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Eben Page May 2026

He developed a specific technique for releasing the rope late—what locals call the "Page Drag." By keeping the ski tensioned longer than anyone else, he would hit the bottom turn already at 40 mph, bypassing the chaotic "foam ball" that eats up lesser surfers.

And then there is Eben Page.

If you blinked, you missed him. If you listened closely, you barely heard him. But if you ever paddled out at Mavericks or Jaws on a 50-foot day, he was the one you wanted next to you. eben page

In an era of hyper-curated Instagram feeds, daily vlogs, and sponsored hashtags, the true "surfer’s surfer" is becoming a rare breed. We are flooded with content, but starved for mystique.

But when the charts go red and the National Weather Service issues the "High Surf Warning"—when the tourists are running toward the beach to watch—Eben Page will walk the opposite direction. Toward the water. Toward the quiet. He developed a specific technique for releasing the

And that is the real lesson.

Do you have a favorite "unsung hero" of big-wave surfing? Drop a comment below. Or don't. Eben Page probably wouldn't. 🌊 If you listened closely, you barely heard him

Eben Page is the exception. And that is because he treats the ocean like a mathematician, not a matador. Those who have surfed Mavericks with Page describe him as unnervingly calm. While waves detonate with the force of a freight train, Page doesn't hoot. He doesn't flail. He breathes.

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