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Aussie superstars forced into early Olympics elimination fight after shock first round setbacks

Aussie superstars forced into early Olympics elimination fight after shock first round setbacks

Almost 16,000 kilometres away from Paris, the furthest an Olympic event has ever been from a host city, the opening heats at famous surf break Teahupo’o are now completed.

While Australians Ethan Ewing and Tyler Wright have made a promising winning start, our top-ranked male and female surfers, Jack Robinson and Molly Picklum, will fight early Monday morning (Australian time) to get their Olympic campaign back on track in their respective elimination Round 2 heats.

Nothing comes easy at the Olympics; world number three Jack Robinson was agonisingly close to winning his opening heat with a score of 13.36 just short of French heat winner Joan Duru (world number 42) who notched up 13.84.

It came after Robinson suffered an injury scare days before competition began when he cut his ankle in training at Teahupo’o.

Molly ‘Pickles’ Picklum went down after drawing one of the toughest opening heats imaginable against WSL world number one, Caitlan Simmers, and top Brazilian contender Tatiana Weston-Webb.

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Robinson paddles out in his heat.Source: Getty Images

With Ethan Ewing and Tyler Wright safely through to round three, and the proven big wave ability Robinson and Picklum can draw upon, hopes for surfing medals still remain high for Australia.

Tyler Wright’s brother, Owen Wright, picked up Australia’s first ever Olympic surfing medal at the Tokyo Games where the sport was first introduced, in vastly different conditions than Teahupo’o.

The beautiful beast of a wave that is Teahupo’o in Tahiti (commonly referred to as the heaviest wave in the world, and loosely translated to ‘place of skulls’) is a scary proposition for even the world’s best surfers, but perhaps oddly well suited to our Aussie contingent.

Australia’s Molly Picklum drops in.Source: AFP

Jack Robinson can draw upon winning the WSL Tahiti pro just last year, with one of the more memorable waves of the WSL Championship season.

While Molly Picklum scored the first ever perfect 10 for a woman at world renowned Pipeline Hawaii, the other infamous heavy wave break.

Molly Picklum will square off against the hope for French women’s surfing, Johanne Defay at 4:48am (AEST).

Robinson will take on Peruvian surfer, Lucca Mesinas, at 11.24am (AEST) in a fight for a place in Round 3.