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Re:2008 Gran Canaria PWA Grand Slam - 2008/07/10 20:50
Iballa Moreno Pic - PWA/John Carter
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Re:2008 Gran Canaria PWA Grand Slam - 2008/07/11 20:56
The 2008 Gran Canaria PWA Grand Slam – Day Seven 10.07.08 - Day Seven: Fifty knot wavesailing madness sees more competitors fall by the wayside in the double elimination.
Picking up the wave double elimination where it was left off, six more heats were completed before the waves backed off.
On form players
Robby Swift (JP, NeilPryde) killed it in his heat against Kevin Mevissen (RRD, RRD, MFC). In a return to form for the Brit, Swift dominated the heat with a precision display of huge backloops, a tabletop pushloop and a mad double forward loop.
Complimenting his aerial acrobatics, Swift also notched up one of the day’s highest scoring rides, picking off a set wave out the back, and mercilessly ripping it apart with powerful front and backside smacks.
Vidar Jensen (North Sails) gave a taste of things to come in his heat against Boujmaa Guilloul (Starboard, Severne, MFC). Unphased by the monstrous 50 knot gusts, Jensen landed all his jumps, and incredibly most were one handed.
Close calls
Team mates Julien Taboulet (F2, Naish) and John Skye (RRD, Naish) had one of the closest battles of the day. Gathering momentum from victory in his previous heat, Skye entered the tussle with Taboulet on a high, but Taboulet was ripping.
The heat culminated with a both Taboulet and Skye throwing double forward loops to decide upon the winner. Taboulet touched his down with a cleaner landing, edging him ahead on the judges’ score sheets, and securing him the victory.
Another close call was Horrocks (JP, NeilPryde) versus Siver (Quatro, NeilPryde, MFC, Dakine). Siver held onto a marginal lead for the entire heat aided by huge back loops and tabletop forwards, only losing his grip on things when Horrocks landed a super clean double forward loop towards the end of the 12 minute bout.
Horrock’s double would prove to be controversial though, as he fell moments after landing it. Unsure if the move would count himself, Horrocks proceeded to pull another double out the bag. Sailing away from the move, this time Horrocks had done enough to sneak past Siver, and take the win.
Swift’s Crazy Heat
Taking on Alex Mussolini (RRD, NeilPryde) in heat 39, Robby Swift took part in the day’s most dramatic clash.
A poor sail size decision by Swift meant he had to change down a rig during the heat, leaving Mussolini free to rack up the points. Returning to the water, Swift then threw a huge double loop, snapping his mast on the landing. Again, Mussolini was left to capitalize on the situation with some solid riding and jumping. When Swift finally got another board and rig, he was only left a small window of time in which he had to score a waveride to defeat Mussolini. Here’s the account from the man himself.
Robby Swift: "I went out for the heat on a 4.0 thinking that I would be able to jump higher than Alex with that sail, but it was way too big, so I wasted the first few minutes on too big a sail. I came in and changed to the 3.7, which was much better, and allowed me to do a decent pushloop tabletop and a nice backloop. I also got a fairly solid waveride in, and then went for a double that I landed well, but broke the tip of the mast. Ross Williams came out to rescue me, again on my 4.0, and with all his clothes on, plus the car key in his pocket, which he lost! I will forgive him though, as I managed to get one more crucial wave ride, which allowed me to get through the heat. Alex was unlucky, he did 2 push table tops and 2 forwards, so he needed another jump to get through the heat.”
After six heats, the waves backed off, placing competition on standby for the remainder of the afternoon, and eventually postponing things until day eight.
Tomorrow’s skippers meeting times are: Wave 09.30am Freestyle 10.00am, Slalom 10.00am.
© PWA / Andrew Buchanan
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Re:2008 Gran Canaria PWA Grand Slam - 2008/07/12 08:41
The 2008 Gran Canaria PWA Grand Slam – Day Eight 11.07.08 - A repeat of 2007 sees Victor Fernandez and Daida Moreno crowned event winners after an awe inspiring double elimination finale at the Pozo proving ground.
For the third year running, Victor Fernandez (Fanatic, Simmer Sails, MFC) has shown defiance to lay claim to the prestigious Pozo wave title, defeating Ricardo Campello (JP, NeilPryde, MFC) in the final of the double elimination.
