Category: Sports at a Glance

Camarero is the island’s only horse racing track located 15 minutes from the Isla Verde hotel sector and a 20 minute drive from San Juan taking Route 66.

Plenty of excitement at Camarero racetrack

By Eugenio Hopgood 1150

Infectious energy, the majesty of the thoroughbreds, jockeys wearing vibrant silks, and stunning park-like grounds with El Yunque mountains as a backdrop is the perfect way to describe the setting at Camarero racetrack.

2018

Puerto Rican jockeys have proven their dominance
for decades at top racetracks in the world.

Infectious energy, the majesty of the thoroughbreds, jockeys wearing vibrant silks, and stunning park-like grounds with El Yunque mountains as a backdrop is the perfect way to describe the setting at Camarero racetrack.

If you enjoy horse racing, or just want to spend a few exciting hours during your vacation in Puerto Rico– than add this on your To-Do list.

Grab your binoculars and sunscreen for a fun-filled day of fresh air and adrenaline, and hopefully you’ll leave with some extra money in your pocket.

“To see a live race is very different than seeing it on TV,” said Alejandro Fuentes, executive vice president at Camarero Inc., the Puerto Rican company that manages the racetrack and horse racing business on the island. “You get to hear the fans cheering for their favorite horse and the sound of the horses galloping on the track; it’s truly exhilarating.”

Camarero is the island’s only horse racing track located 15 minutes from the Isla Verde hotel sector and a 20 minute drive from San Juan taking Route 66. There is plenty of parking, admission is free and the norm is casual attire.

Back on Track

Race days at Camarero are Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday with post time at 2:50 p.m., and a fifth day will be added soon. However, Sunday is the perfect day to go for people watching.

If it’s your first visit to a racetrack, you may get a more rewarding experience finding a spot where the entire track can be seen. The horses are paraded about 10 minutes before each race prior to trotting off to the starting gate. You sit outdoors at the grandstand –which is an open air multi-leveled seating near the center of the action where you can watch the parade, race, and winner circle picture taking up close and personal. Kids, especially, will enjoy this part of the track.

The Clubhouse and Terrace Restaurant, THE place where horse owners and anybody who simply preferred to leisurely eat a meal in air conditioning while watching the races through its huge windows, is currently closed and expected to be reopened soon.

Learning the ins-and-outs of how to bet before you arrive at Camarero will save an incredible amount of time. So get a racing program, pick your horse of choice, and hurry to the betting window and hope the odds are in your favor. Stick to a budget. A racetrack can be one of the most affordable entertainments 
around.

There is important information you need to know before you approach the clerk’s window: the race number, dollar amount of your bet, type of bet and number (NOT name) of the horse(s) you’re betting on. The types of straight wagers are win, where you pick a horse to finish first; place, where you select a horse to finish first or second and show, where you pick a horse to finish first, second, or third.

Exotic wager bets include exacta, where you pick the first and second place finishers in the exact order and trifecta, where you pick the first, second, and third place finishers in the exact order; and the multi-race bets that include daily double (pick the winner in two consecutive races), pick three (choose the winner in three consecutive races), pick four, pick five and pick six referred to as el Poolpote in Puerto Rico.

Payouts are determined by the number of horses in the bet, the odds, and the wager amount.

Daily wagering at Camarero currently fluctuates $400,000 to $500,000.

Its monthly event “Night at the Races,” where the race card begins early, followed by a live band is expected to make a comeback soon. This event, held every Friday night, attracts a large crowd and high number of wagering.

“It is like a whole world in itself, an entire industry revolves around the track activity,” said legendary racetrack announcer Norman H. Davila, who is one of the faces and voices of Puerto Rico horse racing.

There are more than 1,000 employees and contractors at the racetrack, especially in the stables – from hot walkers, grooms and trainers to blacksmiths and vets.

“When you add up indirect jobs there are about 8,000 that include owners and employees in over 400 off track wagering agencies island-wide, the horse breeding farms, producers and distributors of food,” said Fuentes.

An island full of world-class jockeys

In horse racing there are two types of athletes: the horse and the jockey. Puerto Rico has had its share of excellent thoroughbreds that have won important international races like the Caribbean Classic. Half of the 600 horses that normally are active on the island are native specimen while the rest are imported mainly from the U.S. mainland. But more impressive are our exceptional Puerto Rican jockeys who have proven their dominance for decades at top racetracks in 
the world.

Camarero’s horse racing vocational school, affiliated to the Puerto Rico Horse Racing Administration, is where trainers, blacksmiths, and jockeys are trained. This school graduates about 15 jockeys a year that begin their racing careers as apprentices. In the 1960’s and 1970’s, several young apprentices ventured out into the racing circuits in Florida, New York and California, three states that have some of the most important racetracks in the world, in order to test their luck and begin demonstrating their talent.

Puerto Rico’s pioneer adventurer was jockey Eddie Belmonte who attracted attention in the New York racing circuit and was the first Puerto Rican to win a race (Preakness) of the Triple Crown aboard ‘Personality’ in 1970.

Jockey Angel Cordero followed suit and dominated for years the racing circuit in New York at Saratoga, Acueduct, and Belmont Park racetracks. He competed for 30 years (1962-1992) and was the jockey with the most earnings on four occasions in the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico. Cordero, referred to as the King of Saratoga, has the most wins in Triple Crown events including three Kentucky Derby victories.

