When I first started skating there were so many times I thought "I've came up with my own trick"...only to find out years later when I was finally allowed to go into the city where the other 20 skaters in all of Nova Scotia were, that the tricks I thought were my inventions have been done years before me. With that said, I can't help but think that in the early day's of skating when kids were first learning what was possible on a skateboard, that there were a few people sequentially "inventing" the same tricks in different places, and was a matter of who got known for it first. I know for a fact that there's sponsor level skaters out there right now with no sponsor or recognition, who no one will ever see. So in the aforementioned "early day's" I'm thinking that not every trick inventor was known-sponsored, and it's very possible that there was someone doing shuvit's in their driveway before Allan and Rocco in the arena over the pipe, but were living in the middle of nowhere(where I live) and stopped skating at age 15 to become a alcoholic fisherman. There's just too many variables involved for me to believe that the same skaters in the spotlight were also the same to invent the tricks. Doesn't that kinda insinuate that all talented skaters had sponsors and recognition at that time? Because that's just bonkers.
I always considered a shuv-it to be anytime where the board turns 180 degrees without you while a pop shuv-it needs an ollie tacked onto the beginning.
I can land kickflips, heelflips, varial flips... but pop shove its will always be my favorite trick ! In my opinion, Ty doesn't invent the pop shove it, but he obviously was a big influence to it.
If you look at Rodney's ON Video from 2002, it shows footage of him in 1979 doing a backside pop shove it. It's even shown in slo-mo. Interestingly I can't think of any other time that I saw him do a backside pop shove it.
greetings from Venezuela! interesting how fs shove it was first, I guess the did fs air Ollies without turning the bodies. Btw, some friends here don't speak English so I have to retell your videos each week, keep the good work!
Dudo mucho que el pop shove it se haya hecho justamente acá en Venezuela. No hay registros de ningúna competencia venezolana de skate durante los 70s, creo que esa quote de Steve Rocco es falsa, o la alteraron de alguna forma
have you ever seen anyone do a pop shuv fs smith fs huv out? i did it for the first time the other day, your channel kind of inspires me to learn about skating and its history and make skating history even if its a personal skating history of learning new tricks
Emerica started it I believe with the “Wild in the Streets” thing they did in Philly. I met Reynolds and spanky at love park, it was awesome. June 21st because it’s the first day of summer, time to skate!
up to 10K subs!! great , not an actual skateboarder, but I've always admired the culture , different games and what not, amazing videos you make as well, keep it up!
I would love to see an informative video about board sizing. Everything I've seen says it's pretty much all personal preference but I can't afford to buy a new complete everyday just to test different sizes. Anyway, I love the channel, super high quality stuff. Keep it up!
8" is the standard right now. Go for it and by the time you will need to change your board you will already know if you want to go bigger or smaller. Don't overthink it because at the end of the day its not that big of a deal when you begin.
THank for the research. I totally agree with you opinion on the ty hop. The litmus test would be: Once you can do the ty hop, can automatically also do a bs pop shove it? Clearly not. The hardest parts of a pop shove it are (1) gaining height and (2) doing the trick while rolling forward. That's what you struggle with while learning a proper pop shove it. It is easy to imagine that people learn walk the dogs and ty hops, but would still struggle with doing a pop shove it while rolling forward. If it is possible that you can do one trick but not the other, then they are not the same. Should you run out of questions to answer, here is mine: Why are skateparks becoming more and more street oriented and also seem to focus on smaller obstacles? All the parks built in recent years seem to have more small stair sets, wheelie tables, rails, but less ramps, expecially steep ramps and transitions. I don't get it. For one thing, if I want to go street skating, I don't need a park. And these new park designs make skateboarding so much less accessible for viewers. They force Skaters to do more early 90s style high tech tricks at low speed, one at a time, with no flow. Whatever happened to going big?
Dude, pop shoveits were like hokus pokus time frame. And what made it a pop shoveit was an ollie lol. Like late shove... love your channel bro, keep up the good work
Ha! Thanks for the info on "walking the dog". I've definitely seen Mullen do it and didn't know what it was called. I learned how to do it in less than an hour last night and none of the kids at the park knew what it was called when I asked if they could walk the dog.