A nail biting Women’s final witnessed a classic Moreno showdown, with Daida (North Sails) sparing her sister no mercy, to win yet another Pozo wave final.
Men’s Double Elimination
Powered by fifty knot wind, and armed with their smallest sails, the wave fleet hit the water to finish up the double elimination.
Mounting a sustained attack, Julien Taboulet (F2, Naish Sails) showed his hunger to advance. The Frenchman, aided by his trademark, super contorted tabletop forward loops, cleared John Skye (RRD, Naish), Phil Horrocks (JP, NeilPryde), Philip Köster (F2, NeilPryde) & high flying Jonas Ceballos (Fanatic, Simmer Sails, MFC) to the side, as he advanced from the third round to within touching distance of the final.
Taboulet would finally fall at the hands of Kauli Seadi (JP, NeilPryde, Mormaii), who was gaining momentum after knocking out Vidar Jensen (North Sails) and Klaas Voget (Fanatic, NeilPryde, MFC).
In an unfortunate turn of events, Taboulet had his gear washed all the way to the inside following a crash. Relentless dumping waves hindered his efforts to launch, meaning all he could do was watch, as Seadi racked up the points. When he finally returned back in the game it was too late, and Seadi walked on through to the next round.
Marching on to face Nik Baker (Mistral, North Sails), Seadi continued to pick up pace. Baker matched, if not exceeded Seadi with his wave riding, but couldn’t produce the goods in the air. Seadi on the other hand, was fully dialed, throwing double loops, one legged back loops and tabletop pushloops. In the end, Bakers score sheet didn’t touch Seadi, leaving the Brazilian free to advance through to face Ricardo Campello (JP, NeilPryde, MFC).
The double looping duo put on an awesome display of aerial dog fighting for the Pozo crowds, however the super close heat was eventually won by Campello, who flew higher than Seadi, and managed to stick cleaner landings.
A stones throw from the final, Campello’s last hurdle was Tenerife’s Danny Bruch (Gaastra). Bruch, renowned for his monumental hang time, lived up to his reputation, launching into huge stalled forward loops, and massive contorted tabletop pushloops. Snubbing Bruch, Campello landed a perfect double forward, complementing it with aggressive wave riding and more aerial madness, to hand him the victory, and passage to his first ever wave final.
Last stop was Fernandez, who’s won in Pozo the last two years. For Campello to even challenge the reigning champion, he’d not only have to go big, but also match Fernandez’s creative and aggressive wave riding.
Fernandez’s first run showed why he continues to dominate at this venue, he effortlessly landed a perfect stalled forward and a backloop, but not just standard jumps, these were massive! Campello, knowing he had work to do, pulled a perfect double forward out the bag, only for it to be mimicked by Fernandez moments later.
Fernandez allowed Campello no breathing space, with every move equaled or bettered. Checkmate came when the Spanish powerhouse clocked up an awesome wave ride, including a goiter on the wave face. Campello had fought bravely, and was by no means outclassed, but the day belonged to Fernandez.
Fernandez’s victory marks an impressive run for the Spaniard; Three years of competition in Pozo, three victories, and not a single heat lost. Impressive, by anyone’s standards.
Women’s Double Elimination
Silvia Alba Orozco (MFC) proved to be a stellar opponent, mounting a spectacular four heat resurgence thanks her aggressive wave riding. The run came to an end when she came up against hard-hitting rival, Karin Jaggi (F2, North Sails), who took control of the airwaves with her sizable aerial artillery.
Jaggi’s downfall came when she squared up against Iballa Moreno (North Sails). The Pozo local and World Champion outclassed Jaggi, with a comprehensive routine that Swiss sailor couldn’t match.
In a carbon copy of the 2007 final, sisters Iballa and Daida went head to head to decide who’d claim the event. The explosive showdown was a tribute to the immense talent of the siblings.
A class above the rest, the heat was truly spectacular. Iballa took the early lead with a big pushloop and some solid riding, but Daida fought back with a floaty one handed backloop, a huge forward, and with confidence on the up, a crazy double loop attempt.
When the heat ended, the judges awarded a conclusive 5-0 victory to Daida, however; only a small margin separated the pair on each score sheet. The victory adds to Daida’s unprecedented run at top of the podium.
