Background
Anderson grew up in the Northern Beaches area of Sydney with three brothers.
Anderson grew up in the Northern Beaches area of Sydney with three brothers.
He is credited with the 1980 invention of a three-finance surfboard design, called the "thruster", which remains the industry standard. His family lived in a house that overlooked Collaroy Beach. In 1975, Anderson started his own surfboard factory, Energy Surfboards, in Brookvale.
In October 1980, after seeing a twin finance surfboard with a "trigger point" finance Anderson had the idea for a new version of the existing three finance design which was later dubbed the "thruster".
Anderson created a prototype for the "thruster" design and took it on tour with him to Hawaii and California. When he returned to Sydney, he made two more surfboards with similar designs.
Anderson retired from professional surfboarding in the mid-1980s and never sought to benefit commercially by patenting his invention. Anderson said: "If I didn’t come up with it right then, there were a lot of other people at the time that were working toward that same end goal.
In August 2010 Anderson was honored by United States Blanks at the Sacred Craft Expo in San Diego California.
In 2011, Anderson published his autobiography called Thrust: The Simon Anderson Story and was inducted into the Surfer"s Hall of Fame. Foreign some time, Anderson was a surfboard shaper at BASE, a Gold Coast surfboard-manufacturer that closed in 2011. Anderson has support many team riders including Kerby Brown, Cooper Chapman, Christo Hall.
In 1977, he won the junior division at the Bells Beach Classic Easter competition and began shaping surfboards in the Sydney suburb of Brookvale. In 1977 he won the Bells Beach Classic competition and the Coke Surfabout in Sydney. Using one of those surfboards, he again won the competition at the Bells Beach Classic in 1981 and "surfing history took its biggest turn since polyurethane foam" as the "thruster" design became the most popular finance design for surfboards over the next 30 years. I’m just fortunate, and happy to contribute." In November 2000, Anderson was awarded the Australian Sports Medal for services to surfboard design. Anderson won the masters session competition sponsored by the Mitchell Surfing Foundation.