Surfing-California's Lindblad takes first surfing tour win in Brazil


Surfing - World Surf League - Tahiti Pro - Teahupo'o, Tahiti, French Polynesia - May 29, 2024 Sawyer Lindblad of the U.S. in action during the women's quarter finals heat 2 REUTERS/Thomas Bevilacqua/File Photo

June 26 (Reuters) - California's Sawyer Lindblad won ⁠her first surfing world championship tour event at Brazil's Rio Pro on Friday with a ⁠victory over French teenager Tya Zebrowski, while Brazil's reigning world champion Yago Dora soared ‌to his first win of the season.

In a low scoring women's final at Saquarema, near Rio de Janeiro, Lindblad - the 2024 rookie of the year - took an early lead with a couple of sub-four point scores as both surfers struggled to find ​the right waves in the small, wonky and backwash-affected conditions ⁠for a two-wave total of 7.67 points ⁠out of a possible 20.

With the clock ticking down and needing a modest score, Zebrowski took off ⁠on ‌a wave but couldn't complete it and ended with a two-wave total of 6.10.

"I'm really emotional right now. I've worked so hard for this, and yeah, I feel like I've ⁠gotten second so many times, and so happy it was finally ​my day," said the 20-year-old ‌Lindblad, who had lost her previous three finals appearances.

Zebrowski, the youngest ever to qualify for ⁠the world tour ​at just 14, had a tough road to her first final, beating eight-time world champion Stephanie Gilmore and then five-time world champion Carissa Moore in the earlier rounds.

In tricky conditions, Dora's win in the men's final over Italy's ⁠Leonardo Fioravanti propelled him to No.3 in the rankings, among ​a pack of five Brazilians now chasing the Roman, who climbed to No.1 halfway through the 12-stop world tour.

Having taken down Australian Ethan Ewing in their semifinal, Dora seized control of the final with a ⁠full rotation aerial on his backhand for an 8.50 out of 10. He backed it up with similar turn on a smaller wave for a 6.50, giving him a healthy two-wave total of 15.

Fioravanti, who waited more than a decade to win his first championship tour event earlier this month in El ​Salvador, fought his way back with a solid turn-to-aerial combination for ⁠a 7.50. But the 28-year-old couldn't find another big score to end with a two-wave total of 13.17 ​out of 20.

"Oh my god, it's unbelievable. How many people ‌are here with the rain and the storm?" said ​Dora. "I'm so thankful for the energy - that filled me up, for sure. I thought it was going to be an empty beach today."

(Reporting by Lincoln Feast; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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