores today were high, but if you study back through the scores online, you’ll see that there were many nines, for 319s, slim 9s, KGB 7s… and heart attack 7s.