LAGUNA NIGUEL, Calif. (April 30, 2014) — The Surf Industry Manufacturers Association (SIMA) will celebrate 25 years of uniting the
surf industry and protecting the environment by honoring surf legend and
two-time world champion Tom Carroll as Waterman of the Year, Golden
Globe Award Winner and environmental activist Ted Danson as
Environmentalist of the Year, and legendary shaper Rusty Preisendorfer
with the Lifetime Achievement Award. A Special Recognition Award will
also be presented to the family of influential surf industry figure,
Hobie Alter, in memory of SIMA’s first-ever Waterman of the Year.
The 25th Annual Waterman’s Weekend will be held August 8-9, 2014, at
The Ritz-Carlton Laguna Niguel, Calif. The weekend begins Friday, August
8, at the Monarch Beach Golf Links with the Waterman’s Classic Golf
Tournament, and concludes on Saturday, August 9, with the Waterman’s
Ball and Auction.
Tom Carroll, two-time world champion, will be given the title of 2014
Waterman of the Year. He dominated the 1982 World Cup at 8-to-10-foot
Sunset and won three consecutive events, becoming the first goofy foot
to earn a professional world title.
He won again in 1984 and also won
the Surfer Poll that year, proving he was a surfer’s surfer and the
people’s choice. During Carroll’s 14-year tenure on the world tour, he
racked up 26 victories (third only to Curren and Slater), finished in
the top five a record nine times and never wavered as the most powerful
surfer on earth. With all of these titles he can now add 2014 Waterman
of the Year.
“It’s a tremendous honor for SIMA to present Tom Carroll with the 2014
Waterman of the Year award,” said SIMA President and Vans VP/GM Americas
Doug Palladini. “Selfishly, TC is one of my favorite surfers of
all-time, but for the sport and culture of surfing, this is a
significant opportunity to pay tribute and give thanks to a legend who
brings humanity to our world as he pushes all forms of surfing to new
levels.”
Well-known and accomplished television and film actor and producer Ted
Danson is also an avid protector of our environment and a prime
candidate for the 2014 SIMA Environmentalist of the Year title. Danson
founded the American Oceans Campaign (AOC) in 1987 in order to alert
Americans to the life-threatening hazards created by oil spills,
off-shore development, toxic wastes, sewage pollution and other ocean
abuses.
In 2001, the AOC merged into a new organization called Oceana.
Oceana is now the world’s largest international advocacy group
exclusively focused on oceans. Danson is a board member and spokesperson
for Oceana. The group has since won over a hundred important policy
victories for the oceans around the world resulting in the protection of
more than a million square miles of ocean and the restoration of major
fisheries in Europe, South America and the United States.
The group will
launch campaigns this year in Brazil and the Philippines thanks to
funding from Bloomberg Philanthropies. Danson continues to be heavily
involved in Oceana’s campaigns and recently wrote a book entitled
“Oceana: Our Endangered Oceans and What We Can Do to Save Them.”
“With the celebration of the 25th anniversary of the Waterman’s Ball, I
can’t think of a better candidate to honor this year with the
Environmentalist of the Year award,” said Paul Naude, SIMA Environmental
Fund President. “Ted has attended many Waterman’s Ball events in order
to support the SIMA Environmental Fund’s goals and ultimately the
protection of our ocean environments. His work with AOC and now with
Oceana speaks for itself and I couldn’t be happier to present Ted this
award.”
Lifetime Achievement Award recipient, Rusty Preisendorfer, is
considered a premier shortboard shaper and a fundamental part of shaping
history. As a shaper, Preisendorfer deserves credit for perfecting the
modern thruster as we know it.
His shaping career began with his
fascination in merely building things, fixing dinged up boards that he
found at garage sales at a young age. He quickly turned a love for
creation into an unrivaled name in shaping and transmitted that into one
of the largest apparel lines in the industry. Preisendorfer is
recognized all over the world by a single letter – “R” – and by the time
he started Rusty Surfboards in 1985, more than half the world’s Top 16
surfers had ridden his boards.
He was the most in-demand shaper anywhere
and in 1988 he launched a full clothing line, which grew into one of
the largest-grossing businesses in surfing. For 25 years, he worked on
creating fuller size master molds, crafting boards for larger surfers
and was also one of the first big labels to sign a deal with SurfTech to
make molded versions of his designs. Rusty’s impact on the surf world
is extensive, and SIMA is proud to honor him with the SIMA Lifetime
Achievement Award.
“Rusty has without a doubt made a significant and lasting contribution
to the industry, impacting surfing worldwide,” said Naude. “The Lifetime
Achievement Award criteria calls for someone who has impacted the
sport, industry and/or culture of surfing – and Rusty has done all of
the above. He helped take boards to a new level, founded one of the most
successful businesses in surf and more than deserves to be the
recipient of this award.”
Hobie Alter, widely remembered as the man behind the development of the
foam-and-fiberglass surfboard, will be the 2014 Special Recognition
Award recipient. The award will be presented to his family as Alter
passed away March of this year. Hobie started shaping balsa boards in
the early ‘50s and in 1954 opened the Hobie Surfboards shop in Dana
Point, Calif.
He was arguably one of the most successful entrepreneurs
in surfing history and also saw success with his popular sailboat and
radio-controlled glider designs. In 1993, SIMA honored Alter with the
organization’s first Waterman of the Year award and SIMA can’t think of a
better way to honor his memory than by bringing his legacy full circle
to receive the Special Recognition Award.
“What Hobie Alter brought to the surf industry was nothing less than
foundational in allowing us to be where we are today,” said Palladini.
“More than foam or fiberglass alone, Hobie was one of beach culture’s
top-echelon entrepreneurs and it’s just a small token of our
appreciation that we honor his legacy with a Special Recognition Award."
The two-day fundraising event benefits the SIMA Environmental Fund, a
501(c)(3) charitable foundation that awards grants to various
environmental groups based on their dedication to preserving and
protecting the world’s oceans, beaches and waves. This year marks the
25th Anniversary of the Waterman’s Ball and SIMA’s efforts to raise
funds for these dedicated organizations. Last year’s events attracted
more than 600 people and raised more than $400,000 for 20 ocean
conservation groups. The 2014 Waterman’s Weekend environmental
beneficiaries and this year’s fundraising goal will be announced in the
coming weeks.
Sponsorship packages for both the 2014 Waterman’s Golf Classic and
Waterman’s Ball will be on sale in May. Individual tickets for the
Waterman’s Ball are scheduled to go on sale in June. For more
information or to reserve a sponsorship package, please contact Kelly
Keenan, SIMA Event Manager, by calling (949) 366-1164 x 3 or by
e-mailing Kelly@sima.com.
By press release
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