Sugar, a five-time world dog surfing champion, dies at 16 after a cancer battle
Sugar, the five-time World Dog Surfing champion who became one of Huntington Beach's most recognizable figures, has died following a battle with cancer. She was 16 years old.
The beloved yellow Labrador retriever passed away early Monday morning in the arms of her owner, Ryan Rustan, closing out a remarkable life that transformed competitive dog surfing from a quirky novelty into something approaching a legitimate global sport, the New York Post reported.
Just weeks before her death, Sugar caught one final wave. If you had to write the ending yourself, you couldn't do better than that.
More Than a Mascot
Sugar wasn't a gimmick. She was a pioneer. She became the first animal ever inducted into the Surfers' Hall of Fame, earning her place in California surf lore alongside human legends who have spent lifetimes chasing swells.
Five world championships. A Hall of Fame induction. A legacy that redefined what people thought was possible when a dog met a surfboard. Rustan captured it plainly in an emotional social media post: "She absolutely loved you guys!! she lived to put smiles on faces, volunteer, to send it !! to change dog surfing forever !!!"
By every available measure, she did exactly that.
Service That Mattered
What set Sugar apart from a viral video clip was what she did when the cameras weren't rolling. Off the board, Sugar worked with surf therapy groups and visited veterans at the VA Hospital in Long Beach, bringing the same warmth on dry land that she carried into the water.
That's the part of the story worth sitting with. In a culture that churns through internet-famous animals at a dizzying pace, Sugar's owner pointed her toward something with actual weight. Visiting veterans isn't content creation. It's service. And there's something genuinely admirable about a community figure, even a four-legged one, being steered toward the people who gave the most and often receive the least attention in return.
It's a small reminder that the things Americans love most about their communities tend to be simple. A dog on a surfboard making people smile. A visit to a hospital ward where someone needed exactly that. No political agenda, no cultural statement. Just a good dog doing good things in a beach town that embraced her completely.
A True Local Legend
There's a reason Sugar resonated far beyond Huntington Beach. Americans gravitate toward stories that feel authentic, and nothing about Sugar's run felt manufactured. A rescue dog turned world champion turned therapy volunteer is the kind of arc that Hollywood would reject as too on the nose. But it happened.
Sixteen years is a full life for a Labrador. Sugar spent hers catching waves, earning titles, and brightening the days of people who needed it. Communities are built from exactly these kinds of bonds, the ones that don't require explanation or justification. They just work.
Rest easy, champ. You earned it.



