On-duty lifeguard wins Hawaiian event in 50-foot surf as wave sweeps baby under beach house
On-duty lifeguard wins Hawaiian event in 50-foot surf as wave sweeps baby under beach house
Fifty-foot waves hammered Hawaii’s Waimea Bay, with an estimated 50,000-strong crowd watching surfing’s most prestigious event from the shore.
One large wave swept a baby under a beachside home, the child thankfully uninjured, as the world’s best big-wave riders took on the elements.
Luke Shepardson beat all comers at the Eddie Aikau Big Wave Invitational.Credit:SMH
And fittingly, local on-duty lifeguard Luke Shepardson, charged with keeping the masses safe amid the mayhem, emerged as the overall winner of the Eddie Aikau Big Wave Invitational.
North Shore native Shepardson reported for duty as a Honolulu City Council lifeguard on Sunday morning (Monday, AEDT) and surfed the world’s most iconic big-wave event in between extended breaks allowed by his supervisor.
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He couldn’t have done any more in the water, emulating Aikau’s big-wave prowess as Waimea Bay’s first lifeguard more than 50 years ago.
Shepardson’s score of 89.1 from a possible 90 points for three waves trumped 2016 winner and two-time world champion John John Florence and a 40-strong field of competitors.
But even after taking out the prestigious event, which has only been held 10 times in almost 40 decades because it requires 40-foot-plus conditions, Shepardson’s day wasn’t done.
“I told myself, ‘I’m in it because I can win it’,” Shepardson told Hawaii News Now after his historic win.
“It was super scary, the waves were huge and it was a dream come true just to be part of The Eddie, just to be on the alternate list.
“I can’t believe it, it’s f---ing crazy. I’ve got to get back to the tower to make sure everyone’s OK until the end of the day.”
Shepardson and his colleagues were kept busy, with lifeguards reporting at least 64 rescues throughout the day, including two adults and a baby who were swept off the beach early in the day.
The child was washed under the footings of a nearby home, but was quickly retrieved and given a clean bill of health by emergency medical services soon after.
Among a series of hair-raising rides by the likes of Shepardson, 56-year-old Australian legend Ross Clarke-Jones, local Billy Kemper and wave of the day winner Zeke Lau, there was history and havoc in equal measure.
Brazil’s Andrea Moller became the first woman to compete in the Eddie when she featured in the day’s first heat, leading the likes of Keala Kennelly, Justine Dupont, Emily Erickson, Makani Adric and Paige Alms as the first female contingent in the event.
Kennelly, one of Hawaii’s best big-wave surfers, took arguably the heaviest fall of the day, plunging several metres down the face of a 40-foot monster before emerging rattled but unharmed from the water.
Fittingly, Shepardson was on hand once more as Kennelly made her way up the beach to rapturous applause.
“I grew up with Andy and Bruce Irons, and we had amazing big-wave role models,” Kennelly said before surfing her heat.
“But our ultimate hero was Eddie. I remember being a little girl thinking, ‘I want to be a hero like that, but I probably can’t because I’m a woman’.
“So when I was invited ... it was one of the biggest honours of my life. To actually be here, paddle out there and be out there with five of my other surfing sisters, you’re watching history in the making.”
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