Rob Hazelwood wins Lake 38 ProAm

Hazelwood Rises to the Top in the Most Competitive Slalom Field in Over a Decade

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Hazelwood rises to the top in the most competitive slalom field in over a decade

Rob Hazelwood wins Lake 38 ProAm

Image: waterskibroadcasting_

By Jack Burden


The Lake 38 Pro-Am finished in spectacular fashion. Regina Jaquess delivered a dominant performance, running 10.75m (39.5’ off) in all three rounds to secure her third professional victory of 2024. The men’s final elevated the excitement levels even further. Cole McCormick, fresh off his historic Masters victory, Freddie Winter, eager to reclaim the top spot after missing the finals at his last two events, and Robert Hazelwood, motivated to prove himself after being snubbed from the Masters, found themselves locked in a three-way runoff for the title. Ultimately, it was Hazelwood who emerged victorious, clinching his first professional victory and surpassing McCormick as the youngest to win a men’s slalom event since 2019.

“A win on the Pro Tour is something I’ve dreamed about since day zero and for that to become a reality is truly crazy to me,” shared an elated Hazelwood who now sits atop the Waterski Pro Tour leaderboard. “Anyone who spends 10 [minutes] around me knows that waterskiing is more than a sport to me… it’s pretty much all I think about from morning till night.”

Over the first four professional slalom events, we have seen four different winners on the men’s side, including two young up-and-comers clinching their first professional titles. This level of competitiveness in slalom hasn’t been seen in over a decade; the last time a season started with four different winners was in 2011, when Aaron Larkin, Jonathan Travers, Thomas Degasperi, and Will Asher shared the first four events. In the final event of that year, a relatively unknown 20-year-old from Indiana clinched his first professional title, kicking off over a decade of dominance.

Since that season, Nate Smith has maintained a winning percentage just shy of 75%. Smith, along with Winter, Asher, and Degasperi, have won an incredible 116 out of 130 events since 2012, leaving a whole generation of supremely talented slalom skiers relegated to the periphery. In fact, up until the Lake 38 Pro-Am this weekend, no skier outside the ‘big four’ had ever won a Waterski Pro Tour men’s slalom title.

Part of the transition we are seeing in 2024 could be attributed to the old guard slowing down. Both Asher and Degasperi are in their early 40s, while Smith and Winter are now in their mid-30s, an age where many professional athletes begin to contemplate retirement.

However, the level of skiing and the depth of the field is as high as ever. The cut for finals at both Swiss and Lake 38 required a score of 3@10.25m (41’ off) with a solid backup. There are more skiers than ever capable of running 10.75m.

Rather than capitalizing on a waning field, the more plausible explanation is that young skiers like Hazelwood and McCormick have reached a point in their careers where they have both the skills and experience to go toe-to-toe with seasoned campaigners such as Winter and Smith. Hazelwood, just 24 years old, has competed in 29 out of 38 slalom events since the Waterski Pro Tour began in 2021, finishing in the top eight 21 times. That’s a lot of experience competing in professional finals.

Also promising are the 18-year-old pair of Lucas Cornale and Charlie Ross, who have both recorded scores deep into 10.25m and are starting to seriously challenge for podium positions (Cornale picked up his first professional podium at Moomba earlier this year).

Of course, the smart money is on the old guard to strike back. With 11 professional slalom events left throughout 2024’s jam-packed calendar, we should rightly expect to see the ‘big four’ back on top of the podium. But this level of competitiveness, where no skier, no matter their pedigree, is guaranteed a spot in the final, and anyone in the field is capable of winning, adds a layer of intrigue and excitement to the sport that is sure to keep fans hooked over the upcoming months.

Cole McCormick wins the US Masters

McCormick Wins First Professional Title: By the Numbers

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McCormick wins first professional title: By the numbers

Cole McCormick wins the US Masters

Image: @johnnyhayward_photo

By Jack Burden


With his victory this weekend at the Masters Water Ski and Wakeboard Tournament, Cole McCormick clinched his first-ever professional title and etched his name onto one of the most prestigious trophies in the sport. Here’s a look at McCormick’s achievement by the numbers.

1

Number of Canadians to win the Masters men’s slalom title. McCormick is the first male skier representing Canada to win the title and only the fifth Canadian man behind George Athans, Kreg Llewellyn, Jaret Llewellyn, and Ryan Dodd to win the tournament in any event.

