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New Warren Miller ski flick plays Friday in Torrance

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For 62 years a new Warren Miller ski movie has heralded the advent of the winter sports season and his latest effort has arrived, "Like There's No Tomorrow," which will play for one night only at 8 p.m. Friday at Torrance's James Armstrong Theatre at the Civic Center.

Here's more on the film from Warren Miller & Co:

Narrated by California native and Olympic Gold Medalist Jonny Moseley, Like There's No Tomorrow follows more than a dozen professional skiers and snowboarders to exotic locations on five continents. Watch as world-class athletes hit the slopes of some of the world's most inspiring snowy landscapes; from the striking Himalayas in Gulmarg, India to the southern hemisphere's highest peak in Portillo, Chile to the legendary powder of Squaw Valley, Calif.

Tickets are $20.50 apiece. After the film, moviegoers can use their ticket stub toward a buy one, get one lift ticket offer at participating mountain resorts and discounts at Sport Chalet. For tickets, call (1-800) 523-7117

Torrance is one of 240 cities nationwide where the film will be screened.

Check out the trailer:

Galaxy invited to White House

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President Barack Obama called Galaxy Coach Bruce Arena, currently with the Carson-based Major League Soccer club in Indonesia, to congratulate him on winning MLS Cup earlier this month.

The President said, as a soccer fan, he wanted to let Coach Arena know that the team inspired a lot of young soccer players, including his kids. The President congratulated Coach Arena on all that the team has done for the game of soccer and asked him to pass along his congratulations to Landon Donovan, David Beckham and the rest of the team.

The White House visit is expected to occur sometime next year.

Incidentally, the Galaxy won the first game of its Asian tour in the wee hours of this morning Pacific time.

And if you're a soccer fan who can't wait for next season to start in the spring, here's an appetizer in an ad featuring Galaxy players at what will be the new home of MLS:

A note to readers of the 100 Percent Soccer blog

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Due to a technical error the 100 Percent Soccer blog is "down" and readers may not post comments nor can it be updated until the blog is restored (which could be a cumbersome and time-consuming process).

Moreover, there is a factual error in the most recent post that can't be corrected at this time.

For the record, Chivas USA midfielder Paulo Nagamura was traded today to Sporting Kansas City and not the MLS club indicated in the post.

Thank you for your understanding.

Kelly Slater: The People's Champion

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Photos courtesy of the Association of Surfing Professionals

No modern athlete, by any resonable measure, has dominated their sport like Kelly Slater has dominated pro surfing.


Not Jordan or Montana. Not Favre or Lebron or, dare it be said, Kobe Bryant. Not even the historic sporting successes of Woods, Federer and Nadal can really compare to Slater's stunning run of athletic supremacy.


So when the Florida native took home his unprecedented 11th world title this week in San Francisco, he was heralded as a conquering hero by the surfing world.


Slater's feats have lit up Twitter and Facebook, been highlighted in magazine spreads and newspaper articles, fueled massive corporate marketing campaigns and been featured among mainstream sports highlights on ESPN. He was even profiled a few weeks back on that one show my parents always TiVo, CBS Sunday Morning.


"This is pretty fabulous," Slater told reporters after being crowned the tour's 2011 champion. "It's very fulfilling and there's personal satisfaction. It feels real nice. I've dedicated my life to surfing and competing and to go a whole year and win a world title and have it pay off, it's really fulfilling. To win on American soil is nice."


He has already posted three tour wins this year and reached the finals in five of nine events.


Slater's most recent achievement was highlighted this week by the New York Times, which lauded his ability to remain above the competition despite a constant influx of talented young surfers.


The article appeared just after the completion of the latest Association of Surfing Professionals tour stop up north, which - in true Ocean Beach fashion - featured chilly water, offshore winds, a powerful swell and the reported sighting of a massive shark.


The ASP calculates winners and losers through a complex point system, and Slater clinched the title of the 11-stop tour by reaching the fourth round in San Francisco. But it was Gabriel Medina, a 17-year-old Brazilian, who topped Slater in their heat and eventually went on to win the event by beating Australian Joel Parkinson.


Medina may be the gifted young phenom of tomorrow, but today belongs to the Champ.


Need more evidence of Slater's unrivaled superiority? Just take a look at the numbers: 11, the number of world titles he has won; 20, Slater's age in 1992 when he won his first ASP world title; $3 million, the amount of prize money he has earned over a career spanning two decades; 48 tour wins, two X Game medals, countless fans and immeasurable commercial appeal.


Slater holds the distinction of being the youngest and oldest world champion in the history of professional surfing.

Max Klinger of the The New York Times looks at Slater's longevity and deep influence in nearly every aspect of surfing, where younger pros have dramatically progressed the sport by taking to the sky - literally. While Slater has developed his technique to incorporate aerial surfing, he has remained true to his iconic power-surfing style. And Slater's successes this week at San Francisco's legendary Ocean Beach proved to be a powerful testament to his staying power in an ever-evolving sport.


From the NY Times article:


Slater, who is considered a master of every facet of the sport -- barrel riding, aerials, power surfing -- has seemed to age in reverse.