  • Camarero is the island’s only horse racing track located 15 minutes from the Isla Verde hotel sector and a 20 minute drive from San Juan taking Route 66.
  • Brothers Irad Ortiz, on left, and Jose Luis Ortiz have been ranked among the top five jockeys in the U.S. mainland in overall earnings.
  • Jockey John Velazquez is one of Puerto Rico’s superstar in the horse racing scene.
  • Race days at Camarero racetrack are Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday with post time at 2:50 p.m.

John Velazquez has been active in New York since he left at the young age of 18 in 1990. He is also another Puerto Rican superstar in the horse racing scene.

Velazquez has been a leader in earnings for four consecutive years (2001-2004) and has won two races of the Triple Crown – the Belmont Stakes in 2007 and the Kentucky Derby in 2011.

In the past two years, besides Velazquez, there have been other Puerto Rican jockeys who have stood out in the U.S. mainland horse racing panorama – brothers Irad Ortiz and Jose Luis Ortiz. The Ortiz brothers have been ranked among the top five jockeys in the U.S. mainland in overall earnings.

In 2017, the 24 year-old Jose Luis won the Eclipse award for being the most outstanding jockey in the U.S. for highest earnings ($22.9 million) while the 25-year-old Irad was the jockey with most wins.

By winning an Eclipse Award, Jose Luis has joined the exclusive club of Cordero and Velazquez, an honor comparable to winning a MVP award in Major League Baseball.

Juan Carlos Diaz, the King of Camarero

Jockey Juan Carlos Diaz

Nevertheless not all stellar jockeys migrate to the north.

When at Camarero racetrack and making a wager you may see names like Edwin Castro, Hector Berrios, Javier Santiago, Wilfredo Rohena, among others on the racing form that offer a guarantee that the horse will be in good hands and could possibly be a winner.

However the most outstanding of the local crowd is currently Juan Carlos Diaz, a jockey that holds the title of having the most wins in Puerto Rico’s horse racing history with more than 4,700 victories under his belt. He has also been the leader in victories and earnings for 17 straight years showing his absolute dominance on the island.

  • Jockey Hector Berrios
  • Jockey Edwin Castro

“I have had the opportunity to ride in the U.S. but have decided to stay in Puerto Rico because I have led for many years here and am economically solid,” said the 40-year-old Diaz. “I have my home and family in Puerto Rico and my son is enrolled at the jockey school.”

Besides Diaz’ family life, that has a major role in his decision to remain in Puerto Rico, there are other factors.

Diaz was raised near the ocean – not riding sea horses but rather fishing, scuba diving and surfing, even though he loves horses. His passion for surfing and boats continues despite the fact he has to be at the track at 10 a.m. to then race from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. four days a week. But he does find a way to escape to the beach to ride 
those waves.

“Sometimes after the morning workouts at the track, if there are waves, I escape to surf for an hour in Luquillo at La Pared or La Selva beach and then return to the racetrack. Besides the fact that I love the ocean and it relaxes me, it’s a good workout and provides balance, which helps me as a jockey.”

Come and witness the passion of Puerto Ricans as they cheer on riders like Diaz and play the Poolpote jackpot, and if you are lucky to pick all six winners of the afternoon’s race card you can win lots of money. Feel the excitement of seeing your horse fight for the lead and who knows maybe you’ll have beginner’s luck.

Wyndham Grand Rio Mar Golf Club has two 18 Hole Courses in Rio Grande

Back Into the Swing of Things

By Peter Martin 1323

Puerto Rico’s rebound in the wake of Hurricane Maria can be likened to a round of golf at one the islands world-class courses —there was bound to be some rough, some ups and downs, and some unexpected turns along the way. And while landscapes may change, the renewal of the island’s lush greens seemingly blossomed overnight as its mountain forests, palm-lined coasts – and yes its 18-hole oases – sprang back to life under the healing tropical sun.

2018

Puerto Rico’s rebound in the wake of Hurricane Maria can be likened to a round of golf at one the islands world-class courses —there was bound to be some rough, some ups and downs, and some unexpected turns along the way. And while landscapes may change, the renewal of the island’s lush greens seemingly blossomed overnight as its mountain forests, palm-lined coasts – and yes its 18-hole oases – sprang back to life under the healing tropical sun.

Like many of its best hotels, Puerto Rico’s golf courses seized the opportunity presented to grow back better than ever through a host of upgrades including a new fleet of GPS-equipped golf carts at Dorado Beach through the remodeled club house and re-imagined courses at Rio Mar, to cite just two examples.

Check out Costa Caribe to Coco Beach and El Conquistador, Palmas del Mar, Punta Borinquen and beyond, where restoration contractors who arrived on the island in droves could be heard extolling the virtues of Puerto Rico’s range of golf courses on their hard-earned days off from the work of rebuilding.

Puerto Rico is known as the premier location for golf professionals and enthusiasts in the Caribbean where golf enthusiasts travel from all over the world to play throughout the year on the island’s 20 championship golf courses. This year’s tournament calendar features the PRGA’s annual signature event, the PRGA Championships, as well as seven World Amateur Golf Ranking (WAGR) points tournaments for both juniors and amateurs. For the second straight year, Puerto Rico will also host a USGA U.S. Am qualifier.

