Quantcast

KA-CHING: Danny Ching Makes A Clean Sweep At Battle Of The Paddle


Battle Royale in the Elite Race
on Sat.photo courtesy of Pat Huber/Rainbow Sandals


Rainbow Sandals Founder
Jay'Sparky'Longley passes the torch
to 12-year-old Riggs Napoleon
Photo courtesy of Chase Olivieri

“I didn’t expect that at all...I was hoping to win one of the days, but luckily it panned out.”

Stand-up paddling (SUP) made it back to its island home of Waikiki, Hawaii, this past weekend. The inaugural Rainbow Sandals Gerry Lopez Battle of the Paddle Hawaii, presented by Quiksilver Waterman Collection took place on June 13 and 14. It was Danny Ching, a mainlander from Redondo Beach, California, that overcame the home-field disadvantage to walk away a winner. Ching took first in both the 5-mile elite race on Saturday, and the 10-mile distance race on Sunday.

Saturday’s elite race was a 5-mile slugfest between Ching and Australian paddler, Travis Grant. The two men were side-by-side for 19 buoy turns and two 75-yard beach sprints before the final stretch for the finish. The hour and a half battle was decided by just 13 seconds. On Sunday Ching put forth a heroic effort, fighting through the fatigue to win the 10-mile Downwinder.
“I didn’t expect that at all,” Ching said of his clean sweep. “I was hoping to win one of the days, but luckily it panned out.”

In the women's division, San Clemente's Candice Appleby took the Elite battle with her time of 1:35:25. Second was Australian Shakira Westdorp. In the distance race, Maui's Andrea Moller took top honors.

The Battle of the Paddle also featured exhibits, booths, clinics for children, relays for families, fun races and plenty of SUP sampling. There were spirit-moving cultural ceremonies, impassioned volunteers and priceless ocean-based programs like Na Kama Kai. But beneath it all, there was the pure and simple fun that Waikiki has famously offered the world for centuries. In some ingenious way, Gerry Lopez, Jay "Sparky" Longley, and the families of Rainbow Sandals and Quiksilver Waterman Collection tied together all the best elements of the stand-up paddle lifestyle and presented them in an exciting, easy to grasp, 21st century framework. They gave away a total prize purse for the weekend of $25,000.


ELITE RACE - MEN'S TOP 10:
1 1:22:42.3 - Danny Ching (Redondo Beach, CA)
2 1:22:55.1 - Travis Grant (Queensland, Australia)
3 1:26:30.8 - Aaron Napolean (Waianae, HI)
4 1:27:00.6 - Jamie Mitchell (Queensland, Australia)
5 1:27:20.6 - Byron Kurt
6 1:27:23.1 - Scott Gamble
7 1:27:26.1 - Slater Trout (Maui, HI)
8 1:27:32.7 - Conner Baxter (Maui, HI)
9 1:28:39.0 - Matt Becker
10 1:28:47.4 - Sepa K. Napolean

ELITE RACE - WOMEN'S TOP 5
1 1:35:25.3 - Candice Appleby (San Clemente, CA/Honolulu, HI)
2 1:36:35.2 - Shakira Westdorp (Queensland, Australia)
3 1:37:51.6 - Brandi Baksic (San Clemente, CA)
4 1:41:30.2 – Jenny Kalmbach (Big Island, HI)
5 1:41:50.9 - Morgan Hoesterey (Oahu, HI)

HAWAII KAI DISTANCE RACE

1ST MEN: Danny Ching
1ST WOMEN: Andrea Moller

 

Comments:

Would you like to comment? Login or Join!

 

 



Sign up for our Email Newsletter










Forum Partners:














Heard in the Eddy

"Early on that day we came across a fresh dead body that was still in neoprene and had been buried under rocks...it showed us just how delicate life is. Later on we found out that there were two dead in the same pile of rocks..."

--Sam Sutton on paddling Siberia's Argut River in July


"To leave a patient on the side of a river while you get your gear out of the car and set up a rescue system you read about in a book is simply not good policy"
--Duke Bradford, owner of Arkansas Valley Adventures on the rescue of a 13 yr. old girl from Clear Creek on 6/17/10. A rafting guide employed by Bradford was arrested for interfering (read=assisting) with the rescue.

I was a god-damned poster child for bad judgment...dumb, but what can you do when you're hypnotized by a force of nature?"
--North Fork Payette pioneer Doug Ammons on being lured in by record high water to come out of Class V retirement and paddle the Lower Five at a record 9,000 cfs (and subsequently swim).

"My initial goal was to not embarrass myself."
--Tao Berman, after winning his first-ever ramp competition, at the Red Bull Canal Crashers Big Air Contest during Richmond, Va.'s Dominion Riverrock Festival.


If you don't sit in the right place, you'll sink."
--72-year-old Leo Swinimer (as told to the Wall Street Journal) on paddling his 600-lb. pumpkin in Nova Scotia's annual Windsor-West Hants Pumpkin Regatta.






Copyright © 2008 Paddling Life All rights reserved.