Pyzel Surfboards
Pyzel Ghost
The Pyzel Ghost is a streamlined, refined version of the popular Pyzel Shortcut. The Ghost’s wide point forward outline and foam flow, give it range in punchier surf, while still maintaining a maneuverable shortboard feel.
Dimensions
5'9" x 18.88” x 2.38” | 25.80
5'10" x 19.00" x 2.44” | 27.00
5'11" x 19.13” x 2.50" | 28.30
6'0" x 19.38” x 2.56" | 29.70
6'1" x 19.63” x 2.63” | 31.40
6'2" x 19.75" x 2.69” | 32.80
6'3" x 20.00" x 2.75" | 34.50
6'4" x 20.25" x 2.88” | 37.10
6'5" x 20.38” x 3.00" | 39.40
6'6" x 20.50" x 3.00" | 40.20
6'8" x 20.75" x 3.062" | 42.60
6'10" x 20.88” x 3.13” | 45.00
7'0" x 21.00" x 3.19” | 47.30
Pro Dims:
5’7” x 18.38” x 2.13” | 22.20
5'8" x 18.50” x 2.18” | 23.20
5'9" x 18.63” x 2.25” | 24.30
5'10" x 18.75” x 2.31" | 25.40
5'11" x 19.00" x 2.31” | 26.00
6'0" x 19.13” x 2.38" | 27.20
6'1" x 19.25" x 2.44" | 28.50
6'2" x 19.38" x 2.44" | 29.70
6'4" x 19.50" x 2.50" | 31.60
6’5” x 19.63” x 2.50" | 33.10
6'6" x 19.69” x 2.56" | 34.40
6’8” x 19.75" x 2.56" | 36.10
6’10” x 19.88” x 2.56" | 38.00
7’0” x 20.00” x 2.875” | 40.10
From the Shaper
"The Ghost is a board we've been making for team riders and friends for a couple of years now, and finally decided to put it on the "menu" after all the good feedback."
Jon Pyzel
The REAL Deal
Save 15% on wetsuits & surfboard accessories
Add wetsuits, fins, traction, leashes or board bags with your board order. Eligible savings will show in your cart automatically.
Pyzel Ghost
The Pyzel Ghost is a streamlined, refined version of the popular Pyzel Shortcut. The Ghost’s wide point forward outline and foam flow, give it range in punchier surf, while still maintaining a maneuverable shortboard feel.
Dimensions
5'9" x 18.88” x 2.38” | 25.80
5'10" x 19.00" x 2.44” | 27.00
5'11" x 19.13” x 2.50" | 28.30
6'0" x 19.38” x 2.56" | 29.70
6'1" x 19.63” x 2.63” | 31.40
6'2" x 19.75" x 2.69” | 32.80
6'3" x 20.00" x 2.75" | 34.50
6'4" x 20.25" x 2.88” | 37.10
6'5" x 20.38” x 3.00" | 39.40
6'6" x 20.50" x 3.00" | 40.20
6'8" x 20.75" x 3.062" | 42.60
6'10" x 20.88” x 3.13” | 45.00
7'0" x 21.00" x 3.19” | 47.30
Pro Dims:
5’7” x 18.38” x 2.13” | 22.20
5'8" x 18.50” x 2.18” | 23.20
5'9" x 18.63” x 2.25” | 24.30
5'10" x 18.75” x 2.31" | 25.40
5'11" x 19.00" x 2.31” | 26.00
6'0" x 19.13” x 2.38" | 27.20
6'1" x 19.25" x 2.44" | 28.50
6'2" x 19.38" x 2.44" | 29.70
6'4" x 19.50" x 2.50" | 31.60
6’5” x 19.63” x 2.50" | 33.10
6'6" x 19.69” x 2.56" | 34.40
6’8” x 19.75" x 2.56" | 36.10
6’10” x 19.88” x 2.56" | 38.00
7’0” x 20.00” x 2.875” | 40.10
From the Shaper
"The Ghost is a board we've been making for team riders and friends for a couple of years now, and finally decided to put it on the "menu" after all the good feedback."
Jon Pyzel
The REAL Deal
Save 15% on wetsuits & surfboard accessories
Add wetsuits, fins, traction, leashes or board bags with your board order. Eligible savings will show in your cart automatically.
About This Video
Trip Forman breaks down the Pyzel Ghost surfboard, explaining why it’s become one of the most popular high-performance boards on the market. Built for barrels but surprisingly versatile, the Ghost offers a wide range of performance—from powerful, hollow waves to softer conditions—making it a go-to option for travel and the top end of your quiver.
Show video transcript
Trip Forman: Welcome to the REAL Board Loft. I’m Trip Forman, and this board right here needs absolutely no introduction because John John Florence and the WSL are doing an incredible job of promoting it. It’s the Pyzel Ghost, and this is my own Pyzel Ghost 6’3. This board is a good board, and it’s definitely become a very popular board. Based on the performance, it’s one thing when everyone buys what the pro rides and it doesn’t work for them, but people are buying this board because John John’s riding it and because their friends have it and love it.
What’s going on with this board with the Ghost is that Jon Pyzel pulled the wide point forward, flattened the rocker in the front of the board, and then pulled it into a nice rounded pin tail in the back. Originally it was made as a barrel board, a compact barrel board, much like the Short Cut that he makes. This is a refined version of a Short Cut.
What does refined mean? Refined means that if you heated the board up in a giant microwave oven, pinched the nose and the tail, and stretched it out a little bit longer, everything would get stretched, thinner, and a little bit more sleek. That’s what happened with the Ghost.
If you look at this board compared to a Short Cut, it’s a little bit more foiled on the rails. You’re going to ride it a little bit longer than the Short Cut, but it’s going to do a lot of the same things that the Short Cut did and still does. We found that board to be really good in barreling surf but also to have a big range when the waves were softer, and the Ghost does that.