With global media attention focused on Puerto Rico’s challenges and can-do attitude, the island’s profile in the golf world was also elevated through the likes of its touring professionals such as Maria “Marife” Torres, the first Puerto Rican to play full time in the LPGA and Rafael Campos’ solid presence on the PGA Web.Com Tour.

  • Rafael “ Rafa” Campos, the first Puerto Rican to lead a PGA Tour event since the 1979 Tallahassee Open.
  • Costa Caribe Golf & Country Club in Ponce.
  • The Dorado Beach Plantation Sugarcane Course.
  • Wyndham Grand Rio Mar Golf Club has two 18 Hole Courses in Rio Grande
  • Maria “Marife” Torres, the first Puerto Rican to play full time in the LPGA.

Further shining a bright light on Puerto Rico’s competitive golf scene were a range of signature tournaments stretching from spring into winter – no need to worry about the weather on an island where balmy 80 degree days are the rule.

July 9-10
USGA US Amateur Qualifier
August 11-13
PRGA Junior Match Play Championship
November 2-4
PRGA Match Play Championship

But the biggest sign of the solidity of the island’s competitive golfing future may well have been the PGA’s bet on bringing the PGA Tour’s Puerto Rico Open back to the island at least through 2020.

Dating back a decade, the 2018 event could have been carried out, but the PGA Tour and the main sponsor the Puerto Rico Tourism Company opted instead to hold a special, unofficial PGA Tour event in March to support recovery efforts on the island featuring PGA Tour golfers, athletes and celebrities. The charitable event was held at the TPC Dorado Beach, which is home to three legendary championship golf courses, including the famed East and West courses originally designed by Robert Trent Jones Sr. Since its inception, the Puerto Rico Open has supported the work of local charities and donated nearly $700,000 to non-profit organizations that work with children, youth and health-related issues.

While putting relief before dollars was a move right from the heart, the PGA Tour doubled-down on Puerto Rico when it inked in the return of the four-day, official PGA Tour event in 2019 and also in 2020.

“The Puerto Rico Open has been part of the PGA Tour for the last 10 years and our commitment to golf on the island has never been stronger,” said PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan. “Our hope is that this special event in 2018 would benefit Puerto Rico’s recovery efforts to the fullest extent, while reminding the world that Puerto Rico is a premier golf and travel destination.”

In partnership with tournament officials and the PRTC, the PGA Tour heavily considered all factors following Hurricane Maria to determine a course of action for the 2018 Puerto Rico Open and examined what would provide the greatest support and economic impact for the island during this period of recovery. Therefore, the tournament in Puerto Rico was re-imagined as a special, unofficial PGA Tour event to support the recovery efforts and to celebrate golf and Tourism on the island.

Ernesto Zambrana Tabla Surfing Puerto Rico ola

Two master shapers put passion into their top quality surfboards

By Eugenio Hopgood 30597

Puerto Rican master board makers Nestor Ramirez of Pelicano Surfboards and Ernesto Zambrana of Zambrana Surfboards who reside in the northwest coast of Puerto Rico dubbed as the Hawaii of the Caribbean defy the international surf industry’s competitive marketing power and survive out of the sheer merit of their brilliant craftsmanship.

2017

Puerto Rican master board makers Nestor Ramirez of Pelicano Surfboards and Ernesto Zambrana of Zambrana Surfboards who reside in the northwest coast of Puerto Rico dubbed as the Hawaii of the Caribbean defy the international surf industry’s competitive marketing power and survive out of the sheer merit of their brilliant craftsmanship.

Finding Pelicano Surfboards factory is like searching for a secret safe house on the island. Visitors must drive along Barrio Bajura in Isabela, on a small road by the beach. Now and then the coastal brush from the side of the road clears up and gives a glimpse of peculiar rocky pond formations amidst white sand and deep blue water that are typical of this region’s shoreline.

Once on Road 4466, you locate the kilometer 1.6 sign, and enter an open gate on the right side, and keep driving until you come across a blue concrete rancher, not visible from the road with the image of a pelican, the logo of Pelicano Surfboards which is the life work of Ramirez, a senior master of Puerto Rico’s surfboard craftsmen, or shapers, as they are known in the surfing world.

Tall and fit for his age as most surfers, and grey haired in blue jeans and a t-shirt, the 61-year-old Ramirez, greets BIENVENIDOS warmly with a shy and friendly smile yet a let’s-get-to-business attitude.

Soon into the conversation it becomes apparent that Ramirez is a shy, soft spoken, and genuine individual with a no nonsense attitude, who is incapable of bragging or even mentioning his stature as a master shaper in Puerto Rico even with his 41 years of delivering top quality boards.

 

  • Ernesto Zambrana
  • Nestor Ramirez, Pelicano Surfboard Shop
  • Nestor Ramirez, Pelicano Surfboard Shop
  • Ernesto Zambrana, Surfing Puerto Rico
  • Ernesto Zambrana, Surfing Puerto Rico
  • Nestor Ramirez, Pelicano Surfboard Shop

 

The love of waves and boards for Ramirez began in 1968 when at the age of 12 he surfed on a longboard shared with a friend on weekends in Pine Grove Beach, a popular spot for beginners in Isla Verde. After some months, Ramirez was given his first surfboard and there was no looking back. “My first board was a seven footer Mini-Corky Carroll model, named after a Hobbie team rider that was quite famous then,” he recalled.

