GKA Kite World Cup Tarifa – Closing Wrap-up
Words: Jim Gaunt / Photos: Ydwer van der Heide
The taste of final day glory on a ‘super Sunday’ of cross discipline kiteboarding competition in front of a packed Valdevaqueros beach at the Bibo Beach Club was oh so close… Tarifa you tease!
After five frustrating days of competition, taunted by low lying cloud which pushed back the thermal winds, or voodoo local effects playing hocus pocus right in front of the race director’s eyes, we arrived at the beach this morning and were greeted by a very different scene: clear skies and the Poniente blowing.
Over 80 riders registered for this event, one of only a few truly cross-discipline official World Championship events ever seen, and with such strangely absent conditions this week, there were a lot of heats to get through. All riders were on the same page though and accepted a slightly shortened format for their heats in order to fight collectively for a result.
We flew through the afternoon heats, seeing both Men’s and Women’s Freestyle and Men’s Kite-Surf strapless freestyle on the water, often switching from one discipline to the next in back-to-back heats. It was a real optical feast of kiting on the beach!
Maxime Chabloz continued his impressive charge towards the title this year, achieving the highest Freestyle heat score of the day, which was second only to Adeuri Corniel’s opening heat tally of over 34 on day four.
Pippa van Iersel and Therese Taabel actually made it to the women’s Freestyle final on Sunday, but as the wind dropped just before the second semi-final ran, sadly for them, with only 10 riders in their competition, as they hadn’t eliminated over 50% of the competitors, the result doesn’t stand.
Of course we had already reached a final result for the women’s Kite-Surf strapless freestyle back on day three, with Carla Herrera-Oria claiming back-to-back event victories and moving ahead in the championship.
The Kite-Surf men had reached the quarter final stage before Sunday began. They managed to get through two quarter final rounds, won by Simon Joosten and Mitu Monteiro but, again, as with the women’s Freestyle, the result rocks back to the quarter final stage.
Race director Juan Antonio Aragon is all too aware of how the World Championship point system works and, up against an incredibly tough time frame in the end, with a drought of expected conditions here in Tarifa, by hook and by crook, we have an official point results across three of the four categories competing this week.
This time on Friday night, with the way the forecast was looking, we’d have taken that! So… onwards and upwards!
The top finishing riders crowded on to their respective podiums and, just after GKA Secretary General Joergen Vogt had completed an ear piercing rendition of Happy Birthday to Mitu Monteiro, event organiser Jaime Herraiz took to the mic to thank everyone.
βWhat can I say? Of course we’re a little disappointed with the wind this week, but you guys know me, and know that I like a challenge. So we will be back bigger and stronger next year and Tarifa will always have a place for all of you. Good luck with the rest of the world tour and we look forward to welcoming you all back!β
It really has been a strange event. Tarifa has been a loyal venue for the GKA and it has always provided truly classic moments. Airton Cozzolino delivered a real heat of brilliance on Thursday, and we’ll hold on to that memory.
As Jaime went on to conclude, βWe won’t let the wind beat our spirit!β The wind brought us together and we saw a really united atmosphere this week, with riders like Carlos Mario riding a strapless surfboard alongside Mitu Monteiro. The two codes of expression-based kiteboarding disciplines came together and shared the emotions of competition together.