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2012 ASP World Tour

From Wikipedia - Reading time: 6 min

The 2012 ASP World Championship Tour was a professional competitive surfing league run by the Association of Surfing Professionals. Men and women competed in separate tours with events taking place from late February to mid-December, at various surfing locations around the world.

Surfers received points for their best events. The surfer with the most points at the end of the tour was announced the 2012 ASP World Tour Champion.

Joel Parkinson and Stephanie Gilmore were crowned the men's and women's champions, respectively.[1][2]

ASP World Championship Tour

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Event Schedule

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Date Location Country Event Winner Runner-up Prize Money Report
February 25–March 5 Gold Coast  Australia Quiksilver Pro Gold Coast  Taj Burrow (AUS)  Adriano De Souza (BRA) $425,000 Report
April 3–14 Bells Beach  Australia Rip Curl Pro  Mick Fanning (AUS)  Kelly Slater (USA) $425,000 Report
May 9–20 Rio de Janeiro  Brazil Billabong Rio Pro  John John Florence (HAW)  Joel Parkinson (AUS) $500,000 Report
June 3–16 Tavarua  Fiji Volcom Pro Fiji  Kelly Slater (USA)  Gabriel Medina (BRA) $425,000 Report[permanent dead link]
August 16–27 Teahupoo, Tahiti,

French Polynesia

 French Polynesia Billabong Pro Teahupoo  Mick Fanning (AUS)  Joel Parkinson (AUS) $425,000 Report[permanent dead link]
September 16–22 Trestles, California  United States Hurley Pro  Kelly Slater (USA)  Joel Parkinson (AUS) $425,000 Report[permanent dead link]
September 28–October 8 Soorts-Hossegor  France Quiksilver Pro France  Kelly Slater (USA)  Dane Reynolds (USA) $425,000 Report[permanent dead link]
October 10–21 Supertubos beach, Peniche  Portugal Rip Curl Pro Portugal  Julian Wilson (AUS)  Gabriel Medina (BRA) $425,000 Report
November 2–12 Santa Cruz, California  United States O'Neill Coldwater Classic Santa Cruz  Taj Burrow (AUS)  Matt Wilkinson (AUS) $425,000 Report[permanent dead link]
December 8–December 15 Banzai Pipeline, Hawaii  United States Billabong Pipeline Masters  Joel Parkinson (AUS)  Josh Kerr (AUS) $425,000 Report[permanent dead link]

Source

Final standings

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Rank Name Country Points
1 Joel Parkinson  Australia 58,700
2 Kelly Slater  United States 55,450
3 Mick Fanning  Australia 47,000
4 John John Florence Hawaii Hawaii 44,350
5 Adriano De Souza  Brazil 42,350
6 Taj Burrow  Australia 41,900
7 Gabriel Medina  Brazil 41,350
8 Josh Kerr  Australia 38,900
9 Julian Wilson  Australia 35,900
10 Owen Wright  Australia 33,600
11 Jeremy Flores  France 33,600

Source

ASP Women’s World Championship Tour

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Event Schedule

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Date Location Country Event Winner Runner-up Prize Money Report
February 25–March 5 Gold Coast  Australia Roxy Pro Gold Coast  Stephanie Gilmore (AUS)  Laura Enever (AUS) $110,000 Report
April 3–9 Bells Beach  Australia Rip Curl Women's Pro  Sally Fitzgibbons (AUS)  Stephanie Gilmore (AUS) $110,000 Report
April 11–15 Taranaki  New Zealand Subaru Pro TSB Bank Women's Surf Festival  Stephanie Gilmore (AUS)  Carissa Moore (HAW) $110,000 Report
April 18–23 Dee Why  Australia Commonwealth Bank Beachley Classic  Courtney Conlogue (USA)  Malia Manuel (HAW) $130,000 Report
May 9–20 Rio de Janeiro  Brazil Billabong Rio Pro  Sally Fitzgibbons (AUS)  Coco Ho (HAW) $110,000 Report
July 11–July 17 Cote des Basques, Biarritz  France Roxy Pro France  Stephanie Gilmore (AUS)  Tyler Wright (AUS) $110,000 Report[permanent dead link]
July 30–August 5 Huntington Beach  United States U.S. Open of Surfing  Lakey Peterson (USA)  Carissa Moore (HAW) $110,000 Report[permanent dead link]

Source

Final standings

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Rank Name Country Points
1 Stephanie Gilmore  Australia 48,400
2 Sally Fitzgibbons  Australia 43,400
3 Carissa Moore Hawaii Hawaii 40,700
4 Tyler Wright  Australia 36,700
5 Courtney Conlogue  United States 36,000
6 Malia Manuel Hawaii Hawaii 34,100
7 Lakey Peterson  United States 33,700
8 Laura Enever  Australia 32,800
9 Coco Ho Hawaii Hawaii 31,850
10 Paige Hareb  New Zealand 25,450

Source

References

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  1. ^ Sullivan, James (December 15, 2012). "Parkinson scores first surfing world championship". USA Today. Retrieved February 23, 2024.
  2. ^ "Gilmore Wins 2012 ASP World Title". Surfer. July 14, 2012. Retrieved February 23, 2024.
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