Ramirez started shaping boards in 1974 at the age of 19 in his family’s home garage in Hato Rey, where he set up a workshop with his buddy Carlos Ramos and began his quest for excellence by trial and error.

He crafted his first products as “Taino Boards” but by 1976 Ramirez started the Pelicano Surfboards brand, probably the most prestigious and well known in the local scene.

Ramirez began fixing his own board which sparked his curiosity about the whole process of design and manufacture, especially when a book that explained the basics of board building fell into his hands.

“It was in English and I wasn’t too good at it but I figured out how to build them looking at the illustrations and the rest was trial and error,” said Ramirez. “There were no YouTube tutorials back then. Guys at the beach liked my boards and when I told them I built them, they started asking me to make surfboards and that’s how it all started.”

Three years later, Ramirez and his family packed their bags and moved to Aguadilla, a town in the northwest region of the island right in the middle of Puerto Rico’s prime surfing region that begins with Isabela on the north side and ends with Rincon on the west.

There he perfected his board making skills for 19 years. “Coming to live here was one of my dreams,” sighed Ramirez.

Inside the workshop, tricks of the trade

The process starts with the shaping of the boards that are made of foam, mostly polyurethane or expanded polystyrene, which is a lighter foam material. Then a fiberglass sheet is fit to the board with resin over it.

“We have two ways of applying color to the boards, one is mixing color pigments in with the resin, what we call resin tints, and the other is airbrushing directly on the foam board,” explains Ramirez. “We do both here and my son Guaili works the resin and the tints while I do the shaping of the boards and the airbrushing. Also sometimes we work with foam tint where we put the colored resin directly on the foam board and then put the fiber glass on top. There are a lot of small tricks in this.”

The shaping room looks like a battlefield surgery unit where the board is the patient and Ramirez is the surgeon. The prime tool used for shaping is a plainer, an electrical brush originally designed to work on wooden doors. Armed with his tool and various types of sandpaper, the master works the board until he achieves the desired dimensions that will fit the client’s need; be it a faster board, a more agile one to swirl up and down the waves, a board for big waves or one that would be better for expert riders or for beginners. Special side lights on the room walls are designed to reveal imperfections on the board’s surface that would need further polishing to achieve an impeccably smooth finish.

 

Ernesto Zambrana, owner of Zambrana Surfboards, tests his own products to know what works.
Ernesto Zambrana, owner of Zambrana Surfboards, tests his own products to know what works.

 

From dominant trends to ‘anything goes’

Board designs have varied with the times. In the sixties there were the longboards (over 9 feet long) after 1967 and in the 70’s, the boards were in the 7 feet and under range and became even smaller. In the 1990’s most of the boards were 6 to 6.4 feet long, thin, narrow, and white with fluorescent airbrushed colors.

“Man it was boring to make surfboards during the 90’s because people were always asking for the same type of boards. Almost all of my work is custom-made and surfers then wouldn’t want anything else, so I was making more money, but it was boring,” Ramirez said.

Things started changing

“Surfers were using longboards and fun boards, which are a kind of a narrower and smaller longboard; fish boards, that have the swallowtail, and smaller boards that are becoming quite popular again in the last five years, but still anything goes, there is variety and it’s much more fun to shape boards these days,” Ramirez added.

With the longboard, according to Ramirez, it’s easier to ride the wave, especially for beginners, but it also has its style for experienced surfers, like walking the board.

The big boards, known as guns; are narrow, 8 to 9 feet long and are used to ride big waves ranging from 10 to more than 30 feet high.

Ramirez’ boards, signed Nestor Shapes, range from $425 to $800 and the production process takes around 4 to 6 weeks to complete. He makes boards for all types of surfers from the beginner to the pro. Although most of his clients are local he does have faithful followers in the Dominican Republic and the east coast of the U.S. mainland.

“People who really know about surfing know our boards are as good or better than any of the popular California trademarks such as the Channel Islands and Dan Love, but what people tend to see are world famous surfers photographed in magazines riding the big brand boards which sponsor them and this type of marketing works,” Ramirez said.

As a result, the surf shops in Puerto Rico import most of their boards from California and don’t buy local brands. Ramirez sells some of his boards at the Parada Ocho Surfshop in San Juan, but like most of the local producers, he mostly makes custom-made boards for individual clients.

And what makes this expert craftsman continue his board making passion after 41 years, the answer is simple: he just loves what he does.

“My greatest satisfaction is when a client tells me, hey man the board you made for me is awesome, or when somebody says the board is magical, which in surfing jargon means a board almost rides by itself, does whatever you want it to do; well, that’s what drives me to continue,” Ramirez concluded.

Ernesto Zambrana: Surfboard design is art

Zambrana is another of Puerto Rico’s prime board shapers. At 53 years of age he’s half a generation younger than Ramirez, and is also a city boy surfer who ended up settling roots in the surfing strip of the northwest coast, in his case, in the western town of Rincon, where he builds Zambrana Surfboards.

