Freestyle skateboarding


Freestyle skateboarding is one of the oldest styles of skateboarding and was intermittently popular from the 1960s until the early 1990s, when the final large-scale professional freestyle skateboarding competition was held.

Description

The emphasis in freestyle is technical flat ground skateboarding. Often a freestyler will need little more than a board and a smooth, flat surface. Music and choreography have always been an essential part of the professional freestyle routine.

History

1950s and 1960s

Freestyle in the 1950s was created by members of the surfing culture who thought an alternative during times when conditions were not conducive to surfing—surfers would imitate their water-based maneuvers on skateboards when ocean conditions were poor. In the 1960s, many freestyle tricks were derived from gymnastics and dancing.

1970s and 1980s

The following two decades were defined by a progression towards technical, fluid, and more creative routines. Influential freestyle skateboarders of the 1970s and 1980s included Russ Howell, Rodney Mullen, Joe Humeres and Per Welinder. The style changed significantly in the 1980s, when ollies and ollie-based flip tricks were invented and introduced to the discipline, with Mullen playing a significant role in this process.

2000s

In the 21st century, the style has, to an extent, been incorporated into street skateboarding through skateboarders such as Mullen, Kilian Martin, and Darryl Grogan. The mainstream skateboarding media remains focused on street and "vert" styles of skateboarding; however, freestyle has been covered by magazines that focus on other "alternative" skateboarding styles, such as bowl, slalom and longboarding.

2010s & Beyond

While it does not receive as much attention as it did in the early years of skateboarding, freestyle skateboarding lives on in communities throughout the world. In addition to the United States and Canada, countries like Japan, Brazil, England, Germany, and Sweden have hosted freestyle skateboarding .


Companies such as , , , , , and manufacture skateboards and other products specifically designed and crafted for the freestyle skateboarding industry.


There exist several resources for learning about freestyle tricks and history:

- is a wiki-style page dedicated to all things related to freestyle skateboarding.

- is an ongoing podcast hosted by , , , , and , which discusses all aspects of freestyle skateboarding culture since its inception and into modern times.

-Tony Gale runs the YouTube channel .

- owners, Mike Osterman and Daniel Trujillo, each have their own YouTube pages where they teach trick tips and inform viewers of coming projects.

-Popular YouTube channel, , hosted the 2020 "World Freestyle Round-up" amid the Covid-19 pandemic, which featured videos sent in by contestants from all over the world.

- is a unique company which offers insight into the production of custom skateboards. Open Source's owner, , teaches trick tips and shares information on skateboard design and production on his YouTube channel at .

Organizations

“California Amateur Skateboard League” was founded in 1982, by Frank Hawk with the help of two other “skater parents”, Sonja Catalano & Jeanne Hoffmann. C.A.S.L. is where most of the top professional skateboarders from around the world started competing and is still run today. In 1995, professional freestyle skateboarder Stefan "Lillis" Åkesson started the International Network for Flatland Freestyle Skateboarding and, with Daniel Gesmer, produced Flatline and the online version Flatline Online. Following the inception of these initiatives, freestyle skateboarders connected and interacted on a global scale in a manner that had not been experienced previously. The World Freestyle Skateboard Association was then founded by Bob Staton, Åkesson, and Gesmer in the year 2000, thereby attracting further interest in freestyle skateboarding.