“I’ve had a bunch of people come up to me and say, ‘This is a historic day for women at Pipe’,” Picklum told this masthead after being narrowly beaten by Simmers in the final.
“It takes a while for your emotions to settle on days like this. I just really enjoyed it. You don’t get to surf waves like that every day.
“I’m just honoured that myself, Caity, Bettylou and everyone who competed were leading the charge. We’ve put in a lot of hours, blood, sweat and tears to get ourselves comfortable at Pipeline and able to showcase that. We’re still learning on the fly for sure out there.
“But we’re at a stage where we got handed a pretty high bar from Carissa [Moore], Tyler and Steph [Gilmore]. And now we just want to keep pushing it further out here.”
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Picklum cheered Simmers’ triumph from the water even though it gave the Californian took a 4-0 lead in head-to-head clashes between the pair.
Ironically, surfing’s next great rivalry started when Simmers was just 16 and she gave up her spot on tour to continue her schooling, with Picklum taking her place in the big leagues.
As for the 10, which came in a tense semi-final win over Johnson, Picklum took an incredibly steep drop on a 2.5-metre wave on her backhand (typically a surfer’s less dominant side) before tucking into what became an impossibly tight barrel and shooting out in a fountain of sea spray.
Local Pipeline legend Liam McNamara described Picklum’s ride as the “best wave ever by a goofy-footer”, on Instagram, while Wright was also among the admirers praising the 10-point wave on social media.
“Pipe’s so special, it’s such a perfect but unruly wave and that one sat on the reef, and I knew if I got under [the lip] then I was going to make it,” Picklum said.
“I did, enjoyed the ride, got spat out and was like, ‘Woo’. I’m just honoured by that praise, it’s very cool.
“It adds a bit more volume, and it makes the day a bit more fathomable when people you respect are telling you those kind of things.”
Picklum’s 10 was matched by mens champion and emerging Hawaiian star Barron Mamiya, who nailed his own impossible barrel in an upset win over Pipeline virtuoso John John Florence.
With the Olympic surfing competition to be held at Tahiti’s Teahupo’o – the most fearsome break on the competitive surfing calendar – in July, Picklum spoke of a day of great achievement and more to come.
“We’ve put added expectation on ourselves that we’ll have to hit each time now, whether it’s Pipe or Chopes [Teahupo’o],” she said.
“But that’s awesome. I think it’s good, I think it will push us and we want that. We’ll step up to that challenge and I can’t wait.”
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