I love crooked grinds 💘 #Shorts by @Skateboarding Clips - Post Details

I love crooked grinds 💘 #Shorts

Credits: @marcusshaw92 (instagram) 🛹 @martinsstrom (instagram) 🎥 ➥ I don't own this image. I've only edited. ➥ Our goals: Here on Skateboarding Clips we are dedicated to provide you with the best Skateboarding entertainment and community possible! Skateboarding isn't just some kind of sport, It's a lifestyle and a form of art that millions of other people share the same passion for it. Our main goal and focus on the channel is to support and showcase talented Skateboarders of all skill levels at different Skateboarding Spots and Skate Parks around the World. We believe that everybody in the Skateboarding community deserves some kind of recognition, from beginner Skateboarders to professionals! All videos on the channel are edited and uploaded by Skateboarding Clips. ➥ Skateboarding most famous tricks: 1) Ollie 2) Ollie north 3) Nollie 4) Fakie ollie 5) Flip or Kickflip 6) Heel or Heelflip 7) Pop shove-it 8) Bigspin 9) Frontside ollie 10) Backside ollie 11) 360 ollie 12) Varial flip 13) Varial heel 14) 360 flip or treflip 15) Inward heelflip 16) Frontside flip 17) Backside flip 18) Frontside heelflip 19) Backside heelflip 20) Finger flip 21) Casper flip 22) Impossible 23) Hardflip 24) Manual or Manny 25) 50-50 26) 5-0 27) Nose grind 28) Smith grind 29) Feeble grind 30) Salad grind 31) Crooked grind 32) Over crooked 33) Boardslide 34) Lipslide 35) Noseslide 36) Tailslide 37) Bluntslide 38) Nose bluntslide 39) Darkslide 40) Melon 41) Indi 42) Nose grab 43) Tail grab 44) Airwalk grab 45) Rocket air grab 46) Benihana grab ➥ Olympic world skateboarding ranking (male): 1) Nyjah Huston 2) Yuto Horigome 3) Sora Shirai 4) Kelvin Hoefler 5) Gustavo Ribeiro 6) Aurélien Giraud 7) Jake Ilardi 8) Jagger Eaton 9) Vincent Milou 10) Matt berger 11) Jamie Foy 12) Dashawn Jordan 13) Maurio McCoy 14) Manny Santiago 15) Shane O`Neill 16) Angelo caro 17) Felipe Gustavo 18) Yukito Aoki 19) Giovanni Vianna 20) Carlos Ribeiro ➥ Olympic world skateboarding ranking (female): 1) Pamela Rosa 2) Rayssa Leal 3) Aori Nishimura 4) Leticia Bufoni 5) Momiji Nishiya 6) Mariah Duran 7) Roos Zwetsloot 8) Candy Jacobs 9) Hayley Wilson 10) Virginia Fortes Aguas 11) Funa Nakayama 12) Alexis Sablone 13) Gabriela Pereira Mazetto 14) Keet Oldenbeuving 15) Yumeka Oda 16) Isabelly Ávilla da Silva 17) Margielyn Arda Didal 18) Rizu Akama 19) Alana Smith 20) Poe Pinson ➥ Top 5 most influential skateboarders in history: 1) Tony Hawk 2) Andrew Reynolds 3) Mark Gonzales 4) Christian Hosoi 5) Jay Adams ➥ What is Skateboarding? From the 1950s to present day 2020, skateboarding has grown into a multi-billion dollar industry impacting millions of lives across the world as an artform and a sport. In its history, skateboarding has inaugurated its own museums, awarded its own hall of fame and curated a self-documented history cementing a special place in the heart of freedom culture. The launch ramp of 1950’s California lit the torch of skateboarding to be handed off to each new generation over the coming eras. In these decades, skateboarding transcended through ups and downs of economic prosperity and mainstream popularity as different faces and figures shined in the spotlight or dominated the back alleys of urban performance. Between the youth of the world and those aging skateboarders who’ve watched it grow and change, the question of "What is skateboarding?" has undergone a metamorphosis with each passing of the baton. While we do our best to answer this question again here, we take our first push into a larger world. A world defined by the ultimate expression of freedom, movement, and an intimate look at the history of skateboarding. ➥ Skateboarding history: The origin of the skateboard is as ambiguous as the origin of our Universe. There are multiple reports from self-proclaimed skate-historians of who, what and where the first skateboards appeared. It is largely agreed upon that skateboards originated in the United States, first as crates of wood with roller derby skates attached to the underfoot. The earliest models had handlebars attached, like modern scooters but eventually the boxes were replaced by wooden planks and the handlebars scrapped for an experience more akin to surfing. These scooter-boxes were seen as far back as the late 1800s, but it wasn’t until the 1950s when wooden pallets with clay wheels were popularized on the downhill slopes of Southern California. Before commercial skateboards began appearing in 1959, the only way you could skate was by making your own board. These home-made skateboards would seed the DIY mentality ingrained in skateboarding today. In a raw and beautiful way, skateboarding began not from an industry but from the intense desire for one's own self expression. To understand this simple yet profound truth is our first glimpse into "what is skateboarding" and ultimately, what it means to be a skateboarder.