I'm new to skateboarding, but coming from balisong flipping, we have moves that have their own names, but are just strings of smaller tricks. Like a Behind the 8ball is just a 0g Chaplin, a thumb Chaplin, a Zen rollover, and a wrist pass to end it. Granted, we're talking about a similar maneuvers being called different things based on the context, which isnt the case for my example (and I can't think of any). Either way, He didn't pop the board into the air, wouldnt you call the ty hop just a normal shuvit?
so some how when i watch you're videos (btw i love them cuz i really like skateboarding and games) i always get an ad witch has sportland (sports based items scooter, skates) and theres a guy skateboarding showing of
Actually, related to some of the comments below, it would be really interesting to see a breakdown of how the phenomenon of "catching it in the air" emerged. The first time I saw it really clearly was the ender of that video "Turn the other cheek" (c.'91), a cleanly caught kickflip down a stairset. There was also a chris pastras interview in Transworld around that time where he said that was what he was focussing on, with flips and shoveits. But there's even some old 80s footage of Natas catching a kickflip over a flatbar at a demo. That would be an interesting one for sure. There's some appalling non-caught flip tricks in Hokus-Pokus too, even down huge gaps or over trashcans.
I did. I invented it. In or around '87 I was trying something I hadn't seen yet- ollieing high and backside shoving at the top. It felt good to be doing something I hadn't yet seen done...although doubtless it had been done for years by plenty of people. Did anybody care? Yeah- me.
Well if he didn't pop his deck like a real ollie it's just a shove it. Nollie and fakie shove its were done a lot before the ollie. Only if you really pop your tail (or nose) it's a pop shove it. For some reason fakie pop shuv is the trick I get my deck the highest. Except for Ollies of course. I always do it on banks, both directions either fakie or to fakie to show off when skating with a new crowd or at a new spot.
I haven't really been watching for long but I just noticed a few things: Skid plates on the board, and in the impossible video you made you have a mode skateboards sticker on the board. Clearly you're a fan of freestyle, so have you done any videos on things like World Round Up? Isamu yamamoto, Mike Osterman and others that compete? your opinions on brands like Mode and other freestyle brands as opposed to common brands like flip, enjoi, birdhouse etc. And just final notation, what are your preferences on single kick boards?
thats a shuv it..ty page was the first to shuv his board in a 180 direction...not the first POP shuv it of course...but the first recorded shuv it is ty page of colurse..
Isn't there quite a gap between the front side pop shove it and backside pop shove it in terms of when it was first invented? I can't remember who said as much. Then again, maybe it has more to do with lack of footage or claims, as in those early days tricks were done and invented almost every week or month. I'm also 100% confident people underestimate the influence of early boneless and no comply variations that seem to have been forgotten about. Freestyle was big, yes. However there are quite a few tricks from that time that weren't generally done in contests.
I don't think the shove-it really got popped until like 1992-1993. In the late 80's it was sliding on the ground. Watch the New Deal vids. Slippin and slidin an inch off the ground with every variation. The first time I saw someone getting more than an inch or two off the ground was a 411 with some guy I can't recall just owning the trick with a stinkfoot lazy back foot style like kids do real late tre flips now. That was unheard of at the time. Jeremy Wray and Mike Carroll were catching clean kickflips with style while the rest of us were still trying triple varial flips bouncing off the ground. One 411 VCR cassette later, everyone was popping every trick.
I learned how to 'pop' my shove it's in 1986 on a Blockhead Street by combining the street ollie with the shove it: The majority of shove it's I had seen at that time in Street Contests had been done off of the nose with just a whipping motion. A year later in 1987, Natas did a line in Steets of Fire where he did a regular ( no pop ) backside shove it off of the tail & followed with the same type of shove it off of the boards, now reversed, nose. Those started to become known as 'modern shove it's' and yes indeed you are correct-- those trended heavy in the early 90's, becoming all the rage! but I can assure you Pop Shove It's were a separate trick & being done prior. Julian Stranger does a proper one over a hip in 1990's A Reason For Living by Santa Cruz and to me, that trick was already 4 years old at that time. For perspective, when I was 19 at a Contest in 1988, Mike Carrol was in the 14 and under and I was in the 18 and up. So yes kickflips were being caught in the late 80's, just not everyone had perfected that technique. if anything it downgraded in the early 90's as styles, both board and skating wise, changed.
Of course a ty hop is not a pop shuvit. I started freestyling in the 80's and use to both until 10 years ago when I quit skating. There's no comparison. There is video footage of Rodney doing backside pop shuvits in 1979. I'm confident he was the first, and that Natas was the first street skater to do them later.
