Thursday, October 4, 2007

The basics of skateboarding

Learning to ollie? Make sure your board has allot of pop in it!
The basics of skateboarding.

After years of falling and much hard work, we have decided to try and break down the basics so that almost anyone can understand and land tricks. Unfortunately we cannot promise that you’ll be landing any tricks quickly, or every time. We intended this document to only be a guide to assist you while you are learning.

First and foremost you will not land any thing without proper balance. Forget sitting on the carpet or grass; it’s completely different when you begin to roll. If you have ever ridden a bicycle, ice skated, or snowboard you will know this. Proper balanced is ultimately achieved while you are in motion. Learning to roll around comfortably on your deck is the key and will ultimately lead to unlocking accomplished tricks. Through out an entire trick, you should be relaxed, knees slightly bent, balanced and most of all feel comfortable.

Once you feel comfortable and you can roll around with relative ease, it is time to have some fun. Try performing some tricks! All tricks stem from the Ollie. The more proficient you become with performing ollies, the easier tricks will become. The second most important aspect to skating is the pop you get when ollieing. When you are performing a trick, the worst thing you can do is pop with your foot flat. This diminishes the height you will receive and make your trick more difficult to pull off. In other words you do not just stomp down your entire foot, you snap with the ankle downwards to the balls of your foot for lift. Just work on maintaining balance while lifting off and snapping that ankle downwards. Getting a crisp pop will lead increased height and better tricks.

After mastering both balance and ollies, it is now time for a bit more advanced tricks. This primarily applies to learning flip tricks. It works something like this, if you want to do a kick flip, your right foot will be on the far side of the tail, while the heel of your left foot would be entirely off and ready to flick outwards. The same will apply for a heel flip but this time you’re popping foot would be on the other side of the tail. In other words, if you are going to flick off the right side, your popping foot would be primarily on the left side of the decks tail. Putting them on opposite sides creates better leverage making the board flip better.

Lastly, you’ll need to learn how to stop the rotation of the board. This only applies to flip and shuv-it type tricks. Depending on the trick you are performing, different feet will stop the rotation of the board. If your board flips, you are going to catch it with your popping foot in order to stop the flip. If you are doing a shuv-it trick, your front foot or non- popping foot will stop the rotation of the board.

If you are having troubles with any tricks, refer back to these basics and they should help. Practice is the only thing that will make you a better so keep at it and don’t get discouraged.

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