"I just got so lucky. I had two weeks and we surfed every day," he said. "We had every type of conditions and then the final huge swell on Monday. It just all came together." Mitchell compared the wave to Cortes Bank or Belharra, both being open ocean waves with no defined lineup where you have to wait for the waves to come to you.
"You wait for these big lumps that roll through and you are unsure of exactly where they will break. The difference in Nazaré though is all the energy is compressed into a small section of the beach. That's what makes it such a crazy wave."
Mitchell thinks they may have to run the competition in slightly smaller conditions than seen on this season's opening swell. Catching waves and getting back out in a 45-minute heat, he said, might be difficult.
"I think the jet ski drivers will be in for more of a shock than we are," he laughed. "But it will be so exciting to watch, with the surfing and even the action getting back out through the shore break. It's going to be an incredible spectacle."