Skip to main content
Part of complete coverage on

From party animals to professionals: 'Happy' Gilmore defies surfing cliches

By Chris Murphy and Brooke Bowman, CNN
April 18, 2013 -- Updated 1427 GMT (2227 HKT)
HIDE CAPTION
Surfing's golden girl
Surfing's golden girl
Surfing's golden girl
Surfing's golden girl
Surfing's golden girl
Surfing's golden girl
Surfing's golden girl
Surfing's golden girl
Surfing's golden girl
Surfing's golden girl
Surfing's golden girl
Surfing's golden girl
Surfing's golden girl
Surfing's golden girl
<<
<
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
>
>>
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Australian Stephanie Gilmore is a five-time women's surfing world champion
  • The 25-year-old says surfing today is more about professionalism than partying
  • Gilmore laughs at comparison with famous surfing film of the 1990s, Point Break
  • She says traveling the globe to compete in surfing events is her dream job

CNN's Human to Hero series screens every week on World Sport. Click here for show times, videos and features.

(CNN) -- Forget Point Break's party animals, modern surfing is more about professionalism.

That's the mantra of reigning women's world champion Stephanie Gilmore, who raises an eyebrow at the mention of the famous film that became a seismic signpost for surfing in the early 1990s.

The 25-year-old Australian says the seaside sphere she inhabits is a world away from the society showcased by Keanu Reeves and Patrick Swayze, stuffed with wavy-haired folk who all referred to each other as "dudes."

"The biggest misconception about surfers is they all talk the surf lingo," she told CNN's Human to Hero series.

Gilmore: Surfing can be feminine
From refugee to Afghan cricket captain
Hong Kong's Paralympic fencing champion

"Not everybody does and I think Hollywood portrays a pretty scary image of how surfers go about their language. Not all of us talk like that.

Read: The Taliban's favorite sport: Afghan cricket's battle

"It's probably been 30 years now that it has been a professional sport and it hasn't grown too much. But now it's really turned into this phase where it's about treating the surfers as professional athletes and not just party animals.

"The industry boomed for so long, then it finally plateaued and crashed and right now it's in a phase of rebuilding itself, trying to get back to its core and really find that market again that everybody loves so much -- the surfing brands, the industry."

If the world of professional surfing seems impossibly glamorous and cool, that's probably because the reality matches.

Gilmore has struck upon a career that embraces her passion for boarding, traveling the globe and riding waves in some spectacular locations.

Her emergence into the world of surfing was pretty spectacular too, as she clinched the ASP Women's World Championship title in her rookie year back in 2007.

She went on to defend her crown for the next three years, regaining it in 2012 after missing out in 2011.

Read: Wonder of Yu: Fencer's power of positivity

Gilmore is fifth in the 2013 standings after four events, in Australia and New Zealand, with meets in Brazil, France and California still to come.

Hollywood portrays a pretty scary image of how surfers go about their language. Not all of us talk like that
Stephanie Gilmore

"This is a dream life," she beams. "I am not going to lie, and most professional surfers will tell you that to imagine being paid to travel the world and do something that you absolutely love every day is better than anything.

"I always say that to someone, they always say, 'Why are you so happy all the time?' Well, if you had my job you'd be pretty happy too."

While her prowess has driven her to the very top of the sport, she's not a fan of the daredevil form of her art, exemplified by the likes of Garret McNamara, who recently surfed a wave reported to be 100 feet in height.

"My biggest fear would have to be giant waves," she revealed. "It's probably not the best fear to have in my work! A giant wave is big like 30-40 foot.

"It's scary but it's something that, hopefully, I'll push myself to get into one day but right now I am just enjoying high-performance surfing in smaller waves."

It hasn't all been plain sailing for the New South Wales native, who cut her surfing teeth on Australia's glorious Gold Coast, where she still lives and trains today.

Lorenzo: Motorcycling is like dancing
The girl with the dancing horse

Read: Motorbike champion dances with danger

Gilmore and her fellow female professionals have had to swim against the tide for long periods in what has traditionally been a male-dominated sporting environment.

But with standards improving and competition at the very top intensifying, she thinks they have a product which can grow the sport internationally and attract even more women into the water, board in hand.

"Growing up a female surfer in a very male-dominated industry I think has been hard," she explained. "Female surfers in the very beginning really struggled to fight for their respect and the positions they deserved.

"I think the last five to 10 years, the women have really blossomed and shown they are not here to compete against the men, they are not here to take anything away from the men.

"We're just here to surf alongside them and show that we're learning as much as they are and we're growing female surfing.

"Every single day I paddle out there's a lot more girls out there and you see that the market is growing. To watch a girl ride a wave is just a beautiful thing.

