Today is the day of the West Marine Carolina Cup presented by Surftech, the most popular race on the East Coast of the USA and the very first big event of the 2016 International SUP Racing season! Here are 8 things you must know about this year’s edition of the Carolina Cup.
I have had the opportunity to arrive in Wrightsville Beach a week ago and to explore the area with the Hobie crew, the place is awesome, the new board feels great and I’m looking forward to start this racing season the best I can!
1. The location : Wrightsville Beach
The event takes place in Wrighstville Beach, North Carolina. It’s a town consisting of a four-mile-long beach island and an interior island (Harbor Island) both connected to the mainland by bridges.
2. Carolina Cup 2016 in Numbers
– 6th edition
– 4 races
– 700+ competitors
– 60 brands
– 25 miles of racing
– 2nd biggest race of the year according to our friends at SUP Racer
3. Who is coming ?
The big majority of the world’s top paddlers are attending, and everyone wants to start the season well ! The official startlist hasn’t been released yet but on the Women’s side for the favorites, this will include : Candice Appleby, Annabel Anderson, Lina Augaitis (back from maternity leave), Sonni Honscheid and Fiona Wylde.
On the men’s side, the favorites are : Danny Ching, Travis Grant (last edition’s winner), Connor Baxter, Titouan Puyo, George Cronsteadt, Mo Freitas and Kelly Margetts.
The growth of our sport is making the field of racers more and more stacked over the years, the australian website SUPracer recently posted a list of the “dark horses” for the 2016 racing season, most of these guys are competing tomorrow so you’d better keep on eye on them to witness some real upsets.
4. Who is NOTÂ coming ?
There are so many world class paddlers to compete this week-end that to tell who’s coming, it’s easier to tell who’s not. So from what I heard, missing the event this year will be world champion Kai Lenny, the three Australians : James Casey, Michael Booth and Jake Jensen, the Danish viking Casper Steinfath, the Italians Leonard Nika and Paolo Marconi and the Californians Brennan Rose and Slater Trout.
5. Race map
6. The forecast
Waves : knee to thigh-high SSE short period swell with occasional waist high sets.
Wind : glassy conditions in the morning with WEST winds about 5-10mph. Semi-glassy for the afternoon with the wind shifting SW less than 5mph
The tide will play an important part during this year’s edition of the Carolina Cup as it will influence the strength of the current on the inland channel parts of the race. Depending on the direction of the race according to the race directors decision, it can be a fast or a slow race. But there is one thing for sure, the paddlers used to river racing should have an advantage in some technical parts of the race.
8. The event schedule
Saturday, April 23
No clinic
7:00-8:00 Packet Pickup & Last chance to register
8:00 Expo Start
8:30 Harbor Island 3.5 Mile Race Racers Meeting
8:50 Racers start to get on water
8:58 Racers line up
9:00 Harbor Island 3.5 Mile Race Start
9:15 Racers Meeting Money Island 7 Mile Racers Meeting
9:25 Racers get on water and to the line
9:30 Money Island 7 Mile Race Start
9:45 Graveyard 13 Mile Racers Meeting
10:00 Graveyard 13 Mile Race Start
12:00-4:00 Demo
2:00 Banquet: Food, Live entertainment
4:00 Raffle
4:30 Awards
7:00-10:00 The Naked Turtle After Party at Oceanic Restaurant
Sunday, April 24
9:00-12:00 Demo
11:00 Kids Race
12:00 6-man Outrigger Race
For more information on Martin Letourneur’s sponsors, visit
Fresh off his appearance on LENNY BROS – the podcast hosted by Kai and Ridge Lenny – Connor Baxter opened up about the mindset behind dominating a sport for over a decade, while reflecting on the many transitions shaping this next chapter of his life: from a global SUP-erstar to fatherhood and becoming a Maui […]
The SUP calendar has never been more dynamic – but every so often, an event comes along that places stand-up paddling firmly and unapologetically at the heart of the experience. That’s exactly the vision behind the inaugural Gorge Ultra Distance, a 17-mile endurance challenge held on 12 July and set against one of the world’s […]
As the European SUP League (ESL) circuit heads to southern Italy, Lido Gandoli in Marina di Leporano will host three days of top-level stand-up paddle racing from 1-3 May. Set against the stunning backdrop of the Ionian Sea, the event will feature over €7,000 in prize money and bring together some of Europe’s best athletes. […]
Our sport needs people who make you want to show up – voices grounded in a deep understanding of the ocean, the disciplines of SUP and surf, and the delicate balance between its limitations and possibilities. In an era often dominated by noise and influencer culture, what truly stands out is authenticity: the raw perspective […]
From her historic stand-up paddle crossing between Cuba and Key West to countless miles logged along Florida’s wild coastline, Victoria Burgess has built a reputation as a multicraft waterwoman on grit, endurance, and heart. But beyond the big crossings and bluewater challenges, her passion runs just as deep for her home waters. Now she’s inviting […]
Infinity SUP returns to Santa Cruz Paddlefest 2026 (27-29 March) as the official SUP surfing division sponsor, continuing their tradition of showing up strong both at the start line and in the break. The longest-running paddle surf competition on the planet, Santa Cruz Paddlefest has been setting the standard since 1985. Its iconic venue, Steamer […]
There are SUP conversations that stick with you – those that intuitively reveal the direction the sport is headed. Catching up with Susanne Lier, 4x World SUP Champion, elite athlete, Coach, and SUNOVA Team Rider, has always offered nothing short of philosophical depth and insider insight into our sport – and the timing couldn’t be […]
Welcome to the livestream marathon of Last Paddler Standing 2025 – the most unpredictable, sleep-deprived, edge-of-your-seat SUP race on the planet. Starting December 6 at 9 am at Lake June in Winter, Florida, athletes will paddle a 3.33-mile loop every hour on the hour… and keep going until there’s only one paddler left. No finish […]