the year skateboarding broke
Transcription
the year skateboarding broke
T H E Y E A R S K AT E B O A R D I N G B R O K E Text: Dave Swift 078 Heath Kirchart. Photo: Atiba Less than five minutes before this switch frontside flip was shot in Encinitas, Tom Penny had landed bolts on a standard frontside flip. Photo: Swift Philadelphia’s 1995 skate scene was led by Ricky Oyola. This guy found and skated more spots within that city than anyone else in history. Glass ride to fakie. Photo: Gee 1995, the year skateboarding broke. This was the dawn of a more mature era of skateboarding. For better or worse, skating was a part of the zeitgeist. Aided by the film Kids and the launch of the Extreme Games, we were on the world’s radar, and—with the big pants/small wheels era behind us—we were looking good. The internet was just beginning to ping, and we had no idea how far we were about to go. 080 Spots come and go, but this one being ollied in New York City by Bobby Puleo still remains skateable today. Photo: Blabac 082 East Coast transplant, Josh Kalis, locks into a frontside noseslide on a tall San Diego handrail in his Toy Machine days. Photo: Swift The campus at UCSD in La Jolla was the home of many untouched spots in 1995. Steve Berra solidly catches a kickflip over a newly discovered hubba. Photo: Swift 084 El Camino High School in Oceanside had a seven-stair rail a perfect distance away from this ten-stair rail Geoff Rowley is noseblunt sliding to do a line, and many did. Photo: Swift The mainstream officially grabbed a piece of skateboarding when ESPN debuted their version of a skateboard event in Newport, Rhode Island, originally called “The Extreme Games.” Chris Senn, frontside boardslide amidst an extreme color scheme. Photo: Brittain Danny Way’s first contest (and contest win) after a broken neck kept him from skating for more than a year. SPoT contest, Tampa. Photo: Brittain With speed and confidence, Kris Markovich conquered rails and gaps with ease. Frontside boardslide to fakie, Oceanside. Photo: Swift About an hour after Ed Templeton landed this frontside feeble in Escondido there was a conversation about Ian Mackaye. Photo: Swift 086 In ’95, Heath Kirchart was just beginning to carve his name into skateboarding’s history. Backside kickflip on an Orange County bank. Photo: Atiba Jeremy Klein could overcome obstacles with the best of them. The powers that be tried to skatestop Beryl School in Los Angeles but Jeremy just 360 kickflipped to fakie, and switch manualed over the obstacle. Photo: Atiba 088 In ’95, Jeremy Wray was pretty much the perfect skateboarder—power, style, and guts. Curved rail lipslide in Oceanside. Photo: Brittain Out the car, a few ride ups with some self-encouraging words and a dead locked-on tailslide all the way to the bottom. Chad Muska had it like that in ’95, Hillcrest. Photo: Swift 090 Philadelphia was boiling over with skate talent in 1995. Matt Reason ollie shifty in The City Of Brotherly Love. Photo: Gee Gap to 50-50 from a weird angle at night in 1995? Jamie Thomas making the impossible possible. Photo: Swift 092 Guy Mariano doing a body jar in a Los Angeles backyard pool in 1995? Damn straight he did. Photo: Mountain Hubba Hideout in San Francisco was getting merked by many, including Eric Koston, who nollie noseslid it like it was a curb. Photo: Swift 094 Street skating in San Francisco was being taken to a whole other level by guys like Drake Jones, captured here mid-street gap backside flip. Photo: Blabac Bob Gnar (Bob Burnquist) appears on the North American scene with a vert win at Vancouver’s Slam City Jam. Mute to fakie. Photo: Swift 096
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