Archive for the ‘skate’ Category
Dec 6, 2006
This past weekend my friend Christophe generously offered to host a freestyle skate weekend inside an empty building he has access to. Evan, Denni, Christope, Rosicel, and I had a great time, skating for around 12 hours over saturday and sunday. Christophe’s wife and daughters joined us sunday as well.
Having Christophe, who is just getting into slalom and Evan who is starting to apply his own unique skating style to slalom really made the weekend much more fun than just Denni and myself. I think both Evan and Christophe are hooked on the cones (Christophe already bought two pairs of Sebas!) I ‘ve got tons of video to comb through and make a movie for the weekend (about 5 hours!) so i hope you enjoy the video when its done.
Denni and I are definitely getting better; our skating is more smooth and relaxed, and we each learned a few new things. The real star of the weekend, though, was Evan. Skating freestyle has been his past time for years, but until recently, he only made fun of Naomi for being into those silly cones. Now he’s applying the skills he’s built up over the years to the cones, and the result is unlike anything i’ve seen from either the asian or european slalom scenes. I suspect when people see his slalom skating they’ll start talking about it.
Another great freestyle weekend. Check out the videos:
Winter Warehouse Land
Shoot the Duck!
1 Comment »
Nov 12, 2006
Me, Denni, Stacy and a few others are mentioned in Naomi’s latest freestyle article on inlineplanet.com. Woot!
tags
Posted in Slalom Link
1 Comment »
Nov 2, 2006
We’ve started the US Freestyle Skating Association (USFSA) with a bunch of skaters from all over the country. Its for all kinds of freestyle skating, on and off cones.
We’re still working out our charter, etc, but the basic idea is to promote freestyle skating in the US. Drop on by our forums, and join the community!
One of our first events will be BattleUS, sometime in 2007!
tags
Posted in Battle, USFSA
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Oct 11, 2006
I spent last weekend in the UK for the first annual BattleUk freestyle slalom competition. It was so much fun, and it boosted my passion for the sport of freestyle slalom. I made loads of new friends, got to skate with so many great skaters, and even learned a few things. I got 8th in the free jump which totally surprised me since I wasn’t planning on even doing it. Plus I got some more training time with Naomi, and got to meet Sebastien, whose videos on universkate.com are what inspired me to learn freestyle slalom in the first place. Oh, and I bought a suitcase full of slalom cones for my friends, since they aren’t available in the US.
Let me give you some background, since freestyle slalom is so new to the US. Traditionally, competitions have been run by the IFSA. In these competitions, judges watch all of the competitors perform their “routine” which is about 1.5 minutes. Then they try to rank them using a fairly complex system defined by the IFSA. I’ll not go into the details here, because you can find a number of heated debates about the IFSA rules elsewhere online.
In a Battle competition, which is not run by IFSA, you get placed into groups of 4 or 5 based on your qualification run. The qualification run is about a minute, and allows the judges to spread out the skill level of each group (preventing all the top skaters from being in one group). Once you’re in your battle groups, all four of you go out to the floor. You each take turns doing quick runs of about 30 seconds, doing a total of 4 runs each. This allows you to adapt based on what your opponents are doing, and it also allows you to be less conservative, since each run is scored separately from the others.
When I was younger, I was a competitive figure quad skater, and the figure skating world has a very similar tension that you can see in the slalom world: some feel that the judging system is too restrictive and limits creativity and expression. Using my figure skating competition experiences, I’d have to say that Battle style competitions create a strong sense of companionship and fun, while traditional competitions foster isolating the competitors from each other, and stress. Its not an uncommon thought to wish your opponent to mess up in a figure skating competition, but at BattleUk, I really wanted every one to do great, and I felt like they wanted me to as well. Being on the floor with my group while each of them skated really sucked me into wanting everyone to do well. Instead of sitting on the side by myself, I felt like I was with them, and this made me get excited when they did a cool trick.
During the event I was mostly hanging out with other skaters and everyone just just had a lot of fun. On saturday night we all went out for a city skate in Nottingham, which was a blast, and then killed the night at a local pub. Finally, back in London, Naomi, French JB and I went for a late night skate through London, where I skated on the Queens steps, and she was home, because the flag was up.
