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He’s the Same Old Wilko, Playing a Brand New Game

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

After his recent victory at the QS 6,000 at Merewether Beach in February, Matt Wilkinson arrived at the Gold Coast hoping to carry his momentum into the first event of the 2016 Championship Tour. And carry it he did, winning every heat all the way through to the first CT win of his career, thanks to his ferocious backhand attack.

After his recent victory at the QS 6,000 at Merewether Beach in February, Matt Wilkinson arrived at the Gold Coast hoping to carry his momentum into the first event of the 2016 Championship Tour. And carry it he did, winning every heat all the way through to the first CT win of his career, thanks to his ferocious backhand attack.

“Wilko had a reality check since he almost fell off Tour a couple years and he knows he’s a lot better than that and obviously I do too,” said Coach Hall in an interview last year. “I had a little chat with him and told him, ‘Hey, you’re better than that.’ He thought it was probably a good time to change his ways.”

Hall’s advice to his athletes (who also include Sage Erickson and Tyler Wright on the women’s Tour) at the Gold Coast has been to pay attention to the details and avoid over-surfing opponents, focusing on performing to the best of their abilities.

Though there’s always room to improve heat strategy, Wilko appears to have been paying attention. The goofyfooter went on to take down Taj Burrow, another former event winner, in Round 3 and reigning World Champ Adriano de Souza in Round 4, and again the Quarterfinals, then overtaking Filipe Toledo, the highest flyer of the event, to land himself into the Final, where took the win over an in-form Kolohe Andino.

The biggest change in Wilko, so far, is he’s carrying a new belief in himself, and what he’s capable of. When asked if he’s got a World Title run in him, Wiko was his usual self: “I might as well.”