19

Total Masters titles in the McCormick household. Cole’s 2024 slalom victory adds to his mother Susi Graham McCormick’s 5 slalom titles and his father Ricky McCormick’s 13 titles across trick, jump, and overall. Cole is the first-ever second-generation Masters champion.

45

Months since any man other than Nate Smith, Freddie Winter, Will Asher, or Thomas Degasperi has won a professional slalom title. The last before McCormick was Daniel Odvarko at the 2020 Ski Stillwaters Pro Team Challenge.

3

Different winners in men’s slalom across the first three professional events of 2024. McCormick joins Asher (Swiss Pro Slalom) and Winter (Moomba Masters) in the winner’s circle this year.

15

Top five finishes for McCormick across 25 professional events over the past four years before finishing on top of the podium. McCormick has finished inside the top 10 on the year end standings in every season of the Waterski Pro Tour.

28

The youngest male winner of a professional slalom tournament since Stephen Neveu at the Botaski ProAm in 2019 (25 years, 9 months).

Joel Poland wins jump at the US Masters

Changing of the Guard: Young Stars Shine at the 2024 Masters

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Changing of the guard: Young stars shine at the 2024 Masters

Joel Poland wins jump at the US Masters

Joel Poland celebrates his victory in men’s jump (image: Mitchell Miller)

By Jack Burden


History. Prestige. Tradition. No tournament matches the pageantry of the Masters. From the boat parade to the historic pavilion, down to the presentation of a semi-automatic rifle to a wounded veteran in honor of Memorial Day, the tradition of the event runs long and deep. This year however, unlike in the past, defending champions stumbled as a new generation rose to the top of the ranks.

On Saturday, 21 men and 19 women entered the three events scheduled for the preliminary round of the 64th Masters Water Ski and Wakeboard Tournament in Callaway Gardens, Georgia. For all of them, it was a matter of winning today or not skiing tomorrow – sudden death water skiing at its best. The reward was a chance to split the largest prize purse in tournament water skiing.

Following Saturday’s action, the cut for Sunday’s finals was razor-sharp; only four skiers in each event qualified for Sunday. Many of the biggest names in the sport found themselves out, including defending champions Pato Font and Nate Smith, and seasoned competitors such as Freddy Krueger, Whitney McClintock Rini, and Freddie Winter.

The men’s slalom semifinal concluded with a drama-filled runoff, with Adam Sedlmajer, Stephen Neveu, and Winter vying for the last spots in the final field. Ultimately, it was Sedlmajer and Neveu, both searching for their first professional victory in over five years, who punched their tickets.

Joel Poland, the first man to ski three events at the Masters in 24 years, came agonizingly close to making the finals in all three events, falling short of the bubble score by a fraction of an inch under video review. The British overall phenom qualified as the top seed in men’s tricks and runner-up in men’s jump with scores over 12,000 points and 70 meters (230 feet) respectively.

In a generally low-scoring tournament, where seasoned campaigners struggled in every event, Poland’s first-round scores stand out. His semifinal marks were less than three buoys shy of the current world overall record, and a higher overall score than any other skier has ever achieved even on a perfect man-made lake.

The women’s semifinals were perhaps the only part of the event that went according to script, at least in jump and tricks, where the four competitors with personal bests over 10,000 points all qualified, along with four of the five capable of 55-meter (180-foot) jumps, including Brittany Greenwood Wharton competing in her first professional event in two years.

Women’s slalom, much like the men’s, was a slog in challenging conditions, where two of the favorites, McClintock Rini and Allie Nicholson, failed to qualify in the variable conditions of Robin Lake.

In women’s tricks, the trio of Erika Lang, Anna Gay Hunter, and Neilly Ross were locked in tense battle as they have been at every event for the past decade. Since 2015, the three have secured over two-thirds of all podium positions and won all but three titles. Hunter led the pack after the semifinals with 10,500 points, while both Lang and Ross stumbled with scores in the mid-9,000s.

In the finals, defending champion Lang found herself in the unfamiliar position of first off the dock and set the pace early with the highest scoring hand pass of the tournament, on target for an 11,000-point score. However, a messy finish to her toe pass, falling at the end, left the door open for the rest of the field. Peruvian Natalia Cuglievan, the most recent woman to join the 10,000-point club, wowed the audience with a toe-wake-line-five out of the wrap, but couldn’t quite match the flipping ability of the rest of the field. Stand-up passes from both Ross and Hunter left the title up to a tight judging call. Ultimately, it was the newlywed Hunter who claimed her 3rd Masters trick title.

