Gui Khury


Guilherme 'Gui' Khury is a Brazilian skateboarder known for being the first person to land a 1080 on a vertical ramp.
Khury also holds the record for being the youngest person ever to land a 900, which he landed at age 8, as well as for being the youngest person to compete at the X Games at the age of 10 years and 7 months.
In 2020, he was officially awarded two Guinness World Records for being the Youngest X Games Athlete and for the first 1080 on a vertical ramp.

Early life

Khury was born in Curitiba, Brazil in 2009. In 2011, his family moved to Carlsbad, California, when he was two years old. He started training at young age, being encouraged by his father. He started training at the YMCA in Encinitas, California, at the age of four. In 2015, the family moved back to Brazil, where his father built an indoor ramp for him to practice. He completed his first 540 at the age of 7. Three months later, he had landed his first 720 and became the youngest in the world to land it.

Skateboarding highlights

900

In 2017, at the age of 8, Khury became the youngest person in the world to land a 900, a 2½-revolution aerial spin performed on a skateboard ramp. Tony Hawk popularized this move when he was the first to achieve this feat, in 1999.

X Games

Khury was invited to his first X Games at the 2019 X Games Summer Event in Minneapolis. By participating in the event, he became the youngest ever competitor at an X Games at the age of 10 years and 7 months, breaking the previous record set by Jagger Eaton seven years earlier. At the same time, he became the youngest athlete to land a 900 at an X Games.

1080

On May 8, 2020, at age 11, Khury became the first person to land a 1080 on a vertical ramp, breaking Tony Hawk’s record 900 on a vertical ramp set in 1999. He achieved it in after 10 attempts. Khury performed the feat “in an indoor skateboard training facility built at his home in Curitiba, Brazil, by Green Box,” a Brazilian company. Khury’s father, Ricardo Khury Filho, credited school closures due to the COVID-19 pandemic with providing his son extra time and energy to practice the technique.

Guinness World Records