2004 ASP World Tour
The ASP World Tour is a professional competitive surfing league. It is run by the Association of Surfing Professionals.
Men's World Tour
Tournaments
Date | Location | Country | Event | Winner | Runner-up | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
March 2-March 14 | Gold Coast | ![]() |
Quiksilver Pro | ![]() |
![]() |
Report |
April 6-April 16 | Bells Beach | ![]() |
Rip Curl Pro | ![]() |
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Report |
May 6-May 18 | Teahupoo, Tahiti | ![]() |
Billabong Pro | ![]() |
![]() |
Report |
May 26-June 4 | Tavarua | ![]() |
Quiksilver Pro Fiji | ![]() |
![]() |
Report |
July 13-July 23 | Jeffreys Bay | ![]() |
Billabong Pro | ![]() |
![]() |
Report |
September 1-September 8 | Chiba | ![]() |
Quiksilver Pro | ![]() |
![]() |
Report |
September 10-September 21 | Trestles | ![]() |
Boost Mobile Pro | ![]() |
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Report |
September 23-October 4 | Hossegor | ![]() |
Quiksilver Pro | ![]() |
![]() |
Report |
October 5-October 16 | Mundaka | ![]() |
Billabong Pro | ![]() |
![]() |
Report |
November 1-November 10 | Florianópolis | ![]() |
Nova Schin Festival | ![]() |
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Report |
December 8-December 20 | Pipeline, Hawaii | ![]() |
Rip Curl Pipeline Masters | ![]() |
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Report |
Final Standings
Rank | Name | Country | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Andy Irons | ![]() |
7,824 |
2 | Joel Parkinson | ![]() |
6,588 |
3 | Kelly Slater | ![]() |
6,444 |
4 | C.J. Hobgood | ![]() |
6,108 |
5 | Luke Egan | ![]() |
5,760 |
6 | Taj Burrow | ![]() |
5,724 |
7 | Nathan Hedge | ![]() |
5,688 |
8 | Sunny Garcia | ![]() |
5,172 |
9 | Damien Hobgood | ![]() |
5,124 |
10 | Peterson Rosa | ![]() |
5,076 |
Women's World Tour
Tournaments
Date | Location | Country | Event | Winner | Runner-up | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
March 2-March 14 | Gold Coast | ![]() |
Roxy Pro Gold Coast | ![]() |
![]() |
Report |
April 18-April 24 | Tavarua | ![]() |
Roxy Pro Fiji | ![]() |
![]() |
Report |
May 6-May 16 | Teahupoo, Tahiti | ![]() |
Billabong Pro Tahiti | ![]() |
![]() |
Report |
May 22-May 30 | Anglet | ![]() |
Roxy Jam | ![]() |
![]() |
Report |
October 2-October 10 | Malibu | ![]() |
Rip Curl Malibu Pro | ![]() |
![]() |
Report |
November 12-November 24 | Haleiwa, Hawaii | ![]() |
Roxy Pro | ![]() |
![]() |
Report |
December 8-December 19 | Honolua Bay, Hawaii | ![]() |
Billabong Pro | ![]() |
![]() |
Report |
Final Standings
Rank | Name | Country | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Sofía Mulánovich | ![]() |
5,484 |
2 | Rochelle Ballard | ![]() |
4,584 |
3 | Chelsea Georgeson | ![]() |
4,572 |
4 | Layne Beachley | ![]() |
4,368 |
5 | Maria Tita Tavares | ![]() |
3,846 |
6 | Jacqueline Silva | ![]() |
3,768 |
7 | Keala Kennelly | ![]() |
3,348 |
8 | Laurina McGrath | ![]() |
3,336 |
9 | Megan Abubo | ![]() |
3,078 |
10 | Samantha Cornish | ![]() |
2,964 |
gollark: I mean, in sane languages if you want to declare a new type you can do `data Bees = Bees Int String deriving (Show, Eq)` or whatever.
gollark: It's harder to understand if it's verbose and whatnot.
gollark: ... being... sane?
gollark: Yes.
gollark: If your language *needs* a dedicated editor it's probably too complex and verbose.
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