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Skateboarding Tricks 101
Posted By ZachPlay On 6. May 2010 @ 06:17 In Skateboard Tricks | No Comments
Skateboarding tricks are what drive skaters to keep their motivation and become so obsessed with the sport. While it’s fun to cruise down the street on four wheels, there’s no thrill greater than sailing through the air over a trash can or grabbing onto your board, balancing on one arm at the top of a half-pipe. It may seem like a long way to go for beginners just learning skateboard trick tips, but if they diligently practice each day, they’ll notice big improvements and progress in no time at all.
Skateboarders can do their tricks on the street or at a skate park. All skaters begin learning with baby steps. They may want to hit the ground running and get that kickflip down right away, but in reality, the most successful skaters are the ones who learn the basics of where to put their feet, how to transfer balance and weight around, how to pop the nose or tail to manipulate the board, how to change from switch back to regular stance, how to balance on different parts of the board and who know how to skateboard on the street very well before they learn tricks. The very first trick any skateboarder learns is the “ollie,” which is basically just jumping up in the air with the board. Once this jump motion is perfected, skaters will then plausibly be able to leap over obstacles, hop up onto rails or curbs, and perform a great variety of other technical tricks.
There are five basic types of tricks that skateboarders do. With “freestyle” tricks (like 50/50s, ollies and shove-its), the technical street skateboarder flips and manipulates the board in some way, while balancing on two wheels, one wheel, the tail or the edges of the board. “Aerials” (like 180s, 360s and 900s) may be done on the street or on ramps and involve floating in the air, while using a hand to hold onto the board. Similarly, “flip” tricks (like nollies, bigspins and kickflips) involve spinning the board around in different rotations while in the air. Rail skaters are famous for “boardslides” or “grinds” (like nosegrinds, crooked grinds or 5-0 grinds), which require the rider to get the board or trucks up onto a railing, ledge, curb or handrail. “Lip” tricks (like axle stalls, blunt-to-fakies and frontside inverts) are done along the rim of an in-ground swimming pool or skate ramp and require balancing along the edge of the highest skate surface.
Many avid skaters wonder where some of these popular skateboarding tricks came from. Jay Adams, one of the original Z-Boys, was the first to pull off a lip trick. Some of the most distinguished aerial skaters include Steve Caballero (who has his own trick called a “Caballerial”), Tony Hawk (who was the first to perform a 900 at the X-Games and invented the varial), Jeff Phillips (one of the first skaters to land a 360 backwards), Mike McGill (who invented the “McTwist”), Rob Sluggo Boyce (the first to do a backflip), Duane Peters (who invented the indy) and Lance Mountain (famous for his 720s). Some of the most legendary freestyle skateboarder icons include Stacy Peralta, Tony Alva and Jay Adams, members of the Zephyr Team, who were interviewed in the documentary “Dogtown & Z-Boys.”
There are many different skateboarding tricks to learn and many ways to learn them. Most kids begin by going out every day and getting a feel for their boards, the road and the different surfaces. They read skateboarding magazines full of skateboarding photos that can show each step of a certain trick. Transworld has some of the best photo montages for beginners and advanced learners. Some kids will even attend a labor-intensive skateboard camp, where a trained skateboard coach can show him or her exactly how to complete different series of tricks. The more skaters learn, the more they will be inspired by things like skate videos and competitions featuring the pros.
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