Zambrana likes building boards for small kids and enjoys the fact that he has made the first surfboards for many top local surfers like Jorge and Christian Rivera.
Zambrana likes building boards for small kids and enjoys the fact that he has made the first surfboards for many top local surfers like Jorge and Christian Rivera.

 

Zambrana’s love affair with surfing started early

As a toddler Zambrana spent weekends in a beach apartment in Condado, right near La Punta, one of the surfing spots in the San Juan metro area. For hours he would sit on the sand and watch the surfers ride the waves, imagining it was him on top of those magical boards.

“When I was 9 I was invited to a Cub Scout picnic on the beach and somebody lent me a board. I just went for it and on my first try I stood up and rode the wave, as natural as a kid learning to run, and that was it. No turning back,” said Zambrana, who appears younger than his age.

In the late 1970’s when Zambrana was 12, he and his younger brother got surfboards for Christmas. His was a 7.2 foot Hawaiian style, single fin pintail model from Wave Riding Vehicles (WRV). “Not in my wildest dreams could I have ever imagined then that many years later WRV, a world renowned brand, would ask me to design boards for them!” exclaimed Zambrana while opening his eyes widely.

After a year of surfing at the San Juan “school beaches” in Pine Grove and the Sheraton Beach in Condado (right in front of the San Juan Marriott Resort), Zambrana and his friends began paddling into more challenging waters at Aviones Beach in Loiza.

“By 1976 I was a good surfer and we were making our pilgrimages to Rincon, considered not only the prime surfing area in Puerto Rico, but one of the best venues worldwide. At Aviones you could find some of the best surfers, I even got to surf with world champion Kelly Slater, who was a young rising star at the time,” Zambrana said. “He used to call me Conan the Barbarian because he was a skinny teenager and I’ve always had a wide sturdy frame, so Kelly joked that I might just beat him up if he got in front of me and ruined my ride.”

Surfboards were getting expensive in the 80’s and Zambrana couldn’t afford the one’s he liked, so he became interested in making his own.

Puerto Rico’s established shapers were not willing to share the tricks of the trade but Zambrana, who was studying sculpture at San Juan’s School of Plastic Arts, teamed up with a friend who had some experience. They set up a clandestine shaping room in a storage area inside the historical Maunabo Lighthouse, situated in the east coast of the island, where his partner and first mentor worked as a lighthouse keeper.

“We were kicked out of there a year later of course, but that’s where I learned the trade,” Zambrana laughed.

Zambrana and some other emerging shapers got prime materials from Bill Balke, an American hippie who drifted to Puerto Rico’s northwest coast in the 60’s. Balke had settled in Aguada, a town next to Rincon, however, besides being a free spirit he was also a chemical engineer, who was very savvy about the use of resins and tints.

“Bill was a very important guy in the development of shapers in Puerto Rico because he gave us advice and even had shaping rooms in his place where guys could build their boards,” Zambrana recalled.

“Rincon to surfers is the Hawaii of the Caribbean and the east coast of the U.S.,” Zambrana said. “Swells at Tres Palmas and Maria’s beaches, get up to 40 feet, the biggest waves ever documented in the Caribbean and the U.S. east coast. It’s not unusual to find celebrity surfers around here. Garret McNamara, who is sponsored by Mercedes Benz and is a big wave surfer of the world, was in Tres Palmas a couple of years ago,” Zambrana said.

Zambrana, who is a skilled surfer himself, showed BIENVENIDOS one of the boards he designed and built for the WRV brand, which he signs as Ernesto Z.

“Shaping is the extension of my passion for surfing,” said Zambrana with a sparkle in his eyes. “It enables me to fuse my two greatest passions, surfing and art. Creating boards is a mix of engineering with art. When I make custom boards I work with the surfer’s experience, size, and weight; one has to take all those elements into account to design the measurements.”

Lately Zambrana has been concentrating on just board design and airbrush artwork.

“Besides the functional quality, the board is like a white canvas and you create art out of it. So I use prints, photos, or drawings in rice paper and combine it with airbrush technique, freehand painting using stencils, which adds esthetics to the board. For health reasons, I do not work with lamination, resins, and fumes, so I contract that part of the work to Guaili, Nestor Ramirez’s son, who has become quite an expert,” Zambrana said.

 

Ernesto Zambrana, owner of Zambrana Surfboards, test his own products to know what works.
Ernesto Zambrana, owner of Zambrana Surfboards, test his own products to know what works.


A living legend riding your board

Zambrana likes building boards for small kids and enjoys the fact that he has made the first surfboards for many top local surfers like Jorge and Christian Rivera.

“But one of my greatest satisfaction was building a board for Tom Curren, a three-time World Champion and one of the greatest surfers of all times,” Zambrana said. “I gave the board to Tom as a gift when he came for the premier of a documentary about the Billabong riding team that was filmed in Rincon in 2000. I didn’t make much of it because I thought he wouldn’t even ride it.”

But then a friend called Zambrana one morning and informed him he saw Curren riding the board he made for him in a two-page spread inside an Australian surf magazine. “I just told my friend that it was too early for pranks. But it was true,” Zambrana recalled, reliving his astonishment.

