Olympics-Skateboarding embraces roots as sport prepares for Olympic
debut
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[July 16, 2021]
By Steve Keating
(Reuters) - Once seen as a sport for misfits and goof-offs,
skateboarding makes its Olympic debut in Tokyo with the blessing of
one of its Godfathers, Tony Hawk, who offers a cautionary note to
never forget your roots.
Born on American streets by bored surfers looking for something to
do when the waves were calm, skateboarding long ago cast aside its
slacker image as it filtered into the sporting mainstream, growing
into a multi-billion dollar industry.
Despite possessing a global footprint and heaps of the youthful
energy the International Olympic Committee (IOC) is desperate to tap
into, skateboarding is late to the Olympic party following the
arrival of snowboarding, skicross, BMX, beach volleyball and others.
But now that it is part of the Games lineup there is a belief among
many in the sport, including Hawk, that the Olympics needs
skateboarding more than skateboarding needs the Olympics.
"I think it is cool we have come from this unlikely underground,
counter-culture scene to be probably one of the highlights of the
Summer Games," Hawk told Reuters. "I never had a stance that was
anti-Olympics.
"I was always more baffled why the mainstream didn't recognise
skateboarding as something that was a positive influence and a
positive outlet."
Now 53 and a father of four, Hawk says he has always embraced the
misfit tag, but at the same time deftly harnessed the street and
corporate forces pulling at the sport, building a skateboarding
brand that has made him independently wealthy.
That kind of fame and success is usually the kiss of death for
cultural icons, who are quickly labelled sellouts sending believers
in search of a new leader with rebel credentials.
Hawk avoided such a fall from grace by backing up his "street cred"
with NBDs (rider slang for Never Been Done tricks) that earned him
respect on the streets even as he moved into the corporate towers.
At the 1999 X-Games, Hawk cemented his status as a skateboarding
legend when he became the first to land a 900 (2 1/2 revolution
aerial spin), a feat described as the skateboarding equivalent of
Roger Bannister breaking the four-minute mile.
"At the core of skateboarding, especially its deep roots, you can't
fake it," explained Hawk. "The kids who are skateboarding see the
people who are successful at it as legitimate and they have great
respect for them.
"It's not like somebody is putting on a fake public persona to gain
notoriety."
CULTURAL PHENOMENON
When snowboarding joined the Olympic lineup at the 1998 Nagano
Winter Games there was undeniable angst.
The boarding community was conflicted, fretting the Olympics would
suffocate the creativity and freedom that was part of its DNA.
[to top of second column] |
Professional skateboarder Tony Hawk
skates his office ramp with other professional skateboarders as they
use the internet and social network to broadcast their session to
the world during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
in Vista, California, U.S., May 8, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake
Almost every new sport that has
followed snowboarding into the Olympic club has wrestled with an
identity crisis.
Not skateboarding.
Unlike those other sports, who needed the Olympics to get the word
out, skateboarding had already arrived as a cultural phenomenon.
"Snowboarding when it first got introduced none of our sports,
action sports, had broken into the mainstream yet in any significant
way," explained Hawk. "So when that happened it was a sudden jump
ahead from being underground to being on the Olympic stage.
"Luckily skateboarding got to go through this growth cycle.
Skateboarding is as big as any Olympic sport and has mainstream
sponsors, has huge events.
"So it doesn't seem that so far-fetched now that it would be held
under the Olympic banner."
Hawk describes the sport as a big tent with room for everyone.
Yet skateboarding and those who market, sponsor and profit from it
understand that to thrive it must stay connected to the
counter-culture roots from which it was born.
Hawk and one of his sponsors Vans have combined with non-profit
Skateistan to support the creative culture of skateboarding by
empowering children through skateboarding.
He believes the Olympic stage will only extend skateboarding's
reach.
"There are these hardcore or soulful skaters that want to do it on
their own terms, they don't want to be judged by anyone else,"
conceded Hawk.
"There will be these people over here who are high-performance
competitors that will thrive in the Olympic setting and people over
there that don't want to be compared to anyone because it is their
art form yet they can be successful at it in a different way."
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto. Editing by Toby Davis)
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