
USA Surfing gets new financial backing in a bid to be recertified for its hometown Olympics
USA Surfing executive director Becky Fleischauer told The Associated Press on Wednesday that the investment is a major step toward the organization's goal to return to the Olympic movement.
'We have a new board, new leadership, and we've been delivering more value to our surfers than has ever been provided in the past,' Fleischauer said. 'There's a lot of energy. This investment is a declaration of confidence in the future of surfing from those who know it best.'
USA Surfing has struck multiyear deals for financial backing from Kamaka Responsible Development, which builds housing communities, and with Orange County-based surf company Resin Services. Kamaka also plans to develop a wave pool that can be used for year-round training for USA Surfing athletes.
Fleischauer spoke from the USA Surfing Championship at Lower Trestles, the iconic surf break near San Clemente, California, that will also host the Los Angeles Olympics surfing competition in 2028. USA Surfing, which is based in San Clemente, has crowned its under-18 national champions at Trestles for decades.
'Trestles is our backyard,' Fleischauer said. 'It's where our surfers train. It's where our coaches coach. It's really a global hub for surfing, and we reside right here, so that puts us in a really strong position to know our surfers, know our break, and to be able to lift up the entire community by having the Olympics here.'
Surfing made its Olympic debut at the Tokyo Games in 2021, but USA Surfing had already run into trouble with the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee by then over numerous concerns about the organization's financial management. USA Surfing voluntarily decertified as the sport's national governing body in December 2021, although it remained the American representative to the International Surfing Association.
USA Surfing is reapplying to be the NGB again, but the U.S. Ski & Snowboard Federation has also applied to manage the Olympic surf team. The well-funded winter sports organization is run by Sophie Goldschmidt, the former chief executive of the World Surf League.
One governing body managing multiple sports is an accepted practice in some countries, but hasn't been the norm in the U.S. Olympic movement since the Amateur Sports Act in 1978.
The USOPC is evaluating both groups' filings and is expected to resolve the situation within the next few months.
While Ski & Snowboard has ample Olympics experience, USA Surfing has the backing of the ISA and even the World Surf League itself, according to its filing with the USOPC. U.S. Olympic gold medalists Caroline Marks and Carissa Moore were among several top surfers who submitted letters of support for USA Surfing.
USA Surfing has kept operating without funding from the USOPC since its decertification, still staging competitions and aiding American surfers in their preparation for international events. The body has since made large changes to its leadership, appointing Fleischauer and adding several new members to its board of directors in January 2024.
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Boston Globe
23 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
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New York Times
24 minutes ago
- New York Times
Lyles, Hodgkinson, Warholm, Richardson: Big wins, progressions and causes for concern at Silesia Diamond League
Timing is everything. This year's athletics World Championships, which take place in Tokyo, Japan, for eight days from September 13, are the latest in the calendar year since the 2019 edition in Doha, Qatar. While the Silesia, Poland, leg of the Diamond League meet last year was a relatively pressure-free, post-Olympics showcase, the backdrop on Saturday was very different. In a month's time, the track and field season hits its climax. Advertisement Theoretically the lucky ones are the World Champions from Budapest, Hungary, two years ago. Winning there fast-tracked them to last summer's Games and meant they qualified automatically for Tokyo this year, too. However, across the board, injuries have derailed and disrupted the seasons of many top athletes this year. With meet records in nearly half of the elite events (11 out of 23), Silesia was a melting pot and proving ground for six Olympic/World champions, who had question marks by their name ahead of Worlds. 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'I was just happy to step on the track after more than a year,' she said. A world gold is the only medal missing from Hodgkinson's set, having been runner-up at the last two editions — beaten by Mary Moraa in 2023 and Athing Mu the year before that. After this performance and time, Hodgkinson is the athlete to beat. In just under five weeks, Warholm will return to the track in Tokyo where he took 0.76s off his world record in 2021, when he ran 45.94s in the Olympic final. Warholm's run in Silesia was his best performance since then. He finished in 46.28s, winning by almost an entire second (with Ezekiel Nathaniel in second running a Nigerian record of 47.31s). It was a big world lead, nearly 0.3 quicker than Rai Benjamin's 46.54s from June, and the third-fastest time ever, smashing the Diamond League record. This comes after the Puma athlete set a 300m hurdles 'world best' of 32.67s in Oslo this June, at his home Diamond League. 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Thompson is the fastest 100m man of 2025 with his 9.75s from Jamaican trials earlier this summer (which was the fastest 100m time for a decade). He has won all seven of his races over the distance in 2025, so while the Silesia meet means he has finally beaten Lyles (in their third meeting), the gap between the two this season is decreasing. He and Thompson are scheduled to race next week over 100m again in Lausanne, Switzerland. 'Not so good, not so bad,' was Thompson's assessment of his third sub-9.90s clocking this year. 'It is all about execution. The key is to find the momentum in the race and to maintain it until the end.' Advertisement The Jamaican led from the blocks, and while Lyles — as he always does — closed hard, Thompson's lead from the first 60m was enough. 'The more I run, the better I am getting,' Lyles said. In 2023, he was the fourth different American in a row to win men's 100m gold. Not since Maurice Green, who three-peated in 1997, 1999 and 2001, has an American man defended a 100m world title. Jackson is quietly stitching together a promising season. She won the 200m in 22.17s, her fastest time for two years, when she won the world title. Jackson held off the fast-finishing American Brittany Brown (22.21s), while Nigerian Favour Ofili (22.25s) outran the British pair of Amy Hunt and Dina Asher-Smith to finish third. 'We are back! I have not run a curve this hard since 2023,' she said. 'Last year was a disappointment, but now mentally I am here and I am strong.' Injury kept Jackson out of the Olympics last summer, a real shame for an athlete with such range, and who is an essential part of Jamaica's relay pool. The 31-year-old has won the 200m world title at the last two Championships, and also has individual medals over 100m and 400m. Jackson ranks 12th over 100m and 200m this year, while her 36.13s clocking over 300m in April is the seventh-fastest in 2025. She came second over 100m at the Jamaican Championships, so will race that and the 200m, for which she is wildcarded. Melissa Jefferson-Wooden continued her excellent season with a 10.66s run for first place, extending her winning streak to eight races over 100m in 2025. The newly-crowned U.S. Champion — over 100m and 200m — won by daylight, with Jamaican Tia Clayton in second (10.82s) and Marie-Josee Ta Lou-Smith (10.87s) third. Jefferson-Wooden took bronze in the Olympic final (10.92s) behind Richardson and Julien Alfred last summer, and her run in Silesia was just 0.01 off her 100m world lead from U.S. trials two weeks ago. Advertisement 'Everything is going great this year,' she said. 'I was genuinely shocked when I saw the time. I hope to keep this momentum.' Some context for Richardson, the defending 100m world champion who finished sixth in a season's best time of 11.05s, and was the slowest of the three Americans (with Jacious Sears fifth in 11.00s). 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Holloway is still yet to break the 13s barrier in 2025, something he has done in each of the past four years — his races in 2024 became more about him versus the world record than other athletes. 'It was not my best day and it has not been my best year so far,' he said after coming second. 'But I am working hard on figuring it out. These competitions are just building blocks on the way to the World Championships. I am still optimistic about doing well there.' His optimism is for good reason, having won seven of the past eight global finals, which totals three outdoor and three indoor world titles, one Olympic silver (2021) and Olympic gold (2024). Advertisement However the same Holloway who won 21 of 23 meets last season has only won twice in nine 110m hurdles races in 2025. Tinch, after winning in Silesia, spoke on this: 'In the U.S. it is sometimes hard to find yourself with all those fast hurdlers. 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