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Behind the Graphic - Automation Snowboards
Posted: 10/19/2009 - 2 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: Snow

Behind each snowboard graphic is someone's ideas. A graphic can be born from a long car ride with friends, a silly design they walk by, in a dream they have'the list goes on. I caught up with Automaton Snowboards to find out what goes into each graphic, first talking with Brenton Woo the owner and brains behind Automaton Snowboards and then talking with three of Automaton's artist about their graphics they have created.

automaton

Shay: How do you come up with ideas for Automaton?
Brenton: I like topics that the general public will pick up on quickly. One thing I don't like about the traditional art scene is work that isn't easily understood. Ever gone to an art museum and wondered why the pile of whatever you?re looking at is in there? I?m sure there's a historically significant back story to it, and if we took the time to learn it, it would make sense as to why that piece is in a museum. But what's the point of that? That seems like a very inefficient method of conveying information to me. For Automaton, I like to work with themes that are common life experiences for people. Art is created for expression (emotional, political, social, personal, etc). But what's the point if people don?t understand the meaning? For example, 09/10 is Shred Today (Because Tomorrow It May Melt). Most people have experienced the regret of wasted time. Generally I see something about how our world operates and try to come up with an idea for artwork that will make fun of it. Try to get the viewers thinking and acting, and hopefully changing.

Shay: How do you find and select artists to work with Automaton snowboards?
Brenton: So far, pretty easily. Most of the artists find Automaton. On average I?d say a new artist contacts us once a week. But that's good because visual art is a large part of our brand, and I?m glad Automaton's becoming known for that. I also like to keep the artists on rotation so that the work stays fresh and everyone has their chance. Since our product line involves 2 snowboard models, we work with 2 artists per season. I prefer to have a more established artist take care of 1 model, and have a hungry up and comer for the other.

Shay: What gets your creative juices flowing?
Brenton: A lot of the time it's specific triggers. I can?t think of most of them off the top of my head right this second, but one example is when someone says that they?re unable to accomplish a goal. That really gets me fired up. Why can?t they? What's stopping them? Most of the time, it's nothing. It's their personal fears, which in reality are nothing. And then I start scheming practical ways on how that person can accomplish their goal. Dreams are worthless unless you do something to achieve them. And the best way to get something done is to go ahead and do it. The concept of self-empowerment is how I came up with the idea for the graphic of a boy armed with his wooden sword, facing down his monster for the Ferris 150 (done by Ferris Plock) 4 seasons ago. I?m not calling myself an artist, but I?ve heard that great artists know great pain. I think this is true whether it's music, visual, film, literature, or snowboarding.

brenton5

Shay: What is the process for creating and completing a board graphic?
Brenton: The first step is to agree on the season's theme. We have to stay at least 18 months ahead of the game, so this winter 2009/10, we?ll be working on winter 2011/12. Then I need to come up with 2 graphic concepts that complement that season's theme. Usually, 1 of the 2 artists from the current season's line is returning, which means I need to find only 1 more. From the artists that I know or have been contacting me, I?ll go through their portfolios and see whose style I think will work well with the graphic idea. A lot of artists will do some quick pencil sketches of their idea so we?ll know what to expect and to also finalize the general layout. Sometimes they forget that things like bindings will eventually obscure the viewing area. Once all the preliminary issues are set, I let the artists have total control on the rest of the creative process. They can use whatever tools and mediums. However, the graphic ultimately needs to be digitized either in vector or bitmap format. By March of every year, I?m uploading these files to the factory in Austria to start sample production. Proofs come out at the beginning of summer. The art department at Elan is really on top of their game. Colvin's team definitely knows how to translate artwork into a finished board.

Shay: When it comes to graphics, do you keep with an image or look?
Brenton: The only things we keep consistent are the Automaton logo and red sidewalls. Obviously people need to know that what they?re looking at is Automaton. In branding, we call this visual cohesiveness. But the rest is left up to the artist. I like to share the feeling that things are fresh and new, which is why I?ve set up our art program like it is. Having an established artist teamed with an unknown often creates a great dynamic. Even though they work independently of each other, sometimes they get sort of competitive and want to feel like they?re out doing each other when I think the end results are great on their own merits anyway.

