03/20/2007 Jodie Cooper (Australia)
Posted: Tue Mar 20, 2007 5:52 pm
Shark love bite won't stop Jodie
21Mar07
IF there are waves to ride, surfing champion Jodie Cooper will paddle out today -- despite having been attacked by a shark yesterday.
The former pro surfer was bitten 50m off South Golden Beach in northern NSW at 10am.
"There was a lot of blood but it really is just a bit of a love bite," she said.
Cooper, 42, said she had been 'having a ball' surfing with friend Andy Scott when she felt a shark bite deeply into her left hand.
"The water was a bit murky but we were on our own and it was like a bathtub -- we having a ball," she said.
"Earlier on we had been swimming with dolphins and then caught some waves and I was on my way back out when I took a paddle, drove my hand down into the water, and then it locked on and I knew what it was.
"I didn't see it myself but my friend did and he said it was this small bull (shark) or a bronzer.
"It just locked on and I started shaking and shaking my hand and when it did release it ripped a bit and the bite went down to the bone into my knuckles.
"I just screamed to my mate 'shark, shark' and then started paddling ... that was probably the scariest part, that paddle back to shore.
"It is not a nice feeling -- you don't know if it is going to come back for you. Because I didn't know how big it was I didn't know if it would come back."
Asked if it felt like time stood still as she scrambled to get out of the water, Cooper said it was like time slowed down.
"Luckily I caught a wave in but it is like ... time slows up. I just didn't want to feel that bite (on my side)."
Mr Scott rushed Cooper to Mullumbimby Hospital, where she was treated for deep flesh wounds across her outer three fingers.
She said she had never been attacked by a shark despite surfing waves all around the world since the early 1980s.
"I remember just feeling pretty amped-up when I got to the beach," she said.
"Andy drove us to the hospital where I got the old tetanus shot and they patched me up with some butterfly clips and gave me some antibiotics and painkillers.
"While I was waiting, this other guy turned up with a snakebite. His three mates, traditional hippies, turned up in this Kombi van to drop him off and they whisked him off before me. So I wasn't a big emergency.
"I'll just take a bit of Panadeine Forte then get back into the water.
"I'll just wrap my hand up in a plastic bag and get back out there.
"Honestly, I am just pretty lucky. It is nothing really. We are lucky it appears to have been a little baby."
Cooper said she would stick to her plan to fly to her birth state of Western Australia tomorrow so she could work as a commentator for the Margaret River Pro surfing competition.
The WA surfing hall of fame member was widely considered the Layne Beachley of the 1980s.
Her career highlights included memorable wins at the 1989 Newcastle Surfest, 1985 OP Pro and the Haleiwa World Cup.
Described by friends as one of the toughest competitors on the tour, the Albany-raised boardrider officially retired in 1994 but continued to surf competitively and was regularly offered wildcards by event organisers.
She appeared in the world's top eight 11 times, finishing as high as No.2, and is famous for her 1989 run-in with Hawaiian legend Johnny Boy Gomes who punched her in the face after she rode waves at his break. Gomes told her: "If you act like a man I'm gonna treat you like a man."
Cooper acted as Lori Petty's body double in the 1991 movie Point Break, a Hollywood blockbuster starring Patrick Swayze as a surfing villain and Keanu Reeves as an FBI agent who must learn to surf to infiltrate a gang of criminals.
"Yep, that's the one and only time I have done any movies," she said.
Since retiring from the tour, Cooper has acted as event director at several Roxy Pro events across the globe and has a senior coaching role developing junior talent at the Surfing Australia high performance centre at Casuarina.
Her students have included current gun Stephanie Gilmore and she is also a regular commentator on the women's circuit.
The snakebite victim was last night in a stable condition.
http://www.gcbulletin.com.au/article/20 ... _news.html
21Mar07
IF there are waves to ride, surfing champion Jodie Cooper will paddle out today -- despite having been attacked by a shark yesterday.
The former pro surfer was bitten 50m off South Golden Beach in northern NSW at 10am.
"There was a lot of blood but it really is just a bit of a love bite," she said.
Cooper, 42, said she had been 'having a ball' surfing with friend Andy Scott when she felt a shark bite deeply into her left hand.
"The water was a bit murky but we were on our own and it was like a bathtub -- we having a ball," she said.
"Earlier on we had been swimming with dolphins and then caught some waves and I was on my way back out when I took a paddle, drove my hand down into the water, and then it locked on and I knew what it was.
"I didn't see it myself but my friend did and he said it was this small bull (shark) or a bronzer.
"It just locked on and I started shaking and shaking my hand and when it did release it ripped a bit and the bite went down to the bone into my knuckles.
"I just screamed to my mate 'shark, shark' and then started paddling ... that was probably the scariest part, that paddle back to shore.
"It is not a nice feeling -- you don't know if it is going to come back for you. Because I didn't know how big it was I didn't know if it would come back."
Asked if it felt like time stood still as she scrambled to get out of the water, Cooper said it was like time slowed down.
"Luckily I caught a wave in but it is like ... time slows up. I just didn't want to feel that bite (on my side)."
Mr Scott rushed Cooper to Mullumbimby Hospital, where she was treated for deep flesh wounds across her outer three fingers.
She said she had never been attacked by a shark despite surfing waves all around the world since the early 1980s.
"I remember just feeling pretty amped-up when I got to the beach," she said.
"Andy drove us to the hospital where I got the old tetanus shot and they patched me up with some butterfly clips and gave me some antibiotics and painkillers.
"While I was waiting, this other guy turned up with a snakebite. His three mates, traditional hippies, turned up in this Kombi van to drop him off and they whisked him off before me. So I wasn't a big emergency.
"I'll just take a bit of Panadeine Forte then get back into the water.
"I'll just wrap my hand up in a plastic bag and get back out there.
"Honestly, I am just pretty lucky. It is nothing really. We are lucky it appears to have been a little baby."
Cooper said she would stick to her plan to fly to her birth state of Western Australia tomorrow so she could work as a commentator for the Margaret River Pro surfing competition.
The WA surfing hall of fame member was widely considered the Layne Beachley of the 1980s.
Her career highlights included memorable wins at the 1989 Newcastle Surfest, 1985 OP Pro and the Haleiwa World Cup.
Described by friends as one of the toughest competitors on the tour, the Albany-raised boardrider officially retired in 1994 but continued to surf competitively and was regularly offered wildcards by event organisers.
She appeared in the world's top eight 11 times, finishing as high as No.2, and is famous for her 1989 run-in with Hawaiian legend Johnny Boy Gomes who punched her in the face after she rode waves at his break. Gomes told her: "If you act like a man I'm gonna treat you like a man."
Cooper acted as Lori Petty's body double in the 1991 movie Point Break, a Hollywood blockbuster starring Patrick Swayze as a surfing villain and Keanu Reeves as an FBI agent who must learn to surf to infiltrate a gang of criminals.
"Yep, that's the one and only time I have done any movies," she said.
Since retiring from the tour, Cooper has acted as event director at several Roxy Pro events across the globe and has a senior coaching role developing junior talent at the Surfing Australia high performance centre at Casuarina.
Her students have included current gun Stephanie Gilmore and she is also a regular commentator on the women's circuit.
The snakebite victim was last night in a stable condition.
http://www.gcbulletin.com.au/article/20 ... _news.html