ISA ANNOUNCES HOST OF 2008 QUIKSILVER ISA WORLD JUNIOR SURFING CHAMPIONSHIP
San Diego, Calif. – September 5, 2007 – The International Surfing
Association (ISA), the World Governing Authority for surfing, has chosen
France as the location for the 2008 Quiksilver ISA World Junior Surfing
Championship. The event will be organized by the ISA’s National
Governing Body for surfriding in France, Federation Francaise de Surf (FFS).
France last hosted an ISA event in 1992 with the World Surfing Games in
Lacanau. “The ISA is very happy to go back to the great waves of
France. By having the event in late May, we will be able to have great
waves. I would like to thank Quiksilver Europe President Pierre Agnes for
his leadership in bringing this event back to France,” said ISA President
Fernando Aguerre.
The
Quiksilver ISA World Junior Surfing Championship has become the premier
annual junior surfing event. Past competitors include WCT, WQS and
other notable surfers such as Jordy Smith, Stephanie Gilmore, Tonino Benson,
Julian Wilson, Jeremy Flores, Sally Fitzgibbons and Bethany Hamilton.
The 2008 event is sure to have more standout performances as surfers
compete in Under 16 and Under 18 categories.
Since 2003, this yearly event has been in Africa (Durban), in the South
Pacific (Tahiti), North America (Huntington Beach), South America (Brazil),
and Europe (Portugal). In 2008, the event will return to Europe in Hossegor,
France. With over 30 National Delegations forecasted to compete in
France, the diversity of races, languages, religions and cultures, have
turned the Quiksilver ISA World Junior Surfing Championship into Surfing's
Junior Olympic-style event. The exposure of young surfers to other
peoples and cultures is part of an unmatched experience for all
participants.
The event will be broadcast live on the internet and will feature
commentary from former World Champion Martin Potter and live scoring.
Webcasting details will be available as the event nears.
Press Contact:
Kate Herber
International Surfing Association
Operations Manager
Phone: (760) 931-0111
Fax: (760) 931-0131
kate@isasurf.org
History of Surfing, the ISA and the WJSC
The roots of surfing reach back to the early Pacific islands when the
ancestors of Polynesians and others started exploring the ocean and islands
around them. While there is no specific date as to when the first wave was
ever surfed, it is generally known that by the 1700s, Hawaiians had begun to
amaze foreign sailors and explorers with their wave-riding skills.
Surfing
continued to develop in Hawaii and gained international importance in the 1900s
when the famous Hawaiian surfer Duke Kahanamoku won the gold medal for swimming
in the 1912 Olympic Games. Within the context of public relations, an
exhibition tour was organized throughout the world, which enabled many countries
to be exposed to surfing. As a result, surfing grew in popularity, and in
1964 during the first World Surfing Championships near Sydney, Australia, the
ISF (International Surfing Federation) was created.
This association gathered all the surfing nations together and began
organizing world championships every other year. In November 1976, in
Hawaii, the ISF gave way to the ISA (International Surfing Association).
The ISA is the world’s governing authority for surfing and all its disciplines, including bodyboard, kneeboard, longboard, skimboard and bodysurf. The ISA governs the sports and works for their development in its member nations and the establishment of the sport of surfing in new places.
Every other year, the ISA holds the World Surfing Games for ISA’s member nations. Historically, the World Surfing Games grants to its winners the title of “World Champion.” The ISA also sanctions a large number of competitions worldwide. The ISA World Surfing Games is also one of the largest events in competitive surfing.
The
first year in which the biennial World Surfing Games held a Juniors division was
1980 in Biarritz, France. With the huge and continuing growth of surfing
worldwide, as well as in junior surfing performance and participation, in 2002,
the ISA wisely decided to hold the Junior division of the World Surfing Games in
its very own annual event, separate from the World Surfing Games.
The plan of separating these events is to provide twice the amount of
competitions and opportunities for the younger athletes as well as for a larger
number of hosting nations.
The former Junior division of the World Surfing Games, along with what used to
be the annual Quiksilver ISA World Grommet titles, were consolidated into this
new event, the ISA World Junior Surfing Championships, which was first hosted in
2003 in South Africa. This event in France will however be the 18th ISA
Junior event and the 4th ISA WJSC sponsored by Quiksilver.
Since 1996, the Sands of the World Ceremony have been held during the Opening
Ceremony of the WSG to represent the true fraternal spirit that bonds together
all members of the Surfing Tribe. The WJSC has also taken on this ISA tradition
in its Opening Ceremonies. The Union of the countries of the world in this
ceremony is done through the mixing of the sands from the shores of all
participating delegations, symbolizing the ISA hopes for a peaceful world.
The ISA will continue to promote these Games as the true “Olympics” of surfing. With gold, silver bronze, and copper medals awarded, the athletes will be competing for the honor to represent their country and national colors and will surf for the pure joy of it, in the true nature of surfing’s aloha spirit.
About Internatioanl Surfing Association
The International Surfing Association (ISA) is recognized by the International
Olympic Committee (IOC) as the World Governing Authority for surfing,
bodyboarding and surfriding. It was originally founded as the International
Surfing Federation in 1964 and has been running world championships since 1964
and the Junior World Championships since 1980.
ISA membership includes the surfing National Governing Bodies (NGBs) of over
50 countries on six continents. Its headquarters are located in San Diego,
California. It is presided by Fernando Aguerre, first elected in 1994 in Rio,
and re-elected six times since. The ISA's four Vice Presidents are Alan
Atkins (Australia), Robin de Kock (South Africa), Maile Aguerre (Hawaii) and
Mike Gerard (USA).