Shay: What is your inspiration for Automaton graphics?
Brenton: The skate industry. The skate industry has the strongest brands in snow/skate/surf, and part of it is due to the graphics. Skate brands really speak to and for skaters. Brands that can?t or don?t stay relevant go away. The same thing happens in music. One band's style can?t stay popular forever. (Bands that last constantly have to reinvent themselves). At Hood, some kids came up to me and said they thought Automaton was Toy Machine snowboards because of the graphics. I take that as a compliment, not because I want to bite Toy, but because Toy is one of my favorite skate brands. Maybe subconsciously I was biting Toy. My favorite brands for graphics are: Toy Machine for Templeton's unique vision. I like Zero for the opposite reason of why I like Element. Element is good clean design, whereas Zero is raw. The word ?Zero? along with the skull logo is just so strong. I?d love if Automaton's logo and name had that kind of power. In my mind, Popwar split the difference between Zero and Element. Consolidated cracks me up, yet often makes good points with their graphics. Anti-Hero is great, too. Other brands I like, but wouldn?t necessarily say inspired me include Pig, Foundation, Bueno, Saturday, Santa Monica Airlines.

Shay: What are you working on now?
Brenton: There's always something. Right this second I?m waiting for the 09/10 decks to be delivered. Should be here this afternoon. Get them inventoried and shipped. After that, the Automaton site is due for an update, so I gotta get my head back into thinking code. It's not that fun.

Automaton Artist Alex Funderburk

alex-painting

Shay: Did you approach Automaton with an idea or did they approach you with an idea for a graphic?
Alex: Brenton and I collaborated on the concept.

Shay: Describe yourself as an artist?
Alex: Aggressive, loose, with a flowy swagger.. I paint like I make love. Sounds sloppy right?

Shay: Which snowboard is your artwork featured on?
Alex: This season I designed The Time Fighter series.

timefighter

Shay: What are your tools for creating art? What about this specific design, what did you use?
Alex: I use acrylic paint, inks, adobe cs and the old brain muscle. For this particular project I used design markers and sized and colored it in Photoshop.

Shay: What was the process like for turning a piece of art into a board graphic?
Alex: I created the art with shape of the board in mind. Basically just a canvas with a snowboard shape.

Shay: What was your inspiration for this graphic?
Alex: The Orange County Milf scene.

Shay: What are you working on now?
Alex: Paintings for a November show and tons of graphics for Paul Frank. Also working on an album with my band the Skullcocks.

Check out more of Alex's work at: http://thesacredbeastart.blogspot.com

Automaton Artist Justin Lovato

mepyramid

Shay: Did you approach Automaton with an idea or did they approach you with an idea for a graphic?
Justin: I?ve known Brenton for a while so I?m in his roster of open-minded artists. He felt confident in giving me a theme to work with. The Unnatural theme just happened to fit my style real well!

Shay: Describe yourself as an artist?
Justin: A little bit comic book cartoon illustrative style mixed with 14th century European, mixed with surreal mixed with weed and beer and awesome.

Shay: What snowboard is your artwork featured on?
Justin: The Unnatural series from Automaton. Three different sizes, three different graphics!

unnatural

Shay: What are your tools for creating art? What about this specific design, what did you use?
Justin: I use acrylic paint, house paint, spray paint, cell vinyl black, ink, wine, coffee, spit, sweat, blood, and lots of other cool shit! For this I used a little bit of all of those things, especially spit and sweat.

Shay: What was the process like for turning a piece of art into a board graphic?
Justin: step 1. Make cool looking shit like fat dudes with beers jammed into head because they ran out of orifices to drink with and popes that look all evil and docile and dirty. Draw til? your hand hurts.
step 2. scan in drawings.
step 3. put scanned in art into Illustrator, arrange it, color it, put on the board template and send to printers. (Don?t forget to wait ?til the last minute to do all this.)
step 4. Look at the clock and say ?Oh shit! It's 4 in the morning! Why did I stay up this late for this board graphic? I was supposed to meet my friend with my road bike in Sacramento so we can ride our bikes 150 miles to Berkeley at 7 in the morning!?
Then say fuck it, sleep for an hour and go do it anyways! Damn i was tired when I got to Berkeley. (True story)

Shay: What was your inspiration for this graphic?
Justin: My inspiration was people and they?re habits and lifestyle that they choose to place themselves in. No matter how detrimental it may be to their health, psyche, and environment.

Shay: What are you working on now?
Justin: I have a solo show at Upper playground Sacramento hanging right now. The opening went super well. I have a brand spanking new print for sale on my website. It's the coolest thing I?ve ever made and everybody should get one because its awesome looking. You can get that here! www.justinlovato.com/buyprints.html

Automaton Artist Joe Polillo

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Shay: Did you approach Automaton with an idea or did they approach you with an idea for a graphic?
Joe: Somewhere in a lucid dream, a while ago we spoke of doing a board about pirates but we all sat down and spoke over a cup of mushroom tea and decided that we should just trust me.

Shay: Describe yourself as an artist?
Joe: Something short of a modern day realist serialist. Not so much an artist more or less a painter, I?m inside my own box without any rocks and a few dark thoughts you know where the wild things are.

Shay: What snowboard is your artwork featured on?
Joe: My first and favorite is the Trust Me and the Oddball was a smash.

oddball

Shay: What are your tools for creating art? What about this specific design, what did you use?
Joe: A time machine that I use to enter the gas world where my thoughts pore from my mind like piles of worms. Lots of ink. I normally go and get paint mixed tell them I?ll be right back to pick it up but here is the twist I come back a few day later and it is on the opp's rack I get it for cheap, I?m a sneaky fuck.

Shay: What was the process like for turning a piece of art into a board graphic?
Joe: i hope no one takes this wrong but a lot of masturbating layers paint cutting your self off from friends, really creating ideas aside the norm.

Shay: What was your inspiration for this graphic?
Joe: A lot of broken relationships, gals I would chase around unnatural things, distractions, drinking parties, lies, made up ideas, looking into religion, reading the skys flowing cem trails all the way down to costa mesa where I now live.

Shay: What are you working on now?
Joe: Kind of backing away from decore pieces, I would rather paint big and huge then chill on some art show pieces that will hang for a mouth and then disappear into a house to never be seen again. Short lived art is what owns my hart?

Joe P is working on a showing with Alex Funderburk in Costa Mesa for this November. He's also currently spicing up The Closet at Fashion Island in Newport Beach.

De Souza takes ASP World Tour Win at Billabong Pro Mundaka
Posted: 10/19/2009 - 0 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 83 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: Surf

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Stop No. 8 of 10 on the 2009 ASP World Tour, the Billabong Pro Mundaka experienced an array of conditions for the event, from clean surf on the opening day at Mundaka to a lengthy seven-day wait before a marathon 24-heat session yesterday, culminating into today's dramatic finale.

Adriano de Souza (BRA), 22, who had previously experienced in the ASP World Junior Championships (winning in 2003) and on the ASP World Qualifying Series winning in 2005), was rapt with his inaugural ASP World Tour victory.

"I don't have words to express how happy I am right now,"De Souza said. "I have been working so hard for this ever since winning the ASP World Junior Championships and the ASP WQS. To finally win here in Mundaka, where the culture is so rich and the people love surfing so much, is an incredible thing. This is the most special day of my life."

The young Brazilian dominated the crumbling lefthander of Sopelana, racking up an insurmountable 16.40 out of a possible 20 to overtake his Australian opponent, resulting in his history-making win as the first South American to take out the prestigious event win.

"The conditions have been hard for this event but we surfed the best waves that were available to us," De Souza said. "Davo (Chris Davidson) is such a strong surfer and he has been going after a win for so long. When he beat C.J. (Hobgood) in the Semifinals, I knew it was going to be a battle. I was able to get the better waves today and that's why I won."

The victory rockets De Souza into a solid 3rd place on the 2009 ASP World Tour ratings, putting him within striking distance for a shot at the ASP World Title.

"I'm not thinking about the world title right now,"De Souza said. "I am just enjoying my win. This is the biggest win of my career and have a lot of confidence heading into the next events."