Tomorrow, both the slalom and freestyle skippers meetings are at 10.00am.
© PWA / Andrew Buchanan
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Re:2008 Gran Canaria PWA Grand Slam - 2008/07/15 08:50
The 2008 Gran Canaria PWA Grand Slam – Day Nine 12.07.08 - Junko Nagoshi fends off Laure Treboux to claim third overall in the freestyle stakes, and Ricardo Campello & Daido Moreno launch into orbit to win the final day’s wave super session.
Third place sail-off
Entering the final day of competition, Laure Treboux (Fanatic, North) and Junko Nagoshi (Simmer Sails, Dakine) held the same number of points after two full freestyle double eliminations.
As a result, they were both tied in third position, meaning the pair would have to compete in a sail-off, to decide who would take outright third position, and who would drop down to fourth.
The tense decider got off to a shaky start, as both sailors struggled to find their rhythm in the monumental 50 knot wind. Tactically thinking, Nagoshi chose to cast the technical moves aside, instead opting for safer moves she knew she could land, and would notch up crucial points on the judges score sheets.
On the other hand, Treboux was becoming a victim of her own over ambition, as she continued to attempt technical, switch stance and clew first moves, but to no avail.
When the heat ended, the result was conclusive. Nagoshi had stolen third place from under Treboux’s nose, thanks to a tactically savvy sailing performance. Treboux would have to settle for fourth.
Wave Super Session
A €1500 prize purse lured the biggest players of the PWA wave fleet to the water for the much anticipate Wave Super Session. The innovative format pitches riders against each other in a jump only contest, where only the best jump from each competitor is scored.
Four, four-man heats, narrowed the fleet down to a heavy weight final consisting of; John Skye (RRD, Naish), Kauli Seadi (JP, NeilPryde, Mormaii), Ricardo Campello (JP, NeilPryde, MFC) and Victor Fernandez (Fanatic, Simmer Sails, MFC), who had all pulled double forward loops to advance.
Armed with 3.5m-3.7m sails, the finalists launched into action. Within the first minute, four double forward loops had been pulled to a soundtrack of roaring applause from the capacity Pozo crowed.
The heat would take an unexpected u-turn, when Campello decided that two rotations weren’t enough. Spotting a towering ramp ahead of him, the famed double looper boosted a mammoth jump, and proceeded to accelerate around three forward rotations. The jump ended in a crash, but came tantalizingly close. Either way, it was enough for Campello to secure the victory (he’d also nailed the biggest double of the heat), leaving Fernandez to take second with a big double, and Skye in third, also with a double!
Not to be outdone by the men’s fleet, Daida Moreno won the women’s category with an insane double loop of her own. Filling out the remaining podium positions were Evi Tsape (Fanatic, NeilPryde) and Iballa Moreno (North Sails).
Marking the end of the event, this evening there’s a glamorous prize giving and closing ceremony at the Gloria Palace Hotel, the official event accommodation partner.
Congratulations to the winners; Daida Moreno (North Sails), Antoine Albeau (Starboard, NeilPryde), Sarah-Quita Offringa (Starboard, NeilPryde), and Victor Fernandez (Fanatic, Simmer Sails, MFC).
The tour now rolls on to Fuerteventura’s Sotavento beach, for the 2008 Fuerteventura PWA Grand Slam, from the 18th to the 28th of July.
© PWA / Andrew Buchanan
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Re:2008 Gran Canaria PWA Grand Slam - 2008/07/15 08:54
Danny Bruch Pic - PWA/John Carter
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Re:2008 Gran Canaria PWA Grand Slam - 2008/07/15 08:59
Event Summary 13.07.08 - Pozo turns up the heat for nine days of mind blowing freestyle, slalom and wave competition.
Wave single elimination
Launching onto action on day one, Pozo Izquierdo’s legendary wind machine roared to life, churning out 40 knot wind, alongside a sizeable swell for the single elimination of the wave contest.
Danny Bruch (Gaastra) started as he intended to go on, knocking out Aleix Sanllehy (F2, North Sails) in round one, then experienced rival Kevin Pritchard (Starboard, Gaastra, Dakine, MFC) in round two.