"When I need to, I'm surfing better than I ever have in my life," he said. "The thing about getting older in anything is keeping your mind open to trying new things and taking new approaches. I honestly don't feel like age is a restriction."


Part of that has to do with the low-impact physical nature of surfing, but part also has to do with Slater's unusual ability to balance the motivation required to surf in contests -- which are often held in less-than ideal conditions and whose format can limit risk taking -- with the desire to advance the larger progression of the sport.


---------------------


On Sunday, after the final horn of his title-clinching heat had blown, he paddled for a wedging barrel and disappeared behind the thick green lip for several seconds before emerging from what could have easily been the best wave of the event.


It did not count, but it did not matter much to Slater, whose title was already in the books. As the crowd burst into a frenzy, it was clear that the tour's champ was also the people's champ.


Slater's appeal is broad for many reasons, one of them being that he just genuinely seems like a decent guy. And that's refreshing in today's culture of celebrity worship. He doesn't drink or smoke or do drugs. He gives his money and time to charity, visiting with wounded solders and teaching disabled veterans how to surf. He often does this under the media's radar. There are no cheating scandals or salacious sex headlines or failed 72-day marriages, no ridiculous political campaigns or head-scratching run ins with the law. Heck, the guy even updates his own twitter feed. Talk about "the people's champion."


Next up in Slater's 11th world title tour will be the Pipeline Masters held in December on the North Shore of Oahu. Us mortals hope retirement doesn't soon follow.



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Surfer Matt Mohagen takes home Big Wave title

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Local surfer Matt Mohagen has won the inaugural South Bay Big Wave Challenge.

He earned the title for riding a massive wave at Hammerland that was captured on film by Jeff Farsai. With the award, Mohagen received $1,000 in cash, a new Body Glove wetsuits and a 10-foot gun, shaped by Pat Readon.


Mohagen caught the 15-foot wave in January and accepted the award Friday evening during a ceremony at the Hermosa Beach Playhouse.


The Big Wave Challenge is sponsored by the South Bay Boardriders Club and given to the surfer documented catching the biggest wave in the South Bay between Dec. 1 and March 31.

 

The boundaries were from the D&W jetty in El Segundo to Indicators in Palos Verdes Estates.


Nominees, in addition to Mohagen, included Derek Levy, Marcelo Malinco, Tyler Hatzikian and Chris Rodriguez.

 

Here's a video of the winning wave:

 

 

Huge wave in Los Angeles, surfer Matt Mohagen, shot by Jeff Farsai from Jeff Farsai on Vimeo.

ESPN personality gives a shoutout to Manhattan Beach

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If you've ever tuned in to listen to Colin Cowherd, chances are you know the longtime sports radio host has an affinity for the South Bay.


Cowherd, a television and radio personality for ESPN, recently spoke about his love for Manhattan Beach, the Shade Hotel and Petros Restaurant in an interview with laist.com.


Here's an excerpt from the interview with the website's Caleb Bacon:


LAist: Do you have a favorite part of Los Angeles?


I like the beach communities a lot, like Manhattan Beach.


LAist: I've heard you mention on your show that you love staying at the Shade Hotel in Manhattan Beach.


I love that joint. I was there last weekend. I walked in and [USC Football Head Coach] Lane Kiffin was there and we just sat and BS-ed about recruiting for an hour. Another one of my favorite cities is Miami, another one is San Diego. When you can put a great city by a beach -- I'm in. If you put New York City on a beach I'd like New York City more.


In the interview, Cowherd discussed the strengths of the USC and UCLA football programs, the proposed NFL stadium downtown and how the Dodgers are "wildly" underrated this year.


Cowherd hosts The Herd and can be caught locally from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. on KSPN 710 AM. He also co-hosts SportsNation, a program on ESPN2.

Local pro surfer Alex Gray reflects on 2010, eyes possible return to competition

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Alex Gray scores along the Avenues in Redondo Beach. (Photo courtesy of Mark Kawakami and Body Glove)


If you've opened a surf magazine in the last five years, chances are you've seen Alex Gray.

The 24-year-old's rise through the ranks of professional surfing began on the beaches of the South Bay and has been developed through the years on the sport's biggest stage, the North Shore of Oahu. He has been featured in dozens of surf films and on the covers of both Surfer and Surfing magazines. 

The Peninsula High School graduate (class of '04) is featured in Taylor Steele's latest film "Innersection" and has spent each winter for the last nine years surfing on the North Shore, where he has a room at Volcom's "Gerry Lopez House," a three-story complex named after the Pipeline legend that is reserved for the company's A-list riders during the winter.

"Hawaii either makes or breaks you as a surfer," Gray said this week. "Going over there as a blond hair California kid, it was really tough. There's a full pecking order out there. There were times I'd paddle out and not catch a wave."

But the persistence has paid off.  Gray, who typically enters up to 20 contests a year, took a break from the competitive grind in 2010 to travel the globe and chase the winter's biggest swells. He was nominated for Surfline.com's "Wave of the Winter".

