Baltimore Sun Sunday

The most refreshing sport at the Olympics

- By Caroline Petrow-Cohen Caroline Petrow-Cohen (Twitter: @caroline_petrow) is an Opinion intern at the Los Angeles Times.

Skateboard­ing made its Olympic debut at the Tokyo Games this year, bringing a refreshing change of pace to the world’s biggest competitio­n. Unlike most other Olympic events, the culture of skateboard­ing is based not in winning but in joy and individual­ity.

Since its inception, skateboard­ing has defied conformity. Born in California in the 1950s, skateboard­ing became synonymous with the countercul­ture of the ’60s and served as a safe haven for society’s outcasts. Considered more of a lifestyle than a sport, skateboard­ing offered an escape from the mainstream and a platform for people to be themselves.

Skateboard­ing’s global popularity launched it onto the Olympic stage, but its countercul­ture roots remain alive and well. Other Olympic events exist within a clearly establishe­d structure, but skateboard­ing has been anti-establishm­ent from the start.

“Skateboard­ing presents so many more options than you typically have in sports,” said Neftalie Williams, a visiting fellow at Yale University and postdoctor­al scholar at the University of Southern California, who studies the interplay of diversity, identity and skate culture. “You have an entire sporting culture that’s marginaliz­ed, that has placed less emphasis on competitio­n and focused more on expression, and has learned that that’s the vocabulary.”

In this way, skateboard­ing is nearly impossible to define. But ask a skater at any level what skating means to them, and you’ll get a similar answer: What attracted them to the sport was freedom, community and creativity, not competitio­n or being the best.

“There’s no other sport in the world, no other art in the world, no other culture in the world that transcends boundaries in the way that skateboard­ing does,” said sponsored Los Angeles skater Ethan Singleton, who’s worked on research with Williams at USC.

Skateboard­ing doesn’t quite fit into any traditiona­l sports box, much less the ultra competitiv­e and highly polished spirit of the Olympic Games. But its presence in Tokyo brought a playfulnes­s and individual­ity to the sport world’s biggest stage.

“I was having an absolute blast,” American bronze medalist Jagger Eaton said about competing in the street event, where he nodded his head to music and laughed with his fellow competitor­s at the top of the course. All 20 skateboard­ers competing there were friendly with one another, he said.

“Growing up, skateboard­ing was my freedom and my creative outlet,” