September 9, 2017
by Christopher Parker (@wheresbossman)

Photo Finish: Mo Freitas Claims Emotional Victory from Team Mate Connor Baxter; Casper Steinfath Takes Bronze (Full Results)


ISA Worlds

Connor Baxter leading Casper Steinfath and Mo Freitas around the ‘beach race’ course here in Cold Hawaii (photo: @georgiasphoto)

Mo Freitas has surged to an extraordinary and quite emotional victory on finals day in Cold Hawaii following a “you couldn’t script this” photo finish with team mate and close friend Connor Baxter, as Team Hawaii plucked an incredible gold-silver result from an intense and exciting beach race here on the penultimate day of the 2017 ISA Worlds.

Mo battled hard the entire race to finally get a shot at Connor, who had controlled the tempo from the first buoy to the final lap of the gold medal decider along with defending champ Casper Steinfath, in the final 50 metres of this frantic and fast-paced affair.

It had looked like a fight for gold between Connor and Casper all the way, but Mo first leapfrogged Casper after surging to the shore on a bump that wasn’t even a bump, before narrowly out-sprinting his close mate Connor up the beach to the line to the roars of the large crowd.

The finish was so tight that nobody – not the commentators, not the crowd, not those of us who were standing right there, not even the paddlers themselves – knew who’d actually won until the finish line footage was analysed by race officials.

Mo dropped to his knees in tears when the beach announcer finally announced that he’d won gold, before being mobbed by his Hawaiian team mates for the start of what will surely be a long celebration.

ISA Worlds

Mo, Connor and Casper after their epic battle (photo @lalaclaydon)

Twenty minutes earlier, it was a hectic start to what was always going to be an intense race. After you could have cut the tension surrounding the starting area with a knife in the minutes leading up to the horn, the 30-strong field sprinted off the line as if this were a 200 metre event.

After taking off like an absolute rocket, Casper hit the golden buoy in first place to setup a possible fairy-tale finish for the home nation. But Connor never let the Viking get more than a board length in front, and by the start of the second lap it was the Hawaiian who was setting the pace out front.

(Casper had told me before the race that while he was desperate to defend his gold medal, what he really wanted to was to help put on a show and make sure the crowd watching both at the beach and online was entertained. He and the other 29 guys achieved that within the first minute, while the excitement and intensity of the following 15 minutes allowed the Viking to easily over-deliver on his promise.)

Lincoln Dews from Team Australia, one of this season’s in-form paddlers and our official gold medal prediction, was always in the mix but could never get around the lead trio of Connor, Casper and Mo to get his own clean water. After being forced to sit at the back of the four-man breakaway over the opening two laps of this four-lap course, the Aussie’s fortunes received a further setback when he tangled with Mo at the buoy and went for a swim.

As the field began to spread out and snake its way around the course, the big movers were the Hasulyo brothers Bruno and Daniel. After their heroics for Team Hungary in the marathon race last weekend, not many pundits had given these boys a shot against the short course superstars. But the bros worked together and set an incredible pace along the back straight to drop the rest of the contenders and keep the leaders in sight.

ISA Worlds

To say the start was “intense” would be an understatement (photo: @georgiasphoto

At the same time, the French duo of Arthur Arutkin and Titouan Puyo were left battling in the lower reaches of the top 10 after both of them, Arthur in particular, had a slow start that held them back from the medals we all know they have the talent to win. Titou’s silky smooth skills were enough to hold him in 7th place by the end of the race, however I know these guys will be disappointed that they didn’t finish in the medals.

Others setting a good early pace were Team USA’s Giorgio Gomez and Noa Hopper, who were top five early but couldn’t keep pace with the leaders to finish just outside the top 10, and Paul Lenfant the ultra dark horse from Poland, who almost stole the golden buoy money shot from Casper but fell off on the way around and never recovered.

Paolo Marconi was another who looked good early, with the Italian able to hold his pace well throughout the race to secure a prestigious top 10 finish in what was the most competitive men’s field the Worlds has ever seen (45.5% on the Race Index).

Team New Zealand had a strong showing as Marcus Hansen and Ollie Houghton hit the beach together to finish 8th and 9th respectively —
Ollie is just 17 years of age and seems to have the talent and work ethic to be a future champ.


Watch a full replay of the men’s gold medal race (starts at the 2 hour 30 minute mark)


Back at the front of the field, Connor, Casper and Mo started the final lap neck and neck, while Bruno, who had run through each of the lap-splitting beach chicanes like a man possessed, was only a handful of board lengths further adrift.

As the race reached its crescendo, it seemed as if Connor – who had led from the start of the second lap right through to the closing stages of the fourth and final loop – would be able to hold off the home nation hero and his Hawaiian team mate, but nobody could have predicted what would happen in the final seconds of the contest.

First, Connor surged forward as the trio headed towards the beach. As the Hawaiian accelerated, Casper tried to stick on the leader’s tail rather than take his own line — the reigning champ told me post-race that this was a mistake, and that it probably cost him a shot at challenging for the gold in the final metres.

But just as Connor seemed to be heading for gold, Mo came out of seemingly nowhere and surged forward with cat-like reflexes after catching a tiny bump that wouldn’t even qualify as a wave. The slight momentum from this micro-swell propelled Mo forward towards the beach, allowing him to first pass Casper and then pull alongside Connor before leaping off onto the sand with the slightest of leads.

