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Canada's Erin Brooks named rookie of the year on World Surf League Championship Tour

Canada's Erin Brooks has been named the 2025 Rookie of the Year for the World Surf League Championship Tour. The only women’s rookie to make the mid-season cut, Brooks finished her debut season ranked eighth in the world.
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Canada's Erin Brooks is seen after surfing in Heat 3 of the Quarterfinals at the MEO Rip Curl Pro Portugal, at Supertubos, Peniche, Portugal, in a Monday, March 17, 2025, handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - World Surf League, Manel Geada (Mandatory Credit)

Canada's Erin Brooks has been named the 2025 Rookie of the Year for the World Surf League Championship Tour.

The only women’s rookie to make the mid-season cut, Brooks finished her debut season ranked eighth in the world.

The 18-year-old is the first Canadian to qualify for the tour, Brooks debuted with high expectations, elevated by a victory in her first-ever World Surf League appearance as a wild card in the final event of the 2024 season in Fiji.

Brooks rose to the top of the strong rookie pack and kept herself in contention for the Final 5 right up until the final qualifying event in Tahiti.

Her three semifinal appearances this season all came at notoriously difficult-to-read, shifting sand-bottom breaks, including Supertubos, Portugal, Burleigh Heads, Australia, and Saquarema, Brazil.

The standout moment of Brooks's season was the quarterfinals of the Bonsoy Gold Coast Pro, where her hyper-critical backhand earned the second-highest heat total of the women’s season, 17.76 (out of a possible 20), to defeat eight-time world champion Stephanie Gilmore of Australia.

Brooks was born in Texas and grew up in Hawaii but has Canadian ties through her American-born father Jeff, who is a dual American-Canadian citizen, and her grandfather who was born and raised in Montreal.

Brooks's citizenship bid was initially turned down but Immigration Minister Marc Miller had a change of heart in January 2024 after a ruling by Ontario's Superior Court of Justice that it is unconstitutional for Canada to deny automatic citizenship to the children of foreign-born Canadians who grew up abroad.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 13, 2025.

The Canadian Press