Curren was photographed in Surfer Magazine and other international publications riding Zambrana’s board, even though he had the best brands in the world available to him. “In some of the photos you can even see a small Puerto Rican flag that I painted on the side so he could remember where the board came from,” Zambrana said. “It was a three fin 6’10” foot pintail, not the kind Tom usually rode, so it seemed like he wanted to try something different.”

In 2010, the World Surfing Championship was held at Middles Beach in Isabela, where Kelly Slater won his 10th championship

“I got to meet and become friends with Tom at this event. I introduced myself and asked him about the board, and he told me he liked it and had traveled around with it. It was a great experience to me,” said Zambrana with pride.

Technology allows concentration on design

Zambrana, who still makes boards for WRV (as also Nestor Ramirez does) and constructs his own Zambrana Surfboards brand with prices ranging from $475 to $650; mostly sells his product directly to customers.

“The advantage of being a surfer and a board maker is that you can test your own product which enables you to know what works and what doesn’t,” Zambrana said.

For the past four years, Zambrana has been working with a computer numerical control (CNC) machine that uses computer technology to shape boards. There is only one CNC machine in Puerto Rico and it’s used mainly to build paddle boards.

Zambrana says he is the only shaper who uses it regularly in Puerto Rico. “It gives me a chance to concentrate in design. I have several models and in 30 minutes I have them. Guaili does the resin application for me and I only have to work the details and art. The best thing is that I am able to clone my models,” Zambrana said.

Teaching the trade

After a lifetime of visiting Rincon, first vacationing there as a kid and then visiting to surf, Zambrana moved to Barrio Corcega six years ago with his wife Laura and their teenage kids.

“This is Puerto Rico’s surfing capital, but there is more to it. It’s Puerto Rico’s only town without traffic lights, where you won’t see a drug addict on a street corner, and where so many people work to protect the environment,” Zambrana said. “My way of sharing is to teach kids how to make and fix their boards. One of my goals is to set up a school where I can teach board shaping and surfing.”

Not only are kids learning the trade with Zambrana, Ricky Muñiz, one of the top new shapers who travels to expo-shows in U.S. mainland with his boards learned from him and he also provided shaping sessions to Rob Machado, yet another Californian former world surfing champion, who was venturing into shaping.

“Surfing is not a hobby; it’s a way of life. Maybe being in contact with nature and the sea all the time makes us different,” Zambrana said. “So I decided to be a board maker instead of a full-time sculptor. Although from now and then I work on sculptures, my love for surfing was just too much. I guess my destiny was to become a sculptor and painter of surfboards.”

Puerto Rico: Your Tropical Sports Paradise

By Peter Martin 471

Sports fanatics will give a hooray about all there is to see and do in Puerto Rico related to the eternal glories of the art of human sports competition. Just relax or go all out because Puerto Rico has major sporting events throughout the year taking place across the island in a wondrous array of surroundings, which help make them once in a lifetime experiences.

2017

Sports fanatics will give a hooray about all there is to see and do in Puerto Rico related to the eternal glories of the art of human sports competition.

Just relax or go all out because Puerto Rico has major sporting events throughout the year taking place across the island in a wondrous array of surroundings, which help make them once in a lifetime experiences.

Whether its world class, pro surfing, golf or running, or a multi-discipline competition like IRONMAN® 70.3® Puerto Rico Pan American Tri Club Championship Presented By: Puerto Rico Tourism Company, the island is host to events that are the best in the Caribbean and are among the top in their class anywhere.

They make for a thrilling experience for visitors, whether you want to participate directly, or enjoy the spectacular fan experience in Puerto Rico. The island has quality events that attract international stars yet are accessible to any participant in a given sport. Best of all, there is always in Puerto Rico a side fiesta among event spectators regardless of what is being watched that is often where the true action is. For these and other reasons, your sports experience in Puerto Rico will likely be among your most exhilarating!

Whether you love golf with the devotion of a Pavlov dog, or you think it’s the death of a good walk, you’ll want to come to the Puerto Rico Open, which pairs outstanding professional golf with so much more: gourmet food and wine tents, classical and popular music performances, fashion shows, art exhibitions, play areas for kids, and other activities.

The Puerto Rico Open PGA Tournament is an official stop on the PGA circuit, and the world-class event draws the best international golfers. The 2017 edition is going to be HUUGGGEEE!!!!! Not only because of its 10th anniversary but it will take place at the Coco Beach Golf Club in Rio Grande from March 13-20.

The world-class golf event at the plush property is a great competition in the shadow of the rainforest, along sweeping Atlantic vistas. However, there is also almost always an intriguing live performance, other event, and gathering taking place at the same time. Every year, organizers say they strive not just to develop the event into the one of the PGA Tour’s most popular, but also to throw the best event on the island each year. And it really is one of the biggest parties the island puts on all year.

