Fitzgibbons, Wright eye surfing crown

The last stop of the women's world sufring tour will decide the 2017 title with Australians Sally Fitzgibbons and Tyler Wright in the box seat to win.

surfing

Sally Fitzgibbons can win the world surfing title with victory in Hawaii.. (AAP)

Australians Sally Fitzgibbons and Tyler Wright are in the box seat to claim the women's world surfing title as the season comes down to the anticipated big-wave event in Maui next month.

The pair both lost semi-finals at the World Surf League stop in Hossegor, France on Saturday as Hawaiian Carissa Moore made up some championship ground when she took out the event.

Moore beat American Lakey Patterson in the final.

But the equal-third showing was enough to keep Fitzgibbons at the top of the standings with Wright in second.

A win in Hawaii by either will be enough to claim the title, regardless of how their competitors fare.

American Courtney Conlogue (fifth in France, third overall) is in the best position to displace the pair with Moore and Australian six-time world champion Stephanie Gilmore needing some significant results to go their way for a title play.

Moore's opening 8.67 in Hossegor laid the platform for her close victory over Fitzgibbons, while a 9.43 to Peterson did the job against Tyler Wright in the second semi-final.

"Carissa got the jump with that first 8.67 and it was tough to find one, in the end I needed that nine-point wave," Fitzgibbons said of her close loss.

"I feel like my surfing was there, I really just didn't bump into the opportunity. It's good to be consistent throughout the year, but you know I have the desire, I want to win events and be on that podium."

It was a good result for Wright who came off a difficult week in Portugal where she sustained a knee injury prior to the event.

She'll head to Hawaii as the defending champion and with a real shot of claiming back-to-back world titles.

"I've actually enjoyed the journey of this injury," Wright said. "It's actually pushed me forward at an accelerated rate."

In the men's event, Brazil's Gabriel Medina beat Sebastian Zietz of Hawaii in the final.

Australians Mick Fanning and Joel Parkinson both advanced to the last eight where they lost to John John Florence and Medina respectively.

Parkinson barely troubled the scorers, recording a total of 1.20 and proving no match for Medina's 15.20.

The Brazilian was similarly dominant in the final, beating Zietz 16.00 to 9.30.

Taylor Wright's brother Owen had lost to Zietz in the fifth round.

Florence will take the tour leader's yellow jersey into the next stop in Portugal and alongside side South African Jordy Smith looks best placed to take the title with two events to go.

Wright and countryman Matt Wilkinson rank fourth and fifth respectively.


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Source: AAP



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