Davidson, who's storied career amongst the world's best surfers has seen him qualifying and falling off tour multiple times, secured his best ever result today with his Runner-Up finish at the Billabong Pro Mundaka.

"Everything has felt special at this event for some reason,"Davidson said. "Everything has clicked and I've felt confident in every heat. Couldn't find the waves in the Final, but congrats to Adriano (de Souza) - it's a truly deserving win."

The win vaults Davidson into 20th position on the 2009 ASP World Tour ratings, well within the requalification cutoff for 2010.

"It was a really crucial event for me in terms of the ratings," Davidson said. "I was on the bubble heading into this event and knew I needed to pull something out of the bag. I'm frothing for the next event and the rest of the year."

C.J. Hobgood (USA), 30, former ASP World Champion (2001), matched his best result today, finishing equal 3rd and solidifying his position at 4th on the ASP World Tour ratings.

"I'm really stoked for Davo (Chris Davidson), but it's disappointing at the same time," Hobgood said. "I'm happy that I matched my best result this season, but was hoping for better. I felt like I prepared well and surfed conditions similar to this most of the week, but in the end, I couldn't edge into the Final."

Kelly Slater (USA), 37, reigning nine-time ASP World Champion, was in stunning form throughout the event despite nursing an Ilio-tibial band strain in his knee, only losing to eventual winner De Souza in a tightly fought Semifinal bout.

"The knee felt okay today," Slater said. "It was sore walking downhill but felt okay out in the lineup. I guess I'm still in contention (for the ASP World Title), but we'll see how it pans out."

The race for the 2009 ASP World Title is far from over and the world's best surfers will battle it out in the remaining two events.

Next stop on the 2009 ASP World Tour will be the Rip Curl Pro Search in Peniche, Portugal from 19 - 28, 2009.

For more information, log onto www.aspworldtour.com

BILLABONG PRO MUNDAKA FINAL RESULTS:
1. Adriano de Souza (BRA) 16.40
2. Chris Davidson (AUS) 11.83

BILLABONG PRO MUNDAKA SEMIFINAL RESULTS:
SF 1: Chris Davidson (AUS) 13.84 def. C.J. Hobgood (USA) 10.53
SF 2: Adriano de Souza (BRA) 16.00 def. Kelly Slater (USA) 15.93

BILLABONG PRO MUNDAKA QUARTERFINAL RESULTS:
QF 1: C.J. Hobgood (USA) 14.00 def. Bede Durbidge (AUS) 10.97
QF 2: Chris Davidson (AUS) 13.40 def. Drew Courtney (AUS) 10.10
QF 3: Adriano de Souza (BRA) 16.33 def. Fredrick Patacchia (HAW) 10.67
QF 4: Kelly Slater (USA) 14.33 def. Taj Burrow (AUS) 10.60

BILLABONG PRO MUNDAKA ROUND 3 RESULTS:
Heat 1: C.J. Hobgood (USA) 8.00 def. Kekoa Bacalso (HAW) 6.17
Heat 2: Bede Durbidge (AUS) 14.93 def. Jordy Smith (ZAF) 10.90
Heat 3: Chris Davidson (AUS) 14.73 def. Bobby Martinez (USA) 14.17
Heat 4: Drew Courtney (AUS) 13.26 def. Kai Otton (AUS) 10.74
Heat 5: Fredrick Patacchia (HAW) 14.44 def. Mick Fanning (AUS) 12.10
Heat 6: Adriano de Souza (BRA) 14.16 def. Taylor Knox (USA) 11.44
Heat 7: Kelly Slater (USA) 12.93 def. Tom Whitaker (AUS) 9.26
Heat 8: Taj Burrow (AUS) 14.60 def. Kieren Perrow (AUS) 11.43

CURRENT ASP WORLD TOUR TOP 10 (After Billabong Pro Mundaka):
1. Mick Fanning (AUS) 6350 points
2. Joel Parkinson (AUS) 6306 points
3. Adriano de Souza (BRA) 5773 points
4. C.J. Hobgood (USA) 5748 points
5. Bede Durbidge (AUS) 5524 points
6. Kelly Slater (USA) 5514 points
7. Taj Burrow (AUS) 5149 points
8. Bobby Martinez (USA) 4914 points
9. Taylor Knox (USA) 4816 points
10. Damien Hobgood (USA) 4794 points

