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Bodyboarding at Shark Island, Australia
Photograph by Cameron Spencer, Getty Images
“I  just wanted to get a bomb and was really enjoying the ride,” says  bodyboarder Chase O’Leary of catching this six-foot wave during the  Shark Island Challenge, in June 2011, near Sydney, Australia. “But I  didn’t read the wave properly, hence why I got smashed into the reef.”  Surfing’s little brother, bodyboarding is a sport that’s growing up.  “There’s been a real boom in the younger generation—not just in  Australia but around the world,” says O’Leary, 19, who has been  bodyboarding for nine years. “People see it as a more functional way of  riding a wave then surfing. Once you start to get the hang of it, it  becomes addictive.”

Bodyboarding at Shark Island, Australia

Photograph by Cameron Spencer, Getty Images

“I just wanted to get a bomb and was really enjoying the ride,” says bodyboarder Chase O’Leary of catching this six-foot wave during the Shark Island Challenge, in June 2011, near Sydney, Australia. “But I didn’t read the wave properly, hence why I got smashed into the reef.” Surfing’s little brother, bodyboarding is a sport that’s growing up. “There’s been a real boom in the younger generation—not just in Australia but around the world,” says O’Leary, 19, who has been bodyboarding for nine years. “People see it as a more functional way of riding a wave then surfing. Once you start to get the hang of it, it becomes addictive.”