 

  • Puerto Rico Heineken International Regatta
  • Puerto Rico Ironman Condado Lagoon
  • Puerto Rico Open at Coco Beach - Round Two
  • Puerto Rico San Blas Marathon, Coamo, Puerto Rico

 

The Coco Beach Golf Club has two courses that run from jungle to coast, and offer both challenges to players and aesthetic visions of the island’s natural splendor. This event will give you a looking glass into the wonderful world of golf in Puerto Rico. With nearly 30 championship and other high quality golf courses, Puerto Rico is the “Scotland of the Caribbean” or its “golf capital.” The top designers in the game have carved courses along expansive coastal vistas, surrounded by the blue ocean and coconut groves and through lush tropical forest surroundings. They include Tom Kite, Robert Trent Jones, his two sons, Greg Norman, Jack Nicklaus and George and Tom Fazio, Arthur Hills, and Puerto Rico’s own Chi Chi Rodriguez.

The World’s Best 10K, which is celebrating its 20th birthday this year, is also a world-class sports competition with so many side shows they often feel like the main event.

The race around San Juan makes it a beautiful experience. It attracts some of the best long distance runners in the sport, but is also wildly popular with casual joggers and even strollers, and it’s a day-long festive event for running enthusiasts, the young and beautiful and active families. The race has historically been held in and around the Teodoro Moscoso Bridge, but organizers said a change in route has been undertaken for its 20th anniversary. Runners will now leave and finish at the Roberto Clemente Coliseum in San Juan, and will unfold along major roadways surrounding the sports complex. The race this year will be dedicated to Ivan “Pudge” Rodriguez, the great catcher who played Major League Baseball for the Texas Rangers, Florida Marlins, Detroit Tigers, New York Yankees, Houston Astros and Washington Nationals; and who was inducted into the MLB Hall of Fame on first ballot.

This year’s edition takes place on Sunday, February 26 and attracts the best runners in the world, but the event is also wildly popular with locals and tourists, and makes for an amazingly fun time. There is a pre-race fair at a sports complex the day prior, and seamless public transportation is offered for participants before and after the race from major bus and urban train stations. Race sponsors lavish gifts on runners and the spectating public every step of the way, and there are food kiosks and live entertainment at a waterfront park near the start and finish lines.

Post-race events are held across San Juan, for participants and fans. The event normally coincides with a three-day holiday weekend. For years, the event was held in the late afternoon, but it switched in recent years to earlier morning. It has also been an internet trailblazer since its origins – the first race transmitted live via Internet, with audio, video, and results. The race’s internet presence continues to rock.

The World’s Best 10K is a big deal in Puerto Rico, which draws sponsorship support that enables a first-rate, world-class competition. Make sure you participate in one way or another should you be on the island at this time. While enormous swag and benefits are bestowed on early registrants, you can also sign up at the last minute. If you just want to cheer on and party, just follow the crowd surrounding the course.

In early spring, Condado and Isla Verde get overrun with buff guys and gals with an extra bounce in their step. They’re crowds of them, actually. It’s a downright wonder and a seeming mystery until you realize these are just the participants in the annual IRONMAN® 70.3® Puerto Rico, a competitive event that is also the catalyst for a series of side parties before, after, and during the wild competition. Most participants, turn the experience into an extra-long weekend at least, a chance for a mini-vacation, while getting your competitive fire tested.

 

  • Puerto Rico Ironman San Juan Run
  • Puerto Rico Corona Surfing Competition
  • Puerto Rico Ironman San Juan Bike Ride Biking

 

IRONMAN® 70.3® Puerto Rico, unfolds across a multitude of historic sites and attractions in San Juan, the oldest city under the U.S. flag. The race unfolds in view of historic fortresses, lush gardens, and windswept Atlantic coast. Prime viewing spots include Condado’s Dos Hermanos Bridge or the Caribe Hilton’s San Geronimo grounds.

The IRONMAN® 70.3® Puerto Rico starts with a 1.2-mile swim through Condado Lagoon, and then a 56-mile bike along Puerto Rico’s northern coast to Dorado. The 13.1 mile run explores Old San Juan, past enchanted Spanish colonial fortresses and cathedrals, as well as Art Deco office towers and other architectural gems. It meanders through other sections of San Juan and reaches its finish in an oceanfront park outside the old city near the Caribe Hilton.

This year’s IRONMAN® 70.3® Puerto Ricotakes place on March 19, 2017. It offers 30 qualifying slots to the Ironman 70.3 World Championship in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

Another huge race is the San Blas Marathon in Coamo, which unfolds in a south coast valley beside the ancient springs Spanish Conquistador Juan Ponce de Leon believed was the fountain of youth. The annual event (Feb. 5, 2017) attracts the world’s best female and male long distance runners to this gorgeous, pastoral south coast town, which takes place a beautiful Caribbean Sunday. This half marathon, which is one of the world’s most popular, also entails a weekend of musical events, fairs, and culinary delights. About 1,000 athletes participate from several different countries each year, and the event draws tens of thousands of spectators.

The 21.0975 kilometer race takes competitors and spectators on a tour of Coamo’s natural and historic sites and visitors after the event are sure to appreciate the town slogan “come to Coamo and you will love it like I do.” There are more than a dozen historic and cultural sites along the route.

The race winds through Coamo’s historic downtown area, home to the San Blas de Illescas Church, one of the island’s most impressive architectural works. First built in 1661, and reconstructed in 1784, the Baroque church rests on a series of steps with cast iron railings, its bell towers and arches overlooking Coamo’s charming plaza. The race meanders past other historic buildings and also crosses a number of bridges and unfolds on winding country roads.