Nike Zoom Force 1 DKYS (Danny Kass)
Posted: 10/15/2009 - 2 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: Snow

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Yep, it's here. The first-ever Danny Kass Nike Snowboarding boot -- the Nike Zoom Force 1 snowboard boots. Based on the styling of Nike's ever-popular Air Force 1, the Zoom Force 1 is aiming to take snowboard boots and revolutionize them the same way Nike SB did for skateboarding. Featuring a fully removable EVA liner, an aggressive tread pattern, Zoom Air in the heel, and an instep lace lock (just to name a few features), the ultra-limited (only 50 stores in the world have them) Zoom Force 1 is an all-out freestyle assault boot waiting to be ridden in. Tour Yellow/Black Color (Danny Kass); 2009 model.

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  • Part of Nike Snowboarding's innaugural launch of snowboard boots
  • Based on styling of Nike Air Force 1 sneakers
  • Zoom Air in heel of boot for cushioning
  • Lace-up, removable interior EVA liner for fit and support
  • Instep Lace Lock for added heel hold and keeping lower zone of boot tight while lacing upper zone
  • Locking Lace Loop on calf of boot for support and security
  • Aggressive sneaker-inspired tread pattern

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VANS Downtown Showdown 2009
Posted: 10/13/2009 - 0 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: Skate

http://www.dailyskatenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/vans-downtown-showdown-2009.jpg

Now that it's all been said and all been done, we can take a look back at the 5th Downtown Showdown and organize our thoughts. Most of you won't have to write them down, and you should feel fortunate, if only because to catalog all of those thoughts might span as many as 20,000 words. You might start paring it down to just the most important things to you personally. Hell, we all do that. I'll tell you what some of my favorite things were, and maybe you can tell me yours.

Seeing the Zoo York crew out here this year was a fine and wonderful thing. The boys from back east and all points are as potent as they come. Look no further than Zered Bassett and Ron Deily doling out the 1-3 punch on the Little China Girl Banks. On Friday, Zered also straight nollie'd the FLiP pyramid cleanly as well. These guys are so good and on the rare occasions that they surface in this sort of environment, the results are spectacular. We've all seen Chaz do his thing on TV, so seeing the rest of the squad competing here only proved the depth and talent of the Zoo squad.

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I'm thinking, maybe we need an "iron man" award out here next time. Especially in light of watching Angel Ramirez throw down. Angel was the single pro rider representing the Foundation crew, and he was forced to skate every obstacle. It didn't look forced in any way though. He looked perfectly eager to skate with the gas pedal slammed to the floor all day long. I can't remember the last time I saw someone go that hard for that long. Between Angel and Nick Merlino and a small supporting cast, the F-crew took home the $30,000 overall team winner's title. Not bad, not bad at all.

The Black Label team made one of those showings that prompted $100 dollar wagers on them winning the whole thing. I overheard several people talking brashly about their performance, and there was a very good reason for this. Tyler Mumma, Chris Troy, Peter Watkins, and Shuriken Shannon put in powerful performances all around the joint. And to top it off, one of my favorite dudes out there in the last couple of years, Vince Del Valle simply annihilated the Creature Hesh Cross to take top honors. Vince comes from that world where specialists fade and true all-terrain rippers dominate, and his future is brighter than a 20,000 candle power flood light.

Hearty congratulations are due here to the iPod-powered Jani Laitiala who came out here and repeated as the top pro performer. Jani isn't exactly a rookie, he's been in this game for quite some time now. I'm not sure what the exchange rate is on U.S. currency in Finland, but hopefully he will be able to parlay that check into a worthwhile wallet lump.