Hello, hi it’s me steve rocco. I usually do not comment on anything since i have zero social media presence but someone showed me your video and i just finished watching it. First off thanks for doing the work to track down a small part of skateboarding history. But it think your video would have been much better and more honest if you had shown the quotes from Rodney and attributed your source to Mackenzie Eisenhower who wrote the original article. If your intent was to give credit where credit is due on the pop shove it to me thank you. But let’s also give credit to Mackenzie a bit of credit for spending over ten years tracking down the story. And especially to Rodney. It is easier to get blood from a stone than to get Rodney to go on record about anything of controversy. For him to weigh in, using his own words, was a “righteous” thing to do. And that would make your story all the better.
Rad rat in this video you show a clip of people skating in the 60s to be exact 1962 one dude is wearing vans in the vid but vans didn’t come out till 1966 SPOOKY .
I've seen a video of yours where you talk about your ankle injury being so bad, it would've been preferable if you had actually broken it. I feel you, done the exact same thing and it ended my basketball career. Fate intervened and the same thing happened to my other foot. Cruel bitch. My athletic endeavours are over; but it burns at me that I couldn't continue to play ball, and skating is an unrealistic pipedream of mine. Off topic. Still think you should do 'gaps'. They're so infamous they actually have names, lol. Cool channel by the way.
my grandpa did he had to do it over a curb when goo g down hill to survive a gnarly fall true story he revolutionized skateboarding no one knows his name not even me
Hello RADRAT .... PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE do a video about the difference between fakie fs and bs tailslides and lipslides ....EVERYONE gets this wrong and I need your scientific expertise to verify this.
When I first started skating there were so many times I thought "I've came up with my own trick"...only to find out years later when I was finally allowed to go into the city where the other 20 skaters in all of Nova Scotia were, that the tricks I thought were my inventions have been done years before me. With that said, I can't help but think that in the early day's of skating when kids were first learning what was possible on a skateboard, that there were a few people sequentially "inventing" the same tricks in different places, and was a matter of who got known for it first. I know for a fact that there's sponsor level skaters out there right now with no sponsor or recognition, who no one will ever see. So in the aforementioned "early day's" I'm thinking that not every trick inventor was known-sponsored, and it's very possible that there was someone doing shuvit's in their driveway before Allan and Rocco in the arena over the pipe, but were living in the middle of nowhere(where I live) and stopped skating at age 15 to become a alcoholic fisherman. There's just too many variables involved for me to believe that the same skaters in the spotlight were also the same to invent the tricks. Doesn't that kinda insinuate that all talented skaters had sponsors and recognition at that time? Because that's just bonkers.
I always considered a shuv-it to be anytime where the board turns 180 degrees without you while a pop shuv-it needs an ollie tacked onto the beginning.
Same here
I can land kickflips, heelflips, varial flips... but pop shove its will always be my favorite trick !
In my opinion, Ty doesn't invent the pop shove it, but he obviously was a big influence to it.
yoooo Rad Rat I imagine you having an awesome VHS/DVD skate video collection. If you do, you should make a video where you show it off.
I always love the level of research and information in your videos. Keep it up!
Toyota supra
The best TH-cam channel
It's insane how you don't have more subs, with all the effort and research you do, more people need to see this high quality content!
He needs a shout out from a bigger skate channel
If you look at Rodney's ON Video from 2002, it shows footage of him in 1979 doing a backside pop shove it. It's even shown in slo-mo. Interestingly I can't think of any other time that I saw him do a backside pop shove it.
That was a nollie fs shove it
Only started watching your channel a few weeks ago and have binge watched most of your channel. Great work dude. 👍
I love the fan base on these videos:)
Chris Yeah really great
greetings from Venezuela! interesting how fs shove it was first, I guess the did fs air Ollies without turning the bodies. Btw, some friends here don't speak English so I have to retell your videos each week, keep the good work!
Dudo mucho que el pop shove it se haya hecho justamente acá en Venezuela. No hay registros de ningúna competencia venezolana de skate durante los 70s, creo que esa quote de Steve Rocco es falsa, o la alteraron de alguna forma
have you ever seen anyone do a pop shuv fs smith fs huv out? i did it for the first time the other day, your channel kind of inspires me to learn about skating and its history and make skating history even if its a personal skating history of learning new tricks
not trick related, but with go skateboarding day coming up would be cool to know where it came from, and how it progressed!
totally
Emerica started it I believe with the “Wild in the Streets” thing they did in Philly. I met Reynolds and spanky at love park, it was awesome. June 21st because it’s the first day of summer, time to skate!