As you can tell, I totally loved it, and will be going to more competitions when I can. Next on my plate is organizing BattleUS, and improving my skills, so that I can win more than just the prize for coming the longest distance (Yes, I actually won that prize, which made me feel very welcome at the competition. I got a nice set of slalom wheels and a Robin Hood hat and bow & arrow). If you’re wondering where I placed, its hard to say, since I didn’t progress out of my initial group. I was very satisfied with my performance though, and it was exciting to be the first american to compete in any freestyle slalom competition!
Oh, and a huge thanks to AcidEdge (Jim), Mark and others for organizing and all the other people who contributed in anyway. I can’t thank you enough!
There are a couple videos of my battle group (Olivier, Max, Samy, and Me):
»Mine, thanks for holding the camera Luke! (mpg)
»Miles Video, from the other angle (wmv)
And here’s the video of the finals (Igor, Seba, Olivier, JB):
»From Universkate (mpg)
»From Miles (wmv)
6 Comments »
Oct 3, 2006
I just spent 3 1/2 hours practicing for BattleUk. I’ve been nervous up till tonight, but i realized the best thing about going is that there will be tons of good skaters there who I can learn stuff from. Whatever happens in the battle is fine with me if i get to skate with all them!
So in order to do my best i’ve been practicing. Brian Lipko came out tonight for about 1 1/2 hours which made it easier for me to keep going. I finally got the front volte down pretty well today, and I’m starting to do runs without completely planning them out first, which is definitely good for the battle style competitions. I’ve been focusing on the 80cm cones almost exclusively now… hope that doesn’t hurt me this weekend.
Anyway, wish me luck! I’ve only got tomorrow night left to practice!
3 Comments »
Sep 4, 2006
Just got back from practicing for a few hours. I wanted to spend the night working on the moves themselves, and tomorrow i’ll work on transitions between them. Tonight, i learned a couple new moves (spent some time on the universkate videos page first):
1) One Cone Stroll
2) Special
I tried to remember the front volte from seba’s video, but couldn’t figure it out… hmm sounds like a justification for an ipod video…
The Special is kind of cool. I didn’t realize this till after i started doing it right, but its just the X, but you’re only on your toes the hole time. Being so close to the X, its easy to transition into and out of from the X, and therefor all the other moves that I can link with X.
I also practiced my old moves (Crazy and Mabrouk) and all the moves Naomi showed me at the workshop:
(more…)
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Sep 3, 2006
I just bought my ticket to London for the BattleUk freestyle slalom competition! It’ll be my first competition, and I’m psyched, and a bit nervous!
I have 1 month to get my stuff together and practice, will be sure to let you know how it goes.
tags
Posted in Slalom Event
6 Comments »
Sep 1, 2006
Just posted a new video. Its pretty good, since its not just the crazy over and over and over…
Practicing new moves
2 Comments »
Aug 13, 2006
Dennis, Phila-Jeff & I did Naomi’s workshop this weekend, and it was great! I’m very happy that we were able to organize it on such short notice. Over the two days, I got the basics down for tons of tricks. Before I could just do Crazy and Mabrouk, but now I have learned Volte, Italian, Nelson, Crazy Sun, X, Wiper and the cool Sweep move from Naomi’s video as well as the front stroll, back stroll, barrel roll and a handful of freestyle (non-slalom) moves that I don’t know the names of (one was the grapevine, but Evan had already taught me that). Better still, Naomi taught us some good tricks for mixing moves together, using either Crazy or Mabrouk as a “soup base” to throw other moves into. That way you always know what you’ll do before and after a move, which takes a lot of the mental block out of doing a real freestyle run.
(more…)
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Aug 7, 2006
If you are interested in freestyle slalom, then this is for you!
Naomi Grigg, a frequent medal winner in England’s (and the international) Freestyle Slalom scene, is coming to Philadelphia on the 12th & 13th for a two day workshop on Freestyle Slalom!
I know its short notice, but it was originally scheduled for DC, but we got more people up here, so she moved it.
Details:
When:
Saturday: 9am - 12:00ish
Sunday: 1pm to 4:00ish (Naomi will probably be doing the Sunday skate beforehand)
Where:
Front & Washington. We’ll either meet at the Roller Hockey rink just outside the Rizzo Ice rink, OR the large open area just north of Washington and just East of Front (and under the highway).
What:
its an introduction to freestyle slalom, so even if you’re afraid to skate on the cones, come down!
Cost:
$100 for the two day workshop.
Look forward to seeing some of you!
6 Comments »