Backside Wave 360° Marcilio Browne
on 24. December, 2009 17:52 / 10 Comments / 3,066 views
Marcilio circles a very controlled, nice Backside Wave 360 in the waves of Pozo.
- Backside Wave 360°
- Backside Wave 360° – Marcilio Browne
- Backside Wave 360° – Alex Mussolini
- Backside Wave 360° – Alex Mussolini
- Backside Wave 360° – Ben Proffitt
- Backside Wave 360° – Philip Köster
- Backside Wave 360° – Marcilio Browne
- Backside Wave 360° – Philip Köster
- Backside Wave 360° – Jonas Ceballos
- Marcilio Browne
- Goiter (Tow-In) – Marcilio Browne
- Backside Wave 360° – Marcilio Browne
- Pushloop Tweaked – Marcilio Browne
- Double Air Taka – Marcilio Browne
- Pushloop Tweaked – Marcilio Browne
- Future – Marcilio Browne
- Frontside Wave 360° Crash – Marcilio Browne
- Backloop – Marcilio Browne
- Backside Wave 360° – Marcilio Browne
- Air Funnell one handed – Marcilio Browne
- Aerial Crash – Marcilio Browne
- Burner – Marcilio Browne







isnt that shaka ?
oho .. the same discussion as every time seems to get started soon
i was thinking the same thing – looks like a shaka coming in
können diese komischen Hauft-Brüder es auch mal schaffen, einmal NICHT ihren dummen Kommentar dazuzugeben? Bitte!!! Es nervt!
If you watch the same move from Jonas Ceballos, do you think that is a Shaka as well?
It actually is! But It’s the same thing like with the Goiter and the Ponch. It’s just the same move.
The only thing that makes the difference is the environment. A Goiter and a Backside Wave 360 are done in the wave and a Ponch and a Shaka are done on flat water!
Please let me know if I’m wrong. But I always thought it was like that.
@binsurfen – i think you’re right.
@ können – sorry dass ich schon wieder was schreibe. aber du musst es ja nicht lesen.
I think ponch and goiter demand different techniques even though they ressemble each other a lot. On flat water the rotation is a lot more horizontal and you can’t throw the sail into the water as much as you can, for example, when you do a goiter on a bigger wave where you just throw the sail into the white water.
This move can be called a backside 360 I think, but I wouldn’t call it a perfect example of a backside wave 360. Two reasons: 1) the wave is neither steep nor big 2) neither is there any white water at the spot where he does the move. Well, it’s still a backside wave 360.
@Können
Kind of annoying that you obviously are able to read the comments in english yet choose to make your unfriendly and unnecessary comment in German. So much for thinking international.
And on topic: I can totally understand people getting confused and asking how it works, windsurfing vocabulairy is getting so difficult these days! Good to see there are also still people willing to explain the difference in a nice and hang loose way
I just had a little talk with Marcilio about the move name.
Actually he wanted to do a Backside Wave 360. But as the wave is pretty small, it looks the same as a Shaka coming in. For Marcilio both names are in a way right. Shaka or Backside Wave 360.