Thank you Steve Rocco for bringin the front pop love that trick
up to 10K subs!! great , not an actual skateboarder, but I've always admired the culture , different games and what not, amazing videos you make as well, keep it up!
I would love to see an informative video about board sizing. Everything I've seen says it's pretty much all personal preference but I can't afford to buy a new complete everyday just to test different sizes. Anyway, I love the channel, super high quality stuff. Keep it up!
just go to the skate park and ask people if you can just try out their board
8" is the standard right now. Go for it and by the time you will need to change your board you will already know if you want to go bigger or smaller. Don't overthink it because at the end of the day its not that big of a deal when you begin.
i subbed the other day and binged your videos and im so hyped to see this channel blow up. keep up the great work man
THank for the research. I totally agree with you opinion on the ty hop. The litmus test would be: Once you can do the ty hop, can automatically also do a bs pop shove it? Clearly not. The hardest parts of a pop shove it are (1) gaining height and (2) doing the trick while rolling forward. That's what you struggle with while learning a proper pop shove it. It is easy to imagine that people learn walk the dogs and ty hops, but would still struggle with doing a pop shove it while rolling forward. If it is possible that you can do one trick but not the other, then they are not the same.
Should you run out of questions to answer, here is mine:
Why are skateparks becoming more and more street oriented and also seem to focus on smaller obstacles? All the parks built in recent years seem to have more small stair sets, wheelie tables, rails, but less ramps, expecially steep ramps and transitions. I don't get it. For one thing, if I want to go street skating, I don't need a park. And these new park designs make skateboarding so much less accessible for viewers. They force Skaters to do more early 90s style high tech tricks at low speed, one at a time, with no flow. Whatever happened to going big?
congrats on 10k subs man
Dude, pop shoveits were like hokus pokus time frame. And what made it a pop shoveit was an ollie lol. Like late shove... love your channel bro, keep up the good work
another really great video man, keep it up
I saw Ty page do what he called a vertical kick flip in the 70s at Winchester. He had unbelievable balance and board control for his time.
do a video on the gnarliest pro slams in history
Greg Case this one is not necessarily a slam but still... it's brutal. look up inward heel carlsbad slam
@@FakieFSflip augghhh that credit card
@@darntootin897 one of the all time greats. Maybe even theee greatest
Thank you so much for making this one that I requested.
I love your videos! Bringing out everyone's inner skate nerd
Ha! Thanks for the info on "walking the dog". I've definitely seen Mullen do it and didn't know what it was called. I learned how to do it in less than an hour last night and none of the kids at the park knew what it was called when I asked if they could walk the dog.
wow you're going so fast now it's awesome
Quality research and materials! Kudos
3:25 he does a body varial also
I'm new to skateboarding, but coming from balisong flipping, we have moves that have their own names, but are just strings of smaller tricks. Like a Behind the 8ball is just a 0g Chaplin, a thumb Chaplin, a Zen rollover, and a wrist pass to end it.
Granted, we're talking about a similar maneuvers being called different things based on the context, which isnt the case for my example (and I can't think of any).
Either way, He didn't pop the board into the air, wouldnt you call the ty hop just a normal shuvit?
so some how when i watch you're videos (btw i love them cuz i really like skateboarding and games) i always get an ad witch has sportland (sports based items scooter, skates) and theres a guy skateboarding showing of
Actually, related to some of the comments below, it would be really interesting to see a breakdown of how the phenomenon of "catching it in the air" emerged. The first time I saw it really clearly was the ender of that video "Turn the other cheek" (c.'91), a cleanly caught kickflip down a stairset. There was also a chris pastras interview in Transworld around that time where he said that was what he was focussing on, with flips and shoveits. But there's even some old 80s footage of Natas catching a kickflip over a flatbar at a demo. That would be an interesting one for sure. There's some appalling non-caught flip tricks in Hokus-Pokus too, even down huge gaps or over trashcans.
Thank God ty didn't invent one of my favorite tricks
Edit: I can't do front pop shuvs, only back, but I can do nollie front shuvs
Happy 10K subscribers Aron :D
Solid work. I agree: not the same thing; gotta give it to Rocco.
