In her seventh season among the world’s best surfers, Tatiana Weston-Webb (BRA) comes off her strongest showing, ranked second in the world in 2021, and trying to make the rankings Top 5 for a fighting chance at the World Title again.
“I love surfing on my backhand, a lot of people know that, but it’s just been a while since I’ve put it all together and had things go my way,” Weston-Webb said. “This event I just really felt in rhythm and flow and the whole time I was just having a blast, maybe that’s what set me apart.”
With a win early on in Portugal, a couple of Semifinals in G-Land and Rio and her win today, the Brazilian holds the right cards as the tour heads to Tahiti where she has spent time developing a relationship with the Teahupoo lineup. Today’s result will see her move up to third on the rankings before the CT’s final stop.
“We had such perfect waves for this event and I’d like to thank the locals for sharing their lineups with us for a week, it was just phenomenal,” Weston-Webb added. “I’m really excited for Teahupoo but right now I’m just living in the moment here at J-Bay.”
The women’s Final started with fireworks from the get-go, both surfers opting to go on the very first set that came through, and rewarded with similar high-7 scores. Weston-Webb was first to get a second opportunity, starting on a bomb and applying her radical, under-the-lip backhand turns for an excellent 8.50 to pressure Wright.
Weston-Webb continued to build momentum and shredded another big right with incredible control in the critical sections to post a 9-point ride, pushing her opponent against the ropes as Wright needed either a perfect 10-point ride or two new scores to regain the lead.
The two-time World Champion fought back around the 10-minute mark, finding a good wall to work with and combining long-arching carves with powerful snaps all the way to the closeout section. Wright earned an excellent 8.17 to bring her requirement down to a 9.33 with only a few minutes left on the clock. Time ran out without any more opportunities coming through the lineup and Weston-Webb claimed a career-fourth win on the Championship Tour.
“Runner-up is good, there’s a lot of hard work that went into that,” Wright reflected. “Tatiana was really for me the standout of the event, she put so much work in. I knew I had my work cut out for me but honestly a second, from where I started my week to where I ended up is a huge improvement.”
A veteran on the CT where she has spent 11 seasons competing, amassing an incredible 14 wins, Wright had a solid start to her 2022 campaign for a third world title but was injured and sat out the last two events. Coming into South Africa ranked 10th in the world, Wright’s runner-up finish bumped her up to 7th position, with still a mathematical chance to make the Rip Curl WSL Finals at Trestles.
Former J-Bay Winners Moore, Gilmore Drop-out on Finals Day
Wright had previously eliminated the 2018 J-Bay winner and seven-time World Champion Stephanie Gilmore (AUS) in their Semifinal matchup. Gilmore’s wave selection was uncharacteristically off and she only put her first good score on the board after more than 30 minutes in the lineup. She eventually ran out of time to try to overcome Wright’s lead and placed equal third but held onto her position as No. 4 on the rankings.
In the second Semifinal, five-time World Champion Carissa Moore (HAW) made a priority error midway through the heat and with a discarded second score, her mission to overcome Weston-Webb quickly became impossible. Weston-Webb increased her lead and shut down the heat, advancing to the Finals and perhaps got revenge over Moore who defeated her at the Oi Rio Pro. Moore will continue to wear the leader’s yellow jersey heading to the Outerknown Tahiti Pro.
For highlights from the 2022 Corona Open J-Bay, please visit WorldSurfLeague.com.
Corona Open J-Bay Women’s Final Results:
1 – Tatiana Weston-Webb (BRA) 17.50
2 – Tyler Wright (AUS) 15.67
Corona Open J-Bay Men’s Final Results:
1 – Ethan Ewing (AUS) 16.80
2 – Jack Robinson (AUS) 16.30
Corona Open J-Bay Women’s Semifinal Results:
HEAT 1: Tyler Wright (AUS) 14.26 DEF. Stephanie Gilmore (AUS) 11.00
HEAT 2: Tatiana Weston-Webb (BRA) 9.60 DEF. Carissa Moore (HAW) 5.50
Corona Open J-Bay Men’s Semifinal Results:
HEAT 1: Jack Robinson (AUS) 15.80 DEF. Kanoa Igarashi (JPN) 13.17
HEAT 2: Ethan Ewing (AUS) 17.04 DEF. Yago Dora (BRA) 16.87
Corona Open J-Bay Men’s Quarterfinal Results:
HEAT 1: Jack Robinson (AUS) 12.83 DEF. Samuel Pupo (BRA) 7.83
HEAT 2: Kanoa Igarashi (JPN) 15.43 DEF. Italo Ferreira (BRA) 15.00
HEAT 3: Yago Dora (BRA) 15.00 DEF. Connor O’Leary (AUS) 10.83
HEAT 4: Ethan Ewing (AUS) 11.50 DEF. Jordy Smith (ZAF) 7.03
Next Stop: Outerknown Tahiti Pro
The next stop on the 2022 Championship Tour will be the Outerknown Tahiti Pro, which opens on August 11 and holds a waiting period through August 21, 2022. The Outerknown Tahiti Pro will be the final stop on the 2022 CT ahead of the one-day Rip Curl WSL Finals to decide the 2022 World Champions. The competition will be broadcast LIVE on WorldSurfLeague.com, the WSL app, and on WSL’s YouTube Channel. Also, check local listings for coverage from the WSL’s broadcast partners.