Celebrity Surfer Darryl ‘Flea’ Virostko and Crystal Meth Addiction
Sunday, October 25th, 2009Perhaps most well-known for this three big wins at Mavericks, Darryl “Flea” Virostko, 37, often flirts with death as a part of his daily surfing routine. In fact, a near-drowning experience at Waimea Bay in Hawaii a few years ago was called the “Wipeout of the Decade” by Surfer magazine. The thing that really scares him, though? Crystal meth addiction.
Drug Addiction and Surfing
For the last 14 months, Flea has been clean and sober, but before he entered a Pacific Grove drug and alcohol rehab center last year, his friends and family didn’t think he would be alive much longer. Says Virostko about his behavior before treatment: “I didn’t care about my life at all. I wasn’t being Flea.”
The first time that Flea went to Mavericks, he says he was on acid. He took a few of his other trips to the contest on crystal meth. The drugs, however, did not enhance his performance; they took away from it. He was fearless in spite the drugs, not because of them, he says.
Despite his three wins and the big checks that came along with it including $12,000 a month from sponsors and $50,000 checks for each Mavericks win, drug addiction almost bankrupted Flea as well. He had to sell his house recently to pay off back taxes and avoid bankruptcy.
Because he grew up without money, Flea says, he went overboard when he started getting paid for surfing. His sponsors billed him as a rock star and he had no problem filling the bill, with all the drugs and the furniture-destroying parties.
The Descent of a Surfer
Drugs and alcohol are commonly found at the beach parties that routinely follow a day in the surf. It’s not hard for surfers to end up dealing with a drug addiction as a result, especially as they begin to get older and get surpassed by younger athletes.
Flea reports that in early 2007, after his uncle passed away, he began to lose control of the situation. His drug use increased until February of 2008 when he passed out while high and climbing a cliff. The resulting injury took him out of surfing for awhile, and the time off only contributed to his drug addiction. By August, his father had set up an intervention for him, and Flea was soon off to drug rehab.
A Future After Drug Addiction
Today, Flea has 14 months of sobriety under his belt and he continues to surf avidly. He teaches drug addicts and alcoholics how to surf at his FleaHab program and is currently training to become a drug and alcohol addiction treatment counselor. Flea has picked up sponsors again and is still surfing professionally.
As for Mavericks, the last time Flea won was 2004; the Mavericks five-month window opens on November 1 of this year, and he’ll be there, hoping to win a fourth time.
Says Flea: “If I can do it, anyone can do it. Because I went to the edge of the earth.”