Each and every one of the skaters out here brought something amazing to the table. Guys like Truman Hooker coming out of the woodwork and killing it. Sean Malto defining smoothness. Louie Lopez and Curren Caples firing heavy warning shots at the older guys. Kevin Romar making it all look easy. And the beauty of it is, we most likely will be treated to another serving of that next year. This thing shows no signs of fading and we're already 5 years in. A once in a lifetime event, once a year. There is certainly nothing to complain about there. Epic skateboarding in a surreal environment, with something for just about everyone, even this jaded and bitter personality.

I'd like to send out a huge thank you to all involved, the Van Doren family and the entire Vans crew, and all of the sponsors who help put this together and fatten up the prize purse. Rockstar Energy Drink, FUEL TV, Mitsubishi Motors, Epiphone and SPoTlight Productions ( Ryan and Brian, you guys are killing it! ) Also thank you to all of the participating companies, Girl, Blind, Foundation, Skate Mafia, Black Label, Toy Machine, Zoo York, Creature, and FLiP. But the biggest thanks, of course go out to each and every skater out here this year. You all are what make this thing so great. See you next year.

-BLKPRJKT

 

Girl's Little China Girl
1.Zered Bassett (Zoo York) - $2,500
2.Angel Ramirez (Foundation) - $1,500
3.Ron Deily (Zoo York) - $1,000

Flip's Extremely Sorry
1.Jani Laitiala (Blind) - $2,500
2.Nick Trapasso (Toy Machine) - $1,500
3.Louie Lopez (Flip) - $1,000

Creature's Hesh Cross
1.Vince Del Valle (Black Label) - $2,500
2.Angel Ramirez (Foundation) - $1,500
3.Jani Laitiala (Blind) - $1,000

Black Label's Drunk Tank
1.Nick Merlino (Foundation) - $2,500
2.Billy Marks (Toy Machine) - $1,500
3.Felipe Ortiz (Blind) - $1,000

Top Am Performance
Nick Merlino (Foundation) - $5,000

Top Pro Performance
Jani Laitiala (Blind) - $10,000

Overall Team Winner
Foundation ($30,000)
Blind 2nd ($15,000)
Toy Machine 3rd ($5,000)

Loveland first to open slopes
Posted: 10/13/2009 - 0 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: Snow

 

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Loveland Ski Area is first in North America to open its slopes

 

Loveland Ski Area in Colorado opened its slopes at 9 a.m. today and claims to be the first resort in North America to open for the 2009-10 winter season.

The resort boasts an 18-inch base consisting of natural and man-made snow. Skiers and snowboarders enjoyed a top-to-bottom run consisting of 1,000 vertical feet via Chair 1. First turns were made on the trails Catwalk, Mambo and Homerun, which are part of the one-mile-long run.

Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter Jr. congratulated Loveland on its earliest opening in 40 years, saying, “It’s only October, but the 2009-10 snow sport season is open for business in Colorado.

"Recreation and tourism are key economic drivers and job creators in Colorado, and we’re looking forward to a great year on the slopes.”

Loveland is part of a network of resorts represented by Colorado Ski Country USA.

 

 

 

Billabong Pro - Mundaka, Spain ASP Tour Stop #8
Posted: 10/12/2009 - 0 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: Surf

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The Billabong Pro Mundaka is back ON in two-to-three foot (1 metre) surf at the backup site of Sopelana.

http://www.surfertoday.com/images/stories/bendunn.jpg

Event No. 8 of 10 on the 2009 ASP World Tour, the Billabong Pro Mundaka will open up this morning with Heat 9 of Round 1, continuing with the elimination man-on-man format utilized on Day 1 of competition.

“The swell has increased since yesterday and we’ll be getting underway at 9:15am with Heat p of Round 1,” Mike Parsons, Billabong Pro Mundaka Contest Director, said. “We’ll be monitoring conditions throughout the day, but plan on running as many heats as possible.”

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Kai Otton

 

Up first this morning is ASP Dream Tour veteran Dean Morrison (AUS), 28, up against event wildcard Dean Bowen (AUS) in Heat 9 of Round 1.

The Billabong Pro Mundaka will be available web LIVE via www.billabongpro.com/mundaka09/

The Billabong Pro Mundaka will host the world’s best surfers from October 5 through 17, 2009.

For more information, log onto www.aspworldtour.com

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