"The great thing about last year was that it was the best winter California has had since, I believe, '82," Gray said. He would occasionally  spend a day surfing in Hawaii, fly overnight to the mainland, then ride the same swell the next day in California.

Gray scored major swells last winter at two legendary locations: Todos Santos, a small island chain off the Baja Mexican coast, and Mavericks, just north of Half Moon Bay. Waves at each spot can reach 60 feet.

"I basically followed the biggest swells across the ocean," Gray said, adding that it was the first time he took a break from competition in 12 years. "Since I graduated high school, I've been gone 10 to 11 months out of the year. Last year, (the break from contests) allowed me to choose where I wanted to go, searching for the most perfect waves in the world. I was able to get more into big wave surfing. It was nice and refreshing for me."

Gray, whose sponsors include Volcom and Redondo Beach-based Body Glove, said he's not set on plans for 2011 but is eying a spot on the Association of Surfing Professionals World Qualifying Series. In the meantime, he is gearing up for one of the sport's first professional events of the season, the Volcom Pipeline Pro, held later this month on the North Shore. 

"My goal now is to travel the world - to get the best waves in the world and be there when they're at their best," Gray said.

Gray took another brief break from surfing in November to join the sport's professional community in Kauai for a ceremonial paddle-out honoring Andy Irons, who passed away earlier that month after an alleged bout with dengue fever.

The death of Irons hit especially close for Gray, whose brother, Chris, died of a drug overdose when Alex was 17.  It was Chris who first introduced his younger brother to surfing when they where kids.

"My brother is gone but his spirit still lives with me," Gray said. "I can honestly say that if it wasn't for his death, I would not be where I am right now with my career. He is my motivation"

A bit more about Alex Gray, via Volcom.

Is a legendary surfer the world's greatest athlete?

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Chris Mauro, the former Editor of Surfer Magazine, argues that nine-time surfing champion Kelly Slater could be the world's greatest athlete - ever. Slater, 38, took home top honors last weekend at the Hurley Pro, beating 27-year-old Australian Bede Durbridge during epic, flawless conditions at Trestles us mortals could only dream about surfing alone.

The win marked an unprecedented 43 elite tour victories for the legendary Floridian.

Mauro writes:

I know this sounds like an absurd notion. There's simply no way a surfer can enter the conversation when we're talking about the most dominant athletes ever, right? Can we even dare to measure Slater's athletic feats against Wayne Gretzky and Jerry Rice? Those two really did dominate physically grueling sports for two decades. That's why they're considered the greatest. And maybe being blasted into the reef at Teahupoo isn't as scary as being checked, or catching an ill-timed pass over the middle, but watch, then consider which fate you'd choose given the choice.

Whether surfing is a sport or not is an argument even surfers can't agree on. In fact, anything with judges is suspect since it's crossing into art. But there's no denying that whether you're paddling into 25-foot waves at Waimea Bay, or flying high at five-foot Bells Beach, the act demands endurance, timing, speed and flexibility, not to mention commitment, all which favor the young and athletically spry...or so we were told.

After winning five straight titles in the 90s (six total) Slater retired in 1999, which, when translated, means he went surfing more. He chased swells around the planet for three years, visiting friends at every stop, waiting for a new crop of talent to mature and actually threaten his legacy before coming back to competition in 2003. In his first year back, he fell short in the final heat of the season. But by 2005 he had his title back, repeating again in 2006, and nabbing another in 2008. Now he's leading in 2010.

And here's a South Bay connection: Local artist Alison Wright has paid tribute to Slater at Metlox Plaza in Manhattan Beach. Her work, a 10-foot tall red surfboard shaped like a gigantic bowling pin, is titled "If Slater Bowled" and will be on display through mid November.

Want to go to Saturday's UCLA-Houston football game in Pasadena - for free?

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The Daily Breeze has available a limited number of "exchange coupons," for the 7:30 p.m. game at the Rose Bowl, which are redeemed at special ticket booths at the stadium in exchange for an actual ticket.

Here's the catch: to snag a coupon you must come down by 5 p.m. to the Daily Breeze offices at 21250 Hawthorne Blvd., Suite 170 in the South Bay Tower (it's at the corner of Hawthorne and Torrance boulevards) in Torrance.

No more than two coupons will be given out per person. And there are a limited number of coupons available that will be given out on a first-come, first-served basis.


A surfboard, with lights

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Behold, the future.


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A startling new advancement in the surf industry could be upon us: Surfboard headlights.

The "Night Stalker" is designed by Bill Stewart of San Clemente-based Stewart Surfboards and will be auctioned Saturday during Billabong's Art of Shaping charity event, held at the San Diego Convention Center. Proceeds from the auction go to benefit the 2010 SIMA Humanitarian Fund. The board (a 5 fin, it's worth noting) features two rechargeable battery powered adjustable headlights and a plexi-glass nose panel. The side fins house LEDs, too.
 
Now, before we all write off surfboard headlights as a fad or gimmick with little use - other than maybe attracting our sharp-toothed friends - it's important to keep in mind that thrusters, the fish, quad fins, SUPs, heck, even surfing itself, were all at one time thought to be little more than passing trends.
 
No word yet on what the opening bid is.

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