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SURFING

Making waves: the Italian with an eye on surfing glory

Italy has produced its share of elite sports people in the past but no-one quite like Leonardo Fioravanti, aged 19 and one of surfing's most exciting talents.

Making waves: the Italian with an eye on surfing glory
Leonardo Fioravanti is one of the world's most exciting surfing talents. Photo: Iroz Gaikza/AFP

Italy's first and only professional surfer, Fioravanti, a potential world champion if his form and fortune hold, makes his full-time debut next week on the Championship Tour, the elite surfers circuit, on Australia's Gold Coast.

Born in Rome, Fioravanti rode his first waves 20 minutes away from the capital in football-mad Italy with his brother, Matteo, when he was six.

“All of my friends played football, which is really popular in Italy. But Matteo and I wanted to spend the whole day in the water,” he told AFP as he trained in the big surf off the French Atlantic coast here.

“Qualifying for the world championship has always been one of my dreams, and I knew I could do it, but I just didn't think it would happen so soon,” he added.

It all started when he was six and family holidays were spent on a beach run by surfers who put Leo and Matteo on boards. He was so good his family decided to help him develop his talent to the full, to the extent that his mother even snatched him out of school when the surf was up.

“When the waves were good, my mother would come and find me at school and tell them I had an appointment with the doctor,” he said. “During the vacation, we toured France, Spain and Portugal looking for waves.”

The next step came when his mother put him on a correspondence course to free him from the classroom while he travelled to Hawaii, California and Australia in search of better surfing conditions as he chased his dream.

Aged 10 Fioravanti was spotted by Red Bull and Quiksilver, who still sponsor him today.

Stephen Bell, Fioravanti's team manager, said the boy's rise to the Championship Tour ranks shows that “anything's possible for Leo. He has the potential to go far, for sure.

“He got here at the age of 19 and his aim now is to have a long and successful career. But his big dream is to be world champion.”

Eclipsing Kelly Slater

Fioravanti revels in the surfers' life while keeping his dream alive of eclipsing his childhood idol Kelly Slater who will be competing on the Gold Coast.

“When I first started surfing, I used to watch all his videos. If you were to see my bedroom back home in Italy, there's still posters of Kelly Slater up on the walls that I put up when I was 12 or 13,” said Fioravanti.

At 15 he became European junior champion and gained the self-belief he needed to reach higher.

“If I was beating 20-year-olds when I was 15, then I could go right to the top with sufficient determination,” he said.

Last season he was invited three times to compete on the professional circuit and caused a sensation when he twice beat Slater, the US 11-times world champion.

“His dream now is to be world champion and for him everything is possible. He has the potential,” said Bell.

By Mathieu Gorse

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SURFING

Why Denmark’s ‘Cold Hawaii’ is surfing on virus wave

On Denmark's rugged western coast, far from paradise islands in the tropics, "Cold Hawaii" has become the place to be for surfers stranded by travel restrictions during the coronavirus pandemic.

Why Denmark's 'Cold Hawaii' is surfing on virus wave
Surfers at Klitmøller in September. Photo: Jonathan NACKSTRAND / AFP

As the name suggests, surfers seeking out the perfect wave near the town of Klitmøller are not put off by chilly waters or nippy air, nor the lack of palm trees.

This raw and rugged coastline, often under grey and bleak skies, has drawn a growing number of board aficionados in recent years.

Covid-19 has “really created a big boom,” says Mor Meluka, a 34-year-old Israeli who settled here with his family 11 years ago.

Surfing enthusiasts from Denmark and nearby countries “used to travel the world”, but now, “since they can't go anywhere we are definitely experiencing more guests than usual,” he tells AFP.

Together with his wife Vahine Itchner, Meluka runs the “Cold Hawaii Surf Camp”, a surf school that employs 15 instructors in the summer months and continues to give daily lessons even in the off-season.

“You can't really know what kind of waves you're going to get. It's always different waves. If you go to a perfect surf place like Bali or Tahiti, you know exactly how the wave is going to break. Here, it changes all the time,” says Itchner, who moved to Denmark at the age of 10 from Tahiti.

A new addition to the world's surfing hot spots, it has yet to be invaded by the masses.

Klitmøller, a town of just 1,000 inhabitants, is an unexpected destination for surfers, due to its geographic location and the absence of any surfing tradition.

One of many fishing villages that dot the Jutland coast, the spot has long been popular with windsurfers. Surfers started coming in the 1990s, with locals initially eyeing the newcomers with suspicion.


Photo: Jonathan NACKSTRAND / AFP


Nowadays surfing is an integral part of the local culture — and is even part of children's schoolday, with surfing lessons on their schedule.

Sjoerd Kok was one of the early pioneers.

A 42-year-old Dutch computer programmer, he moved here 17 years ago “for
the surfing”. His enthusiasm hasn't waned a bit, as interest in the town continues to soar.

“A couple of years ago I told myself this is the peak… But no, it still expands.”

Itchner and Meluka say they expect surfing to take off across Denmark, a windy country already known for its kitesurfing.

“It's going to become a famous surf spot!” boasts Itchner.

In the land of 'hygge' — the Danish concept of cosiness and comfort that promotes a sense of well-being in daily life — Klitmøller epitomises the art form better than any other place.

“The right word is the word 'cosy': to go surfing and then go home and light a fire and drink a hot chocolate.”

READ ALSO: Danish paddle surfer sweeps across sea to Norway

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