The Coamo race was first run in 1963, and took off internationally as one of the world’s best races in the 1970s. Competitors have hailed from Australia, Ethiopia, Japan, the Soviet Union, China, Mexico, Colombia, Brazil, Tanzania, Costa Rica, Kenya, Belgium, Venezuela, Canada, and others.

Several world record holders have participated.

Surrounded by shimmering emerald waters that beckon off its virgin white beachfront, Puerto Rico is a sailor’s paradise. You’ll feel the lure of the sea from the San Juan to Mayaguez, Ponce to Fajardo. The island’s east coast marks the start of probably the world’s most pleasurable sailing area, a swath of virgin sea, dotted with coral and green islands.

As a result, Puerto Rico is home to several regattas, those sailing extravaganzas that mix the pure thrill of competition, with the infectious rhythm of a Caribbean celebration. The Puerto Rico Heineken International Regatta, which takes place off Puerto Rico’s east coast from March 2-5, 2017, is the biggest of the big sailing events. It has been based recently at Fajardo’s Puerto del Rey marina, as well as at the venerable Palmas del Mar marina, but the race always takes place in the glorious eastern Caribbean waters. The event is held at the close of the Caribbean sailing season but the start of summer, and has slowly become an annual rite of passage on the island over its more than decade-long existence.

The event draws sailors from across the Caribbean and other oceans that come every year to compete at the event, one of the most prestigious in the region that attracts all types of vessels. The event hosts Hobie Cats, Optimist, Sunfish, Laser, Native boats and Chalanas. Other classes are CSA Racing, PHRF Jib &Main, Melges, Raya, Mariner, and Hunter. There is also a Puerto Rico International Dinghy Regatta at the same time, where small boats race in the harbor. Cash prizes are paid out across the categories, and the event is part of the Heineken Star Cup, the sailing circuit uniting Heineken sponsored events across the Caribbean.

The fiesta continues at night, with live music and other entertainment, gourmet food, and so much more. There are all-day, all-night festivities and a variety of great cuisine throughout the event. The regatta is a daylong party that stretches across the night, often with live music, culinary diversity, and sociable bar areas, and other fun, games and prizes. It is also a serious competition that makes for fascinating spectator sport.

The regatta makes clear that Puerto Rico is one of the world’s most important sailing centers, while also reflecting the island’s prowess as a party power.

The Club Nautico’s San Juan International Billfish Tournament (September 25-October 1, 2017) has been attracting sports fishermen from around the world for more than a half century. The tournament has showcased San Juan’s prowess as a sports fishing, with a massive deep-water trench just off its north coast a lure for big game fish just a short ride from the city’s plushest marina. The vessels glide from the Condado and Miramar districts, out past Old San Juan into San Juan Bay, then past the imposing El Morro fortress to the open Atlantic and the big game fishing grounds.

In fact, the tournament is known for its stomping ground just 20 minutes from San Juan’s twin marinas (San Juan Bay Marina is adjacent to Club Nautico), which are known as “Blue Marlin Alley” and the “Billfish Pass,” and begin just a mile and a half off the coast. While the marlins, and other large billfish, are present throughout the year, high season for fishing them is in July, August and September, especially during full moon periods. The blue marlins caught during the tournament have weighed 700 pounds or more, and a 1,085 lb. marlin was caught off the San Juan coast in 2000.

Club Nautico says it is the first institution worldwide to establish today’s tag and release format for small Blue Marlin, even before the United States of America made it compulsory in 1988 and it grew into the sports fishing standard.

Puerto Rico is the Caribbean’s surfing powerhouse, and it has been hosting world class competitions ever since hosting the world championship in 1968. The island’s northwest surf Mecca comprised of an endless string of surf breaks in Isabela, Aguadilla, and Rincon, is most often the host. However, there are great breaks along the north coast, with San Juan home to several hotspots, as well as in the east coast. In summer, certain south coast surf sports are blessed with consistent swell that make for fun waves.

Puerto Rico hosts several world class competitions, and festive local events are taking place somewhere on the island on any given weekend. The 4th Legends Surf Classic (Jan. 20-22, 2017) is the finest on the immediate agenda.

First started in 2014, the Legends Surf Classic is open to surfers 49 and older and is held to recognize and promote the surfing legends of the 60s and 70s. Every year, surf legends from the classic surfing era, including finalists in the 1968 world championship held in Rincon.

This year, the invited guests include Hawaiian surfing legend Paul Strauch, who was a dominate surfer during the 1960s, known for his laid back style and nose riding. He was also the first surfer to perfect the ability to make turns on big waves. The event is held to support and promote the sport of surfing in Puerto Rico.

The island also hosts other pro surfing events, including the Corona Extra Pro Circuit and the Rip Curl Pro series. On 2007, it hosted the International Surfing Association World Masters Surfing Championship, which brought surfers from more than 15 countries including Brazil, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, France, Great Britain, Italy, Jamaica, Peru, Portugal, Puerto Rico, South Africa, Sweden, Tahiti, and Venezuela. The best master surfers in the world competed in the event.

It’s no wonder Puerto Rico is an electrifying sports paradise for athletes and fans alike.