Judo champion towers over opponents
Blind runner with need for speed

"Female surfing in a professional sense, all the girls on tour -- they're fresh faced, they speak well, it's a beautiful product -- and I feel like these next few years are going to be about harnessing that product and then showing it to the world in the right way."

Though they are fiercely competitive on the ocean waves, Gilmore says the current crop of females on the ASP tour have formed a close bond away from the beach.

"On the women's tour there are only 17 of us, so in a sense we're a family traveling the world," she said.

"We're all young girls that love to be girls and we're really good friends but at the same time we have to paddle out and try and be assertive and really focus to beat each other.

"Whatever happens in the water happens in the water and then we bring it back to land and we can celebrate together and enjoy it."

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
May 1, 2013 -- Updated 1314 GMT (2114 HKT)
As a shivering and nervous new recruit to the British Army, Semesa Rokoduguni began to seriously question why he had left the tropical island of Fiji.
May 1, 2013 -- Updated 1306 GMT (2106 HKT)
CNN's Human to Hero series meets Semesa Rokoduguni, a Fijian soldier who is one of the rising stars of rugby union.
April 24, 2013 -- Updated 1358 GMT (2158 HKT)
Ben Ainslie, the most successful sailor in Olympic history, is now trying to help Britain win the America's Cup for the first time.
April 24, 2013 -- Updated 1421 GMT (2221 HKT)
British sailor Ben Ainslie on preparing for the America's Cup and common misconceptions about his sport.
April 17, 2013 -- Updated 1441 GMT (2241 HKT)
As driving snow enveloped him and the temperature sank towards zero, Songezo Jim took another big step towards realizing his cycling dream.
April 18, 2013 -- Updated 1427 GMT (2227 HKT)
Having battled to make her name in the male-dominated world of surfing, Stephanie Gilmore is leading a crusade to change the sport's image.
April 10, 2013 -- Updated 1149 GMT (1949 HKT)
Mohammad Nabi hopes the only sport approved by the Taliban will play a big part in uniting his country Afghanistan.
March 27, 2013 -- Updated 1323 GMT (2123 HKT)
She beat bone cancer to become one of Hong Kong's top Paralympians, and Alison Yu Chui Yee is living testament to the power of positivity.
-- Updated GMT ( HKT)
Olympic champion Charlotte Dujardin and Valegro
Charlotte Dujardin has completed an incredible journey from low-paid stable girl to becoming the new star of dressage.
March 13, 2013 -- Updated 1414 GMT (2214 HKT)
Jorge Lorenzo
With a straight face and a shrug, world motorcycling champion Jorge Lorenzo details the danger involved in reaching the top.
March 6, 2013 -- Updated 1221 GMT (2021 HKT)
Inspirational music has long served to focus the mind of some of the world's greatest sporting stars.
February 28, 2013 -- Updated 1526 GMT (2326 HKT)
What do you do if you're a "crazy kid" growing up in Utah? You clip on your skis and go downhill fast -- very fast -- that's what.
February 20, 2013 -- Updated 1338 GMT (2138 HKT)
Born into grinding poverty and with a degenerative eye condition, Terezinha Guilhermina has overcome the odds to be a champion runner.
February 13, 2013 -- Updated 1604 GMT (0004 HKT)
Great Britain can legitimately claim to have invented ice hockey, but its modern-day heroes are struggling to uphold that heritage.
February 6, 2013 -- Updated 1345 GMT (2145 HKT)
It was a "crazy" high-stakes routine that risked everything in the pursuit of gold. It was Olympic glory or humiliation for Epke Zonderland.
January 30, 2013 -- Updated 1254 GMT (2054 HKT)
He is self coached, he relies on YouTube videos to hone his technique -- and in running-mad Kenya, he had to plead with officials to win selection.
January 29, 2013 -- Updated 1902 GMT (0302 HKT)
Nicol David
Standing tall in a sport once dubbed "boxing with rackets," Nicol David has a better analogy to define the particular rigors of squash.
January 16, 2013 -- Updated 1706 GMT (0106 HKT)
In one life, Lucio Antunes is an air traffic controller. In another, he is coach of the Cape Verde national football team.
January 11, 2013 -- Updated 1727 GMT (0127 HKT)
It's the dream of millions of basketball fans around the world -- to be an NBA star.
January 2, 2013 -- Updated 1551 GMT (2351 HKT)
It could be the spartan living environment, nearly 3,000 meters above sea level -- or maybe it's the influence of a legendary local coach.
December 28, 2012 -- Updated 0206 GMT (1006 HKT)
He can legitimately claim to be the fastest man on ice, and Kevin Kuske could even give Usain Bolt a run for his money in a foot race over 30 meters.
December 19, 2012 -- Updated 1248 GMT (2048 HKT)
It's not easy carrying the hopes of a sports-mad nation on your shoulders, but Richie McCaw did it -- with a broken foot.
ADVERTISEMENT