That’s why John John is able to ride the same board at big Margaret River in Western Australia and also use it at average Trestles and have a really good time on it. We’ve surfed this board here at home in Cape Hatteras in barreling beach break and point break surf, and we’ve also taken it on trips and ridden it in that same type of wave but also in some pretty soft conditions. I would say obviously the bigger wave surfing and barrel surfing on this board is impressive and what it’s known for.
I think where this board surprises a lot of people is that if you take it on a trip, like when we took it to Las Flores, El Salvador, and rode it backside in softer conditions, not really big waves, the board still held its own, generated speed, and was fun.
Jon Pyzel recommends this board as a really good travel board if you’re going to a place with good waves, and I would definitely back that up. Another travel experience—Matt Nuzzo from REAL took this board when we went to Fiji this year and surfed it at every wave: Cloudbreak, Restaurants, Swimming Pools—the whole trip. He had other boards with him but kept going back to this one as his main board. It’s a really rangy board—frontside, backside, big, small, hollow, mushy—it works.
Obviously, if you’re in small mushy waves there are better boards specifically for that, but the fact that you can take a board you’re buying for barrels or bigger waves and ride it in those conditions and still have it work is really good.
The other thing I want to say about this board is that compared to other barrel boards, this one has the most shortboard feel. It has the ability not only to paddle well, catch waves, and get barreled, but also to turn. A lot of boards in that category are pretty straight in the outline and rocker, so when you try to turn them outside of the tube they don’t turn as well as a shortboard. That’s why you see people switching boards. The Ghost has the most shortboard influence in that category and has the ability to turn on an open face, and even backside on a mushy face it will still perform.
The last thing to say about this board is the paddling ability and wave catching. You don’t have to ride it oversized to catch bigger waves. You see someone like John John riding a 6’0 when others are on 6’8s, but with this board you don’t have to size up much because most of the foam is concentrated under your chest where you need it to help you get into waves.
Ride it at your performance board volume or slightly above if you’re going to be in bigger surf, but you’d need to jump several liters to notice a difference. For example, I was riding this one and went up to a 6’8 and didn’t catch more waves than on my 6’3. When I went to a 6’10, then I could catch anything I wanted. Going up just a couple sizes didn’t make a difference because the foam is so concentrated underneath you.
The Pyzel Ghost is one of the best boards out there right now from Jon Pyzel. Definitely check this one out, especially if you’re looking for something for the top half of your quiver and a really good travel board for places with quality waves. If you have any more questions on this board, give us a call at the shop 252-987-6000 or look us up online at realwatersports.com/surfing. Thanks for tuning in.
There’s no need to introduce the Pyzel Ghost. John John Florence and the WSL announcers have made it blatantly obvious that this board rips. The Ghost has a worldwide reputation for performing in sizeable conditions. What most people don’t know is how the Ghost still performs in less than life threatening waves.
The Pyzel Ghost features width and thickness placed perfectly under the chest of the paddling surfer, making it an excellent wave catcher. Where the Ghost differs from many similar boards, is its ability to maintain a shortboard feel through turns. No wonder John John used his Ghost at Margaret River, J-Bay and Lowers. Lowers?! Yes, Lowers. It’s not just a paddle and barrel machine.
Tech Specs
•Wide point forward hybrid outline
•Thickness centered underneath chest and along stringer
•Round tail
•Square tail
•5-fin set up
What We Like
We’ve had a good amount of time to surf our Pyzel Ghosts 6’3 up to 6’10 in length. We surfed them here in Cape Hatteras, as well as El Salvador, Nicaragua, Fiji and Mexico. We’d have to say what we like the most about the Pyzel Ghost isn’t it’s dominance in better/bigger surf. That performance is a given at this point. The performance that sets this board apart from its competition is the ability to combine wide point forward paddle power and drive, with shortboard turns and smaller wave agility.
Pyzel claims the Ghost is an excellent travel board when striking surf zones with good waves. Even when you go to places like this, you’re always going to get some sub par days. The Ghost isn’t a groveler, but you can definitely surf it in any waves you’d surf your everyday shortboard, and it won’t feel overly stiff. That’s the difference between the Ghost and most other boards that look like it. The Ghost retains its shortboard feel more that the rest, while still reaping the advantages of the strategically placed foam.
Insider Info
We use the Futures JJF fins in our Ghosts for the thruster set up and then add 3.75” or 4.0” QD2 quad trailers 3.75” or 4.0” QD2 quad trailers when converting it to quad set up. The tailpad on the board in the video is the Dakine Bruce Irons 5-piece. This is the pad of choice for rounded pintails you’ll be riding the barrel on, with your foot placed slightly forward.
Trip’s board in this video is a custom at 6’3 x 21” x 3” at 40 liters. Trip is 6’2 x 220 pounds. The rail foil on the Ghost is such that 3” on the stringer translates to way less than that on the rail, so don’t be scared of the thicker measurements of the Ghost. The rails are foiled out and feel way thinner. It’s that hidden volume under the chest and along the stringer that make the Ghost so magic. Stock dims, Trip rides a 6’5 in trunks and 6’6 in full rubber. He’s also had great results in bigger waves with the stock dim 6’10. The volume is so perfectly placed on the Ghost, you don’t need a ton of it to get into most waves. When you do decide to add a second Ghost to your quiver, you’ll normally find skipping a few sizes is what’s needed in order to make a difference when it comes to wave catching ability. Matt Nuzzo’s board in the Fiji photos is a stock dims 6’3. Matt weighs 170 pounds.
Why you want a Pyzel Ghost:
You’re looking for a barrel board, a bigger wave board and a travel board. The Ghost checks all the boxes.
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