Mark Occhilupo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mark Occhilupo
Personal Info
Birthdate 16 June 1966
BirthPlace Sydney, Australia
Residence Gold Coast, QLD, Australia
Height 5'9 ft (175 cm)
Weight 194 lb (88 kg)
Surfing Career
Stance Goofy
Best Finish 1st (1999)
Career Highlights

  • World Surfing Champion 1999



Mark Occhilupo is an Australian surfer and winner of the 1999 World surfing champion title.

Occhilupo (also known as 'Occy') began his professional career in the World Championship Tour (WCT) at the age of 17. Occhilupo’s strength under pressure ushered him into surfing’s most memorable heats.

Born June 16, 1966 Occhilupo was born in Kurnell, Queensland, where he began surfing at the age of nine. He soon progressed to neighboring Cronulla, a lazy Australian industrial town near Sydney. He won his first amateur Schoolboys contest at 13 and followed up with two Cadet State Titles. After the 10th grade, he left home as an ASP trialist. Virtually unnoticed, he sneaked into the Top 16 at year’s end, securing a seed for the following year.

In 1984, Occy shot to the top of the ASP ratings as a cocky 17-year-old. He set performance standards over the next few years that still haven’t been matched. At Jeffreys Bay, his power and aggression turned backhand surfing into an advantage.

Even in America, where Tom Curren had become a deity, Occy was adored. In surfing’s biggest spectator event, the Op Pro, the two engaged in a rivalry. With aspirations in the acting field, Occy played himself in the 1987 Hollywood flop North Shore. Professional surfing was peaking, and Curren and Occy were the superheroes, delivering the surf industry unprecedented wealth. He hovered around the top five in the ratings, and some unfortunate influences steered him from a world title that many felt he deserved.

However, the popular surfer struggled with depression. Years on the tour burned him out. He lost focus. He lost his desire to surf. The young aggressive surfer faded away from the ’80s spotlight and into a subdued existence. Then, in 1988, it was over. From a Spartan existence of vegetarianism and yoga, he began sucking cigarettes and scarfing everything harmful. Burned on the tour, he threw a quarterfinal heat at the Op and headed home to Cronulla. At that point, he struggled with motivation and his ever-fluctuating weight. He quit the World Tour in the early 1990's.

Over the next several years, he made a couple half-hearted comeback attempts and remained in the public eye as a repeating star of Jack McCoy’s Billabong videos. Married in 1993 to Beatrice Ballardie, he built a house near Kirra, sat on the couch and basically didn’t get up for more than a year. From his 245-pound peak, he began a training program under McCoy in West Australia that helped him shed 75 pounds and regain his form.

As the years passed, the time away gave Occhilupo a clearer vision of his goal - to dominate the world circuit by making an incredible comeback. In 1995, he re-entered the surfing arena proving he could still capture a title. With some major wins under his comeback belt, Occhilupo stunned the surfing world by capturing the world title in 1999 at the age of 33. From his home in Billambil Heights, Queensland, where he lived with Beatrice and stepson Raynor, Occy’s long overdue reign had finally begun.

With well over 20 years of competition under his belt, 2005 saw him contemplate retirement but after a solid year where he was recognised as putting on arguably the best backside performance ever seen at Jeffreys Bay and with an immense amount of fan support, Occ changed his plans and is back to give the youngsters (who are literally half his age) plenty of stick. Occy turned 40 this year, yet looking as trim and taught as ever he'll blow minds as per usual.


In other languages