Surf Fight Erupts at World’s Most Crowded Wave (Video)
Snapper Rocks, located on the Gold Coast of Australia, is one of – if not the – most crowded surf spots on earth. Unless your name is Mick Fanning, Joel Parkinson, Dean Morrison, or a handful of other elite surfers, good luck getting a wave to yourself.
And so, as expected there are frequent quarrels amongst the crowd at Snapper.
It’s just part of life, like death and taxes and getting snaked at Snapper. But how one deals with all the drop-ins, that’s a different story. Do you stand back and take it? Do you yell and scream at the offending surfer? Or do you do what up-and-coming Queensland native Harry Martin did below, when he finally lost it with the constant snaking?
“Snapper scraps,” @reeframed, who captured the clip, captioned it. “Bit of this going on the past couple days.”
Jacob “Zeke” Szekely, of course, chimed in on the clip, approving of Martin’s behavior. He wrote: “Hell yea, I love the action.”
For more on Harry Martin, he was recently picked up by hemp clothing brand Afends. Here’s his bio:
“Meet Harry Martin, 19 years old and born and bred in Burleigh. He’s one of those heads who always has a board in the car and no set plan, just chasing feeling over trophies. Clean lines, good energy, and waves that get you hyped, that’s what he’s about. Whether it’s a random slab off the highway or a dusty point a few hours too far, he’s usually on the road with a tight crew and that “see what we find” mindset. We’re stoked to officially welcome Harry to the Afends team.”
Keep an eye out for this guy.
This isn’t the first time we’ve seen surf rage at Snapper, not even close. A few years back, surf filmer Seb Chadwick chronicled a run of swell at the Superbank, along with the crazy amount of surf rage that came along with it. Chadwick stated:
“Welcome to the Superbank, a stretch of sand at the bottom of Queensland that is the training ground for some of Australia’s best male and female surfers. Hit with big cyclone swells in December through February, its March to May that sees constant swell that brings the Superbank to life for days at a time.
“This year, we were blessed with an incredibly good amount of swell leading up to the Gold Coast Pro. As the swell turned on, the pros turned up. If you weren’t a high-level surfer, then getting a wave wasn’t going to be easy.”
More Snapper scraps to come? The World Surf League is headed back to the Goldie for the third stop of the upcoming 2026 CT in May. Stay tuned.