Levi Siver (Quatro, NeilPryde, Dakine, MFC) took an early exit at the hands of local wonder kid Philip Köster (F2, Neil Pryde), who proved he’s a talent not to underestimate as he continued to cause upset in subsequent rounds.
As the 48 man fleet continued to narrow, more and more big names dropped from the elimination. Alex Mussolini (RRD, NeilPryde) fell victim to Köster’s seemingly unstoppable run, and Julien Taboulet (F2, Naish) departed courtesy of Browne’s impressive freestyle-wave fusion.
Local favorite Dario Ojeda (Quatro, MFC, Mormaii) was stopped in his tracks by the super smooth wave riding of Josh Angulo (MauiSails, Dakine), and Bruch continued to dominate the airwaves with his gravity defying aerial rotations, defeating Scott McKercher (Starboard, Severne).
Entering the quarters, crowds were treated to arguably the heat of the day, when underdog Köster took on the mite of competition favorite Victor Fernandez (Fanatic, Simmer Style, MFC). The pair went off the scale with their jumps, but eventually Fernandez took the victory aided by a perfect double forward loop.
Also departing in the quarterfinals was Browne, who was beaten by team mate and mentor Nik Baker (Mistral, North Sails), and Angulo, who fell at the hands of double looping maestro Campello.
The semi finals were a fierce affair, but ultimately Fernandez and Bruch would prevail, going on to do battle in the final. This was a close tussle, but Fernandez delivered a more polished, and technically higher scoring repertoire to take first place ahead of Bruch.
Moving onto the women’s elimination, Karin Jaggi (F2, North Sails) pieced together a solid quarter final heat to advance ahead of Silvia Alba Orozco (MFC), and Laure Treboux (Fanatic, North Sails) met her match when she faced Iballa Moreno (North Sails).
In the bottom half of the draw, Nayra Alonso (Fanatic, Severne) had to deliver a stellar performance to defeat Japan’s Junko Nagoshi (Simmer Sails, Dakine) and Daida Moreno (North Sails) fended off her rival Evi Tsape (Fanatic, NeilPryde).
In the semi final, Jaggi and Alonso departed the elimination after some devastating sailing from the Moreno twins, paving the way for a Moreno showdown in the final
The final witnessed some outstanding riding from the pair, but Daida chalked up more points on the score sheet to take the win, leaving Iballa in second.
Wave Double Elimination
Kevin Pritchard (Starboard, Gaastra, Dakine, MFC) showed his hunger to climb the ranks, defeating Jose Estredo (Fanatic, North Sails, MFC), Peter Volwater (North Sails) and local hotshot Dario Ojeda (Quatro, Mormaii, MFC) to him clear a path through the double, before he finally fell to Vidar Jensen (North Sails).
Mounting a sustained attack, Julien Taboulet (F2, Naish Sails), aided by his trademark super contorted tabletop forward loops, cleared John Skye (RRD, Naish), Phil Horrocks (JP, NeilPryde), Philip Köster (F2, NeilPryde) & high flying Jonas Ceballos (Fanatic, Simmer Sails, MFC) to the side, as he advanced from the third round to within touching distance of the final.
Taboulet would finally fall at the hands of Kauli Seadi (JP, NeilPryde, Mormaii), who was gaining momentum after knocking out Vidar Jensen (North Sails) and Klaas Voget (Fanatic, NeilPryde, MFC).
Seadi went on to knock out Nik Baker before losing to Ricardo Campello, who continued to dominate when he took down Danny Bruch, giving him a shot at Victor Fernandez in the final.
The epic final saw perfect double loops from both sailors, but checkmate came when Fernandez clocked up an awesome wave ride, including a goiter on the wave face. Campello had fought bravely, and was by no means outclassed, but the day belonged to Fernandez.
Fernandez’s victory marks an impressive run for the Spaniard; Three years of competition in Pozo, three victories, and not a single heat lost. Impressive by anyone’s standards.
In the women’s double elimination, Silvia Alba Orozco (MFC) proved to be a tough contender, mounting a spectacular four heat resurgence thanks her aggressive wave riding. The run came to an end when she came up against hard-hitting rival, Karin Jaggi, who took control of the airwaves with her sizable aerial artillery.
