The weather is not the only problem on the horizon: Surf legend Jeff Clark, the founder of the celebrated event, is embroiled in a nasty legal dispute with the company that now runs it.
Clark, who is credited with discovering this surfing zone - a rocky break one-half mile offshore
- will not be a part of the contest for the first time in its 11-year-history.
He accuses Mavericks Surf Ventures Inc. of selling out the contest for commercial gain.
Mavericks chief executive Keir Beadling counters that the allegations in his lawsuit are "completely false."
The event begins when the first six or 24 world-class surfers are ferried by jet ski to the surf spot. Each heat of six surfers competes for 45 minutes, with each competitor allowed to catch up to 10 waves. Surfers are judged on their best two waves, and the top three scorers in each heat advance to the semifinals.
The contest is not held every year and is called only when conditions are prime. In the past, Clark made the decision when the event would he held and gave competitors 48 hours warning. This year the competitors voted.
Now all eyes are on radar maps, the skies and the waves.
The waves are expected to be huge and the sun to be out. But forecasters say there is a chance for south winds in the morning. Surfers say that could make for choppier waves than if the winds were out of the northwest, which is expected in later afternoon rounds.
The dispute has fiercely divided loyalties in the insular world of surfing, with some defending Clark as the soul of the contest and others criticizing him for committing the original sin by publicizing a once-secret surf spot.
"This is a dispute between Jeff Clark, a passionate and respected member of the international surfing community, and a series of corporations and persons with no interest in surfing other than as a source of corporate and personal profit," stated the lawsuit filed last month.