“I’m so excited. I went out [and] felt like I did the best I could do, [standing] up both passes,” shared Hunter on the TWBC podcast. Hunter had initially planned to perform a higher-scoring hand run, but after watching the skiers before her, she “decided to go for my normal run [and] try to do it a little faster… Ultimately, I’m very happy with what I did out there.”

It has been a tough week for Patricio Font. After having his world record superseded on Thursday by Jake Abelson, the 2024 Jr. Masters champion, he found himself unable to defend his Masters trick title after falling toward the end of his hand pass in the semifinals. The 21-year-old shared good-humoredly, “Felt good with my plan and my skiing. The swimming not so much, we’ll try again next year.”

The level of men’s tricks has been soaring to new heights in recent months, with all four in the final field capable of tricking over 12,000 points. Martin Labra, the highest scoring toe tricker in living memory, set the pace early with 11,810. Each knowing they had to pull out their A-runs, the rest of the field struggled to execute, handing the 18-year-old Chilean his first professional victory ahead of compatriot Matias Gonzalez, Poland, and world overall champion Louis Duplan-Fribourg.

“I thought [I needed] a little bit more,” shared a still out-of-breath Labra. “I thought it wasn’t enough because we have such great skiers going after me, [but] I was lucky enough to get the win.”

Fresh off a contentious runner-up finish in the trick event, Ross opened up the slalom finals with 3.5@11.25m (38’ off). In the notoriously challenging conditions of Robin Lake, the score held off challenges from compatriots Paige Rini and Jaimee Bull before the veteran Regina Jaquess stood up around four for her 10th Masters slalom title.

“It’s great, it’s actually my third [victory] in a row since my ACL [injury], a continued great comeback from that event in 2021 [where] I had to miss the first Masters I’ve ever missed since I started,” shared Jaquess. Reflecting on the conditions, the 39-year-old said, “It’s Robin Lake… even if it’s not rolly and it seems great, you’ve got the pressure, the pavilion, the athletes, you hear the announcers out there, people are in the water… Every year, every pass, every moment is different out there.”

The men’s final was another low-scoring affair, as Neveu, Sedlmajer, and Will Asher all failed to navigate 10.75m (39.5’ off) before the top seed, Cole McCormick, took to the water. The 28-year-old, competing in his first ever Masters final, was the only skier to run the pass in the preliminary round and needed to repeat the feat in the final after Asher had set the lead at five buoys. McCormick scrapped his way to five and a half, before ejecting spectacularly from his ski to clinch his first ever professional victory.

McCormick, whose mother is a five-time Masters slalom champion and father among the most decorated in Masters history, reflected on the achievement: “Words just can’t even describe what this means to me. To accomplish something that you dream about as a kid, to finally deliver a win for someone who has believed in you enough to make you the face of his waterski brand, just feels unbelievable.” His comments alluding to Kris LaPoint, another legend of the tournament, who has backed McCormick through his ski company, LaPoint Skis.

In women’s jump, we were treated to an all “American” final, courtesy of Wharton, Lauren Morgan, and two formerly Belarusian athletes Aliaksandra Danishueskaya and Hanna Straltsova. It was Wharton, in her comeback tournament, who put some serious pressure on the World Champion. Straltsova appeared to come up short on her first two attempts before a technical malfunction gifted her a small respite in pressure, and she clinched the title on her reride jump.

“It’s never easy at the Masters; it’s more about the mental game, the psychological game, than anything else. Everyone is strong, everyone is capable of jumping far, but it comes down to three jumps here at the Masters,” shared Straltsova after her second consecutive title.

In the men’s jump, 20-year-old Italian Florian Parth clinched his first professional podium before it came down to a shootout between the past two Masters jump champions, Poland and Ryan Dodd. Poland rode a gusty head breeze to an impressive 68.2 meter (224 foot) lead. The Brit appeared to be buffeted around by the breeze through the air before landing and sharing his elation with the crowd. It then came down to the veteran Dodd, chasing his seventh Masters title. The 39-year-old Canadian threw everything at the ramp but came up short of the title.

Poland shared his rollercoaster of emotions while watching Dodd chase his lead: “I was definitely holding my breath, but when you put a score out like that, it definitely puts pressure on… He has to go out and try to jump 230, didn’t quite get the hang of it, and it worked out for me somehow.”

In many ways, this Masters felt like a changing of the guard. The average age of the podium finishers was five years younger across the board compared to the 2023 tournament, and was under 30 for every event except men’s slalom. Burning questions from the start of the season, such as who would be the next man to win a professional slalom title and whether the old guard of Krueger and Dodd would continue to dominate men’s jump, appear to have been answered.