Jaggi departed the elimination when she lost to Iballa Moreno, meaning the fight for first position would be a repeat of the single elimination final, Moreno versus Moreno.
The battle was a class above the rest, however when the heat ended, the judges awarded a conclusive 5-0 victory to Daida. The victory adds to Daida’s unprecedented run at top of the podium.
Pozo Wave Results: Men 1st Victor `Fernandez 2nd Ricardo Campello 3rd Danny Bruch 4th Kauli Seadi Women 1st Daida Moreno 2nd Iballa Moreno 3rd Karin Jaggi 4th Silvia Alba Orozco
Freestyle Eliminations
The first freestyle elimination was convincingly won by Sarah-Quita Offringa (Starboard, NeilPryde), who defeated Daida Moreno in the final. Offringa then had to wait for the double elimination to run its course before she could fight to defend her position.
Initially, Treboux looked dangerous having defeated Junko Nagoshi, but a lapse of concentration saw her lose to Daida Moreno, meaning it would be another Offringa vs.Moreno final.
The final was a class act from Offringa, who landed virtually every move she attempted. Moreno played a high-risk game, attempting double loops, and ponchs. However, the gamble failed to pay off, when she crashed the majority of these high scoring moves, leaving Offringa free to take the win.
In the second single elimination, Iballa Moreno took an early exit when she fell victim to Japan’s freestyle sensation Junko Nagoshi. Moving into the semi finals, Nagoshi had her work cut out when she challenged Offringa. Offringa ultimately dominated the heat, to take her position in the final.
The second semi final saw Treboux lose out on a spot in the final to Daida Moreno, making way for another Moreno vs. Offringa showdown. The hotly contested heat saw Moreno pull a perfect ponch, but it wasn’t enough to defeat defiant Offringa, who took another victory.
In the second double elimination, Yolanda De Brendt (Fanatic, North Sails) showed early form, knocking out Silvia Alba Orozco and Iballa Moreno before exiting courtesy of a polished display by Nagoshi.
Gaining momentum, Nagoshi went on to defeat Laure Treboux only to lose to Daida Moreno in the next round. Moreno’s victory secured her a position in the final, which was a repeat of the previous double elimination final, Moreno vs. Offringa.
Coming out all guns blazing, Offringa’s barrage was impressive to say the least, and Moreno had a tall order ahead of her, having to find a reply to a one handed puneta, a shaka, and funnel. Nerves seemed to overcome the local, and a last minute grubby, flaka and forward weren’t enough to match Offringa’s mammoth score. In a 5-0 decision, Offringa added another double elimination victory to her name.
Pozo Freestyle Results:
1st Sarah-Quita Offringa 2nd Daida Moreno 3rd Junko Nagoshi 4th Laure Treboux
Racing
Race 1: There was shock in the early rounds when Ben Van Der Steen (Exocet, Simmer Sails) and Bjorn Dunkerbeck (T1, North Sails) crossed the start line early, meaning they didn’t qualify for the race final.
In the final, Albeau (Starboard, NeilPryde), Pritchard and Maynard (RRD, NeilPryde) broke away from the pack after the first gybe and proceeded to open up a considerable lead. The spearheading threesome jostled, but on the finish line maintained the same formation that they had had for the entire race. Albeau first, Pritchard second and Maynard third. Dunkerbeck returned to form in the losers final, to take the win.
Race 2: The usual suspects stamped their authority on the first round, with Maynard, Pritchard and Albeau winning their heats. Also joining them was Josh Angulo (MauiSails, Dakine) who showed he’s not one to be left out of contention when the going gets tough.
The final of race two was laden with truly spectacular sailing. Albeau showed why he’s World Champion, entering the first mark in sixth and coming out in second with a magnificent gybe through the fleet. He then chased down Maynard, and overtook him on the final reach to claim his second race win. Maynard got caught in a tussle with Buzianis (JP, NeilPryde, MFC), leaving Dunkerbeck free to steal second place, Maynard third, and Buzianis fourth. Van Der Steen held his nerve to win the losers final.
Race 3: The third race was an epic surf slalom affair. In the final, Albeau looked untouchable in first, leaving Angulo and Pritchard to fight for second. Pritchard put the pedal down and eventually accelerated across the line to beat Angulo to the number two spot. Angulo took third, Dunkerbeck fourth, and Williams came home in fifth.