Could you do a video on Dylan rieders impact on skateboarding? Namely giving style greater attention, trendy Instagram skaters and cuffed pants
dude. theese are freakin great. keep it up!
Id say ty hop is just apart of ty Paige's style and the way he did things with his board... And Steve Rocco rules so I can agree
I've been skating for 30 years and I didn't know that. Thanks for doing the research.
Wow
Great content as always rad rat
I did. I invented it. In or around '87 I was trying something I hadn't seen yet- ollieing high and backside shoving at the top. It felt good to be doing something I hadn't yet seen done...although doubtless it had been done for years by plenty of people. Did anybody care? Yeah- me.
the Ty hop counts. it doesn't matter what direction you are going it's still a shove it
this is one of the greatest/comfiest channels on youtube
Ty Page is the bruce lee of skateboarding lmao
Freestyle is coming back from the dead
Rad rat I have question who made the nollie
he answered that
i notice that yeah right was in thug2 as the special was well as spacewalk
Great content as ever
Congrats on 10k
Can ollie, frontside 180, kickflip, almost heelflip, boneless, but can't shuvit. I can never seem to consistently land it.
10k subs yeah!
23K baby!!
Where is that wave background from? It's bothering the hell out of me that I can't pin where I've seen it before
Here's an interesting question for you: How many possible skateboard tricks exists? Over a million?
Well if he didn't pop his deck like a real ollie it's just a shove it. Nollie and fakie shove its were done a lot before the ollie. Only if you really pop your tail (or nose) it's a pop shove it. For some reason fakie pop shuv is the trick I get my deck the highest. Except for Ollies of course. I always do it on banks, both directions either fakie or to fakie to show off when skating with a new crowd or at a new spot.
I haven't really been watching for long but I just noticed a few things:
Skid plates on the board, and in the impossible video you made you have a mode skateboards sticker on the board.
Clearly you're a fan of freestyle, so have you done any videos on things like World Round Up? Isamu yamamoto, Mike Osterman and others that compete? your opinions on brands like Mode and other freestyle brands as opposed to common brands like flip, enjoi, birdhouse etc.
And just final notation, what are your preferences on single kick boards?
thats a shuv it..ty page was the first to shuv his board in a 180 direction...not the first POP shuv it of course...but the first recorded shuv it is ty page of colurse..
Who was the first person to popularize switch and nollie?
A few ideas: James Frazier, Salman Agah, Dan Gallagher, Ali Mills, Armando Barajas, maybe a few others
theres a wednesday with reda episode where he's in a dinner and talks to a guy who fits what you're looking for. that episode was a while ago though.
Who invented the wallride? You should do a video on that.
natas invented the wall ride.
And the Wallie.
You really shouldnt need a video about that
Well done on 10k
Isn't there quite a gap between the front side pop shove it and backside pop shove it in terms of when it was first invented? I can't remember who said as much. Then again, maybe it has more to do with lack of footage or claims, as in those early days tricks were done and invented almost every week or month. I'm also 100% confident people underestimate the influence of early boneless and no comply variations that seem to have been forgotten about. Freestyle was big, yes. However there are quite a few tricks from that time that weren't generally done in contests.
I do this trick a lot in skate 3
Another quality video. You know you're on the up when your channel starts to attract useless fukbois trolling the comment section.
I don't think the shove-it really got popped until like 1992-1993. In the late 80's it was sliding on the ground. Watch the New Deal vids. Slippin and slidin an inch off the ground with every variation. The first time I saw someone getting more than an inch or two off the ground was a 411 with some guy I can't recall just owning the trick with a stinkfoot lazy back foot style like kids do real late tre flips now. That was unheard of at the time. Jeremy Wray and Mike Carroll were catching clean kickflips with style while the rest of us were still trying triple varial flips bouncing off the ground. One 411 VCR cassette later, everyone was popping every trick.