From there, it was a dizzying sprint over the final 20 metres up the beach, with the team mates and good mates shoulder-to-shoulder as they crossed the line. In the end, Mo’s time was officially two-tenths of a second faster than Connor’s, though considering manual timing was being used I daresay the real margin was even narrower.

Mo Freitas and Connor Baxter

Mo Freitas scrapes past Connor Baxter after an epic battle that included defending gold medalist Casper Steinfath (photo: @benreedphoto)

There were countless great performances today. Too many to mention right here right now, but we’ll have plenty more coverage in the coming days (like surfing world champ Caio Vaz pulling out a sneaky top 20 result). So congratulations to all 30 athletes that simply made the final. That was intense.

Maybe I’m just caught up in the emotion of the moment, but was that the most exciting beach race we’ve ever seen? And there weren’t even any waves. Just imagine… But even without the waves, the event proved that SUP racing can be exciting in relatively flat conditions.

So thanks for the great show, boys, that was one hell of a race to watch up close.

The proud and spirited Hawaiians have earned another incredible gold-silver finish to match Connor & Mo’s heroics in this same race two years ago in Mexico. It won’t be enough to push them into the top three on the team standings, but they are looking good to hold off Team USA in the fight for the fourth and final spot on the teams podium.

It seems like Australia will have earned enough points from their five golds (4x in prone plus Shak’s masterclass in the surfing) to keep the French at bay for another year at least, with Les Bleus needing a miracle in Sunday’s team relay to have any chance of closing the 328 point gap (12001 vs 11673). New Zealand has a lock on third and is an outside chance of reeling in the Frenchies on Sunday morning (the Kiwis are currently on 11338 points).

The team relay, which will close out the 2017 ISA Worlds, is scheduled for 9am local time on Sunday (Google “What’s the time in Denmark right now?” to calibrate your own time zone). As always, you can watch the ISA live stream right here on SUP Racer or on the official event site.

ISA Worlds

Bruno and Mo lead the field in pursuit of Connor and Casper (photo: @benreedphoto)


Men’s Beach Race Results

#AthleteNationTimeISA PointsWorld Rankings
1Mo FreitasHAW19.19.44100045.50
2Connor BaxterHAW19.19.6486034.13
3Casper SteinfathDEN19.29.9873027.30
4Bruno HasulyoHUN19.38.0867022.75
5Lincoln DewsAUS19.51.4061019.34
6Daniel HasulyoHUN20.01.4258315.93
7Titouan PuyoFRA20.19.0855513.65
8Marcus HansenNZL20.20.8452811.38
9Oliver HoughtonNZL20.21.7650010.24
10Paolo MarconiITA20.27.284889.10
11Arthur ArutkinFRA20.28.944758.19
12Noa HopperUSA20.30.804627.28
13Giorgio GomezUSA20.44.244506.83
14Leonard NikaITA20.55.034386.37
15Nikos SyrigosGRE21.04.474255.92
16Kenny KanekoJPN21.06.874135.46
17James CaseyAUS21.20.534005.01
18Aaron RoweCIS21.22.273954.55
19Paul LenfantPOL21.46.693904.10
20Caio VazBRA21.47.313853.64
21Pau YbarraESP21.48.073803.41
22Vinícius MartinsBRA21.50.973753.19
23Itzel DelgadoPER21.59.563702.96
24Jurgi ZulaikaESP21.59.903652.73
25Christian AndersenDEN22.00.283602.50
26Ryohei YoshidaJPN22.05.893552.37
27Carlos GomezECU22.07.583502.23
28Dylan FrickRSA22.09.823452.09
29Peter BartlAUT22.14.033401.96
30Damian WarnerENG22.16.143351.82
31Peter KosinskiIRErepechage3301.73
32Glenn EldridgeENGrepechage3251.64
33Paul GanseGERrepechage3201.55
34Steeve FleurySUIrepechage3151.46
35Francisco GiustiARGrepechage3101.37
36Kimon Dos SantosRSArepechage3051.27
37Andre Le GeytCISrepechage3001.18
38Joel MikkonenFINrepechage2951.09
39Hakim DridahSUIrepechage2901.00
40Kai-Nicolas SteimerGERrepechage2850.91
41Aner GilboaISRrepechage2800.86
42Ross Mc GarryIRErepechage2750.82
43Kodie PeekstokCANrepechage2700.77
44Jose Suazo ManríquezCHIrepechage2650.73
45Tomáš GrošupCZErepechage2600.68
46Paul MikkonenFINrepechage2550.64
47Cristian AlmonacidARGrepechage2500.59
48Jeffrey SpencerCANrepechage2450.55
49Jon HjertströmSWErepechage2400.50
50Francisco HernandezVENrepechage2350.46
51Tomaz JensterleSLOrepechage2300.00
52Urban ÅkessonSWErepechage2250.00
53Bojan BernardSLOrepechage2200.00
54Valdis KlavinsLATrepechage2150.00
55Martin WedlAUTrepechage2100.00
56Manuel RodriguezMexicoDNS repechage2050.00
57Felipe PizarroChileDNS repechage2050.00
58Sekar PatchaiIndiaDNS repechage2050.00
59Igor ChernenkoRussiaDNS repechage2050.00
60Amine BouizgarenMoroccoDNS repechage2050.00
61Ran GaashIsraelDNS repechage2050.00
62Andrey KraitorRussiaDNS repechage2050.00