In the losers final, Micah Buzianis showed class and determination to fend off Taty Frans (Starboard, North Sails) and Sylvain Moussilmani (F2, Simmer) to take the win. Frans sailed well and stole second from Moussilmani who finished in third.
Race 4: Uncharacteristic errors from Buzianis, Maynard and Williams, meant they all failed to make the top five of their respective semi final heats, thus not qualifying for the final.
More upset came in the final, when Pritchard and Angulo crossed the start line early, forcing the heat to be rerun without them. In the rerun, Albeau was tested by Volwater, but kept a cool head to take his fourth successive race win. Volwater slipped into third behind Cyril Moussilmani (Fanatic, North), leaving Cedric Bordes (Tabou, Gaastra) in fourth, and Dunkerbeck in fifth.
In the losers final, Williams owned the show, opening up a huge lead ahead of his nearest rival, Buzianis. Untouched from the first gybe onwards, Williams went on to win in comfortable fashion, leaving Buzianis to take second, and Allen third.
Race 5 witnessed the amazing spectacle of the entire 39 man race fleet battling it out around a mammoth down wind slalom course. A rabbit start kicked off a crazy charge down the first reach as the mass of sailors battled to get clean wind at the first mark.
The amazing race culminated with a frantic blast to the finish, Albeau excelled to claim another first place, Volwater took second, Pritchard third, Williams fourth and Pearch ended in fifth. The race proved to be a stumbling block for Finian Maynard who failed to finish, and Bjorn Dunkerbeck didn’t help his cause, finishing 14th in a race that many had tipped him to be a favorite in.
Race 6: The sixth slalom race of the event saw cracks appear in Antoine Albeau’s seemingly impenetrable defenses. Two falls and a ninth place finish in his semi final heat meant he failed to qualify for the race final.
Signaling changing times, Britain’s Ross William’s and Holland’s Peter Volwater lead the pack in a final depleted of many big name racers. The pair was equally matched, but Williams edged ahead in a final drag race to the finish line. Close behind, Josh Angulo took third, Bjorn Dunkerbeck fourth and Benoit Moussilmani (F2, Simmer Sails) raced home in fifth. Albeau regained his winning form to take first place in the losers final.
Race 7: Failing to make the cut in the qualifying heats, Ross Williams, Micah Buzianis and Josh Angulo all went out in the first rounds, denying them a chance to compete in the final.
No surprises in this one, Albeau lead the final to take another win, Pritchard came second, Allen third, Dunkerbeck fourth and Sylvain Moussilmani fifth.
Recovering in the losers final, Williams relinquished his previous error to take first place, ahead of Buzianis in second, and Angulo in third.
Race 8: Over eager starts for Pritchard, Williams and Volwater meant the final had to be restarted, minus the offenders. In the rerun, Albeau settled into his usual position at the front of the pack. Chasing him down were Dunkerbeck and Buzianis, who never let the leader out of their grasp, but failed to summon enough grunt to overthrow the French World Champion. Albeau walked away with another victory with Buzianis in second, and Dunkerbeck in third.
Race 9: An unfortunate accident saw Micah Buzianis crashed into, and in need of medical attention following a gybe mark incident in the qualifying heats. The incident robbed him of a position in the final, which was won by slalom machine Albeau. Pritchard snapped up another second place finish, and Cyril Moussilmani flew home in third.
Pozo Racing Results:
1st Albeau 2nd Pritchard 3rd Dunkerbeck 4th Williams
The final Saturday of competition was too windy for racing, so organizers ran a wave super session. The event witnessed Ricardo Campello attempt the first ever triple forward loop in competition. He crashed, but had done enough to take the win. Daida Moreno won the women’s category for a crazy double forward loop.
A glamorous prize-giving and closing ceremony rounded-off a spectacular event that saw history made and more champions crowned. Gran Canaria never fails to deliver the goods when it comes to high-pressure, high wind competition, and one can only imagine what the future here will see.
You can review all PWA events at www.pwaworldtour.com or, for more information contact the PWA office via info@pwaworldtour.com
© PWA / Andrew Buchanan
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