Imagine Jess Fox, Kyle Chalmers and Gout Gout lining up on Bondi Beach in the same colours, racing for the same trophy.
It sounds fanciful. But after Wednesdayโs announcement in Sydney of the worldโs first global professional surf racing league, it is a step closer to potentially becoming a reality.
Guardians League is pitching itself as a six-team franchise competition โ that has secured backing from four well-known sporting bodies โ bringing together elite athletes from kayaking, swimming, athletics and surf lifesaving in a made-for-television team format set to launch across Australia and New Zealand in 2027.
In a rare show of cross-code cooperation, Surf Life Saving Australia, Australian Athletics and Paddle Australia have each signed a memorandum of understanding with the league, while Swimming Australia has formally confirmed its support without going as far as an MOU.
The International Life Saving Federation has also endorsed the venture, with president Graham Ford declaring the league would โelevate the visibility of lifesavingโ and strengthen the sportโs case for inclusion as an Olympic sport at the Brisbane 2032 Games.
While dates and venues are yet to be locked in โ those decisions are expected later this year โ the plan is for six franchises to field teams of eight athletes, four men and four women, contesting multidiscipline relays on iconic beaches.
Kim Crane (CEO Paddle Australia), Adam Weir (CEO Surf Life Saving Australia) and Jenny Mann (sport administrator and co-founder). Edwina Pickles
One of Australiaโs most decorated ironman athletes, two-time Olympian Ky Hurst, was immediately sold.
โWhen I heard the concept, I was on the edge of my seat from the start,โ Hurst said. โI said, โGosh, I wish you came to me 10 years earlierโ.
โWho doesnโt want to see someone like Gout Gout tag Kyle Chalmers and then tag [Australian sprint kayaker] Riley Fitzsimmons and [Australia board paddler] Cruz Mckee to finish on the board? Track and field athletes on the beach would be really interesting.
โWhat an epic platform for those athletes. I think it will be pretty appealing to the public. We havenโt seen anything like this, but I think itโs got legs.โ
As for Olympic gold medallists Jess Fox and Noemie Fox, while kayaking in salt water is not their normal domain, they would be obvious targets for organisers seeking star power for what they say will be three-day events.
โThe Fox sisters do paddle sprint kayaks at various times, so Iโm sure theyโll be interested in this,โ said Paddle Australia chief executive Kim Crane.
โOur Australian senior menโs and womenโs sprint teams are over in Hungary at the moment preparing for the World Cup โฆ but theyโll definitely be interested in this. Weโll be briefing our athletes.โ
Advanced broadcast discussions are under way with Fox Sports and DAZN, with the league positioning itself as a scalable international event with ambitions to expand into North America and Europe.
The brains trust behind it is former Australian surf racing champion Adrian Tobin, now the leagueโs managing director, and co-founder Andrew Ryan, a UK and Switzerland-based sports executive.
โOur mission is simple โ to make surf racing unmissable around the world,โ Tobin said. โWeโre doing that by bringing together truly world-class athletes from across lifesaving, athletics, kayak and swimming into the most unpredictable arena in sport โ the surf.โ
There remains a mountain of work, particularly in aligning high-performance programs with a concept that, for now, sits outside traditional pathways. Some sports may be reluctant to release their best athletes if it risks disrupting Olympic campaigns.
Getting four national sporting organisations โ bodies that usually compete fiercely for funding, broadcast exposure and talent โ to align behind the same start line will be no small feat.
The dream, of course, is headline names such as Fox, Gout and Chalmers. The early reality may be more measured.
โWe are looking at the worldโs best Olympians and world champions from each of the sports being a part of Guardians League,โ Tobin said. โBeing a premium sport product, we want premium athletes competing in teams against each other.โ
Australian swimmers Lani Pallister and Sam Short, both Olympic medallists, have strong surf life-saving backgrounds and would loom as prime targets. Pallister competed at last monthโs Australian Surf Life Saving Championships on the Gold Coast.
Swimming Australia will assess its athletesโ availability on a case-by-case basis.
Australian athletics boasts plenty of depth in elite runners, but competing on soft sand would require careful management and coach approval.
Meanwhile, Australiaโs menโs K4 team, which won silver in Paris, was just 0.04 seconds behind gold medallists Germany. Allowing an athlete such as Fitzsimmons to take part may be a difficult sell within a high-performance program.
โWeโve got some work to do in that space,โ Crane said. โI understand where the tension points are going to sit, but I also understand, as a CEO, where the opportunity sits.โ
Australian Athletics chief executive Simon Hollingsworth said in a statement: โAustralian Athletics is always looking at innovative ways of bringing new eyes to athletics as well as increasing running participation.โ
A decision on whether surf lifesaving will be included in the Brisbane 2032 Olympic program is expected later this year.
โItโs a unique opportunity to have it here in 2032,โ Ford said. โOur footprint is about 130 countries that are full members.โ