I learned how to 'pop' my shove it's in 1986 on a Blockhead Street by combining the street ollie with the shove it: The majority of shove it's I had seen at that time in Street Contests had been done off of the nose with just a whipping motion. A year later in 1987, Natas did a line in Steets of Fire where he did a regular ( no pop ) backside shove it off of the tail & followed with the same type of shove it off of the boards, now reversed, nose. Those started to become known as 'modern shove it's' and yes indeed you are correct-- those trended heavy in the early 90's, becoming all the rage! but I can assure you Pop Shove It's were a separate trick & being done prior. Julian Stranger does a proper one over a hip in 1990's A Reason For Living by Santa Cruz and to me, that trick was already 4 years old at that time. For perspective, when I was 19 at a Contest in 1988, Mike Carrol was in the 14 and under and I was in the 18 and up. So yes kickflips were being caught in the late 80's, just not everyone had perfected that technique. if anything it downgraded in the early 90's as styles, both board and skating wise, changed.
Shilo Greathouse said on a podcast that Steve Rocco invented the front shuv
Ty's definitely not a pop shuvit, I'm surprised the first ones were frontside as well.
Its funny how you can use a pop shove it instead of ollie to jump... As you dont use your front leg at all lol its intriguing
10240! to the moon. great content!
I invented the trick called a poop shove- it , it's when you poop your pants while doing a pop shove- it
The Real Goopy Goop and I invented the dick flip, cock shuvit and the anal air. where's our vid??
ellisdtrails420 right
i invented the kickflop.
it's kickflip, but you fall and die.
i'm actually dead rn.
mr. rat do u think rodney mullen should enter the berrics
you will get a job in a musem on day hope to see you on the history of skateboarding museum tour
Of course a ty hop is not a pop shuvit. I started freestyling in the 80's and use to both until 10 years ago when I quit skating. There's no comparison. There is video footage of Rodney doing backside pop shuvits in 1979. I'm confident he was the first, and that Natas was the first street skater to do them later.
Hello, hi it’s me steve rocco. I usually do not comment on anything since i have zero social media presence but someone showed me your video and i just finished watching it. First off thanks for doing the work to track down a small part of skateboarding history. But it think your video would have been much better and more honest if you had shown the quotes from Rodney and attributed your source to Mackenzie Eisenhower who wrote the original article. If your intent was to give credit where credit is due on the pop shove it to me thank you. But let’s also give credit to Mackenzie a bit of credit for spending over ten years tracking down the story. And especially to Rodney. It is easier to get blood from a stone than to get Rodney to go on record about anything of controversy. For him to weigh in, using his own words, was a “righteous” thing to do. And that would make your story all the better.
Ty page is now dead apparently
Just 3 days after this video was uploaded. Weird.
Rad rat in this video you show a clip of people skating in the 60s to be exact 1962 one dude is wearing vans in the vid but vans didn’t come out till 1966 SPOOKY .
10k bro!
Make a video of you skating
No way he was doing front shoves over shit before the pop shove it was invented
I was confused bc he says over a 3-4” pipe
why don't you see more people skate high tops?
Jesus, Ty Page just died.
Dubai was liiiit! Me and ma boi Rocco was goin round and round. Rocco ma boiii
Ay 10k subs
A Ty-Hop is a manual to shove-it?
I've seen a video of yours where you talk about your ankle injury being so bad, it would've been preferable if you had actually broken it.
I feel you, done the exact same thing and it ended my basketball career.
Fate intervened and the same thing happened to my other foot. Cruel bitch.
My athletic endeavours are over; but it burns at me that I couldn't continue to play ball, and skating is an unrealistic pipedream of mine.
Off topic.
Still think you should do 'gaps'.
They're so infamous they actually have names, lol.
Cool channel by the way.
great video
Does anyone know who invented the tre-flip
Rodney mullen
Ty Page died 01. 06 . 2017 [*]
Rocco's hardly comes with any pop in it....
my grandpa did he had to do it over a curb when goo g down hill to survive a gnarly fall true story he revolutionized skateboarding no one knows his name not even me
720 shuvs in the 80's , wow
They didn't look good
it's pretty clear Ty created the pop shove it. where you're rolling after doesn't really matter. lmao
Shove but no pop
who invented tre flip / 360 flip?
rodney.
xxxax31xxx ah thanks!
Hello RADRAT .... PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE do a video about the difference between fakie fs and bs tailslides and lipslides ....EVERYONE gets this wrong and I need your scientific expertise to verify this.
RIP TY PAGE
I wish I could go and skate but I hit myself in the shin with a hatchet :']
rip ty page
Tys doest count. Pop it and preferrable down stairs.
Its almost the most natural trick I say some kid in the 50s
Ty hop was not a shuvit
I feel as if Ty Paige is kind of taking credit for stuff that’s not his, I mean he’s kind of being dramatic.