“[The] future’s looking bright, we’ve got a bunch of young guys coming through, and there’s more of them that aren’t at this tournament. I’m excited for the future,” reflected Poland.

Once again, the Masters has kicked off the summer in spectacular fashion. Strap yourselves in, water ski fans, there is a professional event nearly every weekend for the next three months. Let the action continue!

Slalom skiing at the US Masters

Quiz: Men’s Slalom Winners at the U.S. Masters this Century

Quizzes

Quiz: Men’s slalom winners at the U.S. Masters this century

2024 will be the 64th edition of the Masters Waterski & Wakeboard Tournament (image: Water Ski Company)

By RTB


3 minute play

In this quiz, you need to name every male skiers to have won the U.S. Masters slalom title since 2000.

The list has just eight skiers, all of whom have won the title at least once. While the quiz might seem easy, there’s a catch – you have to guess them in chronological order. We’ve given you the skiers’ country as a hint. Good luck!

Let’s go take up some space on that masters start list

Slalom Invites Finalized: Are the Best Skiers Truly Represented at the Masters?

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Slalom invites finalized: Are the best skiers truly represented at the Masters?

Let’s go take up some space on that masters start list

Image: @pato.font

By Jack Burden


What makes the best skier in the world? Is it talent, skill, and record-setting scores? Or is it the ability to perform under pressure, to excel regardless of the lake or conditions, and to beat the rest of the field when it counts?

If you were fortunate enough to be on the banks of Sunset Lakes yesterday, you were treated to an exhilarating day of slalom as many of the world’s best skiers vied for qualification into the 2024 Masters Waterski and Wakeboard Tournament.

By the end of the day, the Canadian duo of Stephen Neveu and Cole McCormick had punched their tickets. However, an eight-way tie for the last spot forced another intense runoff. It was the European contingent of Sacha Descuns and Adam Sedlmajer that led the pack, each securing 3@10.25m (41’ off). In a second runoff, former world overall champion Sedlmajer emerged victorious to clinch the final spot.

The Masters has long billed itself as the world’s “most prestigious watersports tournament,” where “only the world’s most elite athletes compete.” However, this image is hard to reconcile with a men’s slalom field selected based on a single score at one of two amateur tournaments held this month.

In men’s slalom, only four of the top 10 finishers on the 2023 Waterski Pro Tour standings qualified for the 2024 Masters. The rest of the field, while undoubtedly talented, placed 11th, 13th, 14th, and 19th last year. Collectively, they have finished on two professional slalom podiums in the last 12 months, both courtesy of Joel Poland, and have placed in the top eight at less than half of the events they’ve entered.

Meanwhile, four men who placed in the top seven on the Waterski Pro Tour last year were not invited to the Masters. Between them, they have 11 professional slalom podiums in the last 12 months, including one victory, and have finished in the top eight at over 75% of the events they’ve entered.

In the current competitive landscape, we see logjams at 3@10.25m almost every weekend. The skier who makes it past three on any given weekend is a lottery, but over a long enough period, the cream rises to the top.

That’s why a season-long measure of consistency and performance is the most accurate way to determine the best athlete in water skiing. The Waterski Pro Tour offers this, with 12 professional slalom events in 2023. Who could argue that their year-end standings aren’t a fair reflection of the current elite?

This isn’t to take away from those who did qualify through the two ‘LCQ’ events; they had to beat the best in the world to earn their spots and at times battled challenging conditions to do so. However, it’s tough to say the current qualification criteria is truly “an acknowledgment of achievement for reaching the pinnacle in a given watersports discipline,” claims from the Masters website notwithstanding.

Qualified Men

SlalomQualification
Freddie Winter1st at Worlds, Moomba, & Botas ProAm
Nate Smith1st at Masters & CA ProAm
Charlie Ross5@10.25 (LCQ #1)
Joel Poland4@10.25 (LCQ #1) – Runoff
Will Asher4@10.25 (LCQ #1) – Runoff
Cole McCormick4@10.25 (LCQ #2)
Stephen Neveu4@10.25 (LCQ #2)
Adam Sedlmajer3@10.25 (LCQ #2) – Runoff

Qualified Women

SlalomTricks
Jaimee Bull1st at Worlds & Botas ProAm
Regina Jaquess1st at Masters, Moomba, & CA ProAm
Whitney McClintock Rini1@10.25 (LCQ #1)
Allie Nicholson4.5@10.75 (LCQ #1)
Neilly Ross2@10.75 (LCQ #1) – Runoff
Venessa Vieke3@10.75 (LCQ #2)
Paige Rini2@10.75 (LCQ #2)
Luisa Jaramillio2@10.75 (LCQ #2)
Swiss PRO SLALOM RECAP

Swiss Pro Slalom Recap | Waterski Pro Tour

Repost

Swiss Pro Slalom Recap

Swiss PRO SLALOM
RECAP

Who would bet against the 9-time winner taking her 10th title? (image: @waterskiprotour)

By Jane Peel

Waterski Pro Tour


The Swiss Pro Slalom is always eagerly anticipated – the first professional contest of the season for most competitors and a chance to test out their early form. But what we experienced at the 10th anniversary edition of the event at Florida’s Swiss Waterski Resort, was something very special and a fitting way to start the 2024 Waterski Pro Tour’s series of slalom competitions.

A stacked field, including veterans and a host of new kids on the block, kept us entertained through two preliminary rounds and finals, all packed into one day.  By the end, we had witnessed more than a few shocks, crowned a new champion and seen a glimpse of the future of professional slalom skiing. 

Full article at Waterski Pro Tour.

GB Waterskiers in Historic 1-2-3

British Water Skiers in Historic 1-2-3 at Swiss Pro Slalom | BWSW

Repost

GB Waterskiers in Historic 1-2-3

GB Waterskiers in Historic 1-2-3

Image: Tiare Miranda

British skiers took all three podium spots at the Swiss Pro Slalom held in the USA on Sunday 5th May.

It is the first time GB athletes have swept the board on the Waterski Pro Tour and they did so in the first slalom competition of the 2024 Tour, held at the Swiss Waterski Resort in Clermont, Florida.

The winner was Will Asher, whose 4 buoys at 10.25 metres in the first of two preliminary rounds, was the highest score of the day. As the last skier off the dock in the 8-man final, he did just enough to win, scoring 3.5@10.25m.

Earlier in the final, Will’s cousin, Rob Hazelwood, and Joel Poland both scored 3@10.25m but Rob took second ahead of Joel by virtue of his superior back up score.

Full article at British Waterski & Wakeboard.

2024 Swiss Pro Slalom

Asher, Bull Win Swiss Pro Slalom Titles | USA Water Ski

Repost

Asher, Bull win Swiss Pro Slalom titles

2024 Swiss Pro Slalom

Men’s slalom podium (image: Conner Pesek)

By Scott N. Atkinson

USA Water Ski & Wake Sports


Great Britain’s Will Asher and Canada’s Jaimee Bull won the men’s and women’s slalom titles, respectively, on Sunday at the 10th Swiss Pro Slalom at the Swiss Waterski Resort in Clermont, Fla.

Asher scored 3-1/2 buoys at 41 feet off to win the men’s title. It was his first victory at the Swiss Pro Slalom since 2019. Great Britan’s Robert Hazelwood (3 at 41 off) and Joel Poland (3 at 41 off) placed second and third, respectively. Canada’s Charlie Ross (2 at 41 off) and U.S. athlete Nate Smith (McCordsville, Ind.), who scored 2 at 41 off and was seeking his fourth consecutive Swiss Pro slalom title, rounded out the top-five placements.

Bull won her first career Swiss Pro Slalom title after scoring 1 at 41 off in the finals. Canada’s Whitney McClintock finished second (5 at 39-1/2 off), followed by U.S. athletes Allie Nicholson (Gallatin, Tenn.) and Regina Jaquess (Santa Rosa Beach, Fla.), who scored 3 at 39-1/2 off and 2-1/2 at 39-1/2 off, respectively. Jaquess had won nine consecutive Swiss Pro titles.

Canada's Jaimee Bull has had success on the Waterski Pro Tour

Quiz: Most Women’s Waterski Pro Tour Wins

Quizzes

Quiz: Most women’s Waterski Pro Tour wins

Canada's Jaimee Bull has had success on the Waterski Pro Tour

Image: @jmommer2

By RTB


2 minute play

In this quiz, you have to name every female skier to win a Waterski Pro Tour event.

The Waterski Pro Tour began in 2021 and is at the beginning of it’s 4th season now in 2024. The list contains 13 skiers, all of whom have won at least one tournament on the Waterski Pro Tour. The woman at the top has won titles in multiple disciplines for almost 25% of all possible wins. We have mentioned their country and the events of their wins.

Includes all Waterski Pro Tour events through December 31, 2023.