Sydney - Arab Today
Australian surf champion Mick Fanning Tuesday called his escape from a shark attack a "miracle" and vowed to return to the waves, while paying tribute to "warrior" mate Julian Wilson for rushing to help.
The 34-year-old three-time world champion fought off a large shark during the final heat of a world tour event at Jeffreys Bay in South Africa's Eastern Cape province on Sunday in dramatic scenes beamed live around the world.
He survived unscathed, with his rival and close friend Wilson, also from Australia, furiously paddling towards him to help despite the danger posed by the shark, believed to be a great white.
"I guess someone was looking out for me. To walk away from a shark attack with not a scratch on you, it's a miracle really," Fanning said after arriving back in Sydney with Wilson, where they were met by a large media scrum.
"You just count your lucky stars and if there is someone up there looking after us -- thanks."
As he was knocked off his board and desperately punched the shark to keep it at bay, Wilson paddled towards him in courageous actions that prompted his home state Queensland to nominate him for a bravery award.
"This man came to my aid like a warrior!!," Fanning said of Wilson in an Instagram post earlier in the day, after social media went into meltdown over the dramatic close call.
A YouTube clip of the attack has had almost 13.5 million views and even Hollywood stars such as Charlize Theron and Russell Crowe have been following the action on Twitter.
Wilson played down his reaction, calling Fanning "a great role model".
"As soon as I realised the danger and what was going on, I couldn't get there quick enough," he said in Sydney, adding that Fanning confronting the shark spurred him on.
"It could be the thing that gave me the courage to just head for him. You know, to see that he just turned on something that was so much bigger than him."
- 'Thanks for not eating me' -
Speculation has been rife that Fanning may call it quits after hinting, in the moments after his terrifying ordeal, that he would not compete again.
He admitted he was now dealing with "an emotional mental sort of trauma" and that it would probably take weeks, if not months, to get over. But he vowed to get back on his board again.
"Surfing has given myself and my family so much. It's gotten me through the hardest times in my life," he said. "So to turn my back on surfing, it just wouldn't feel right."
He is even prepared to get back in the waves at Jeffreys Bay, replying "for sure" when asked if he would compete there again next year.
And while both men were clearly shaken, they found time for some humour during a packed press conference with Fanning replying: "Thanks for not eating me" when asked if he had a message for the shark.
The World Surf League, which organised the J-Bay Open, commended the rescue teams who quickly came to Fanning's aid and said the situation could have been much worse.
"Certainly it will give us an opportunity to sit down and reevaluate more the safety side of what we do," commissioner Kieren Perrow told Australian Associated Press.
Perrow said authorities would look to employ new and improving technologies to deter sharks, while pointing out that the South African stop was not the only location with a reputation for sharks.
"Being able to have a solution that not just works here (in South Africa) but everywhere would be pretty incredible," he said.
"We'll spend some time doing that and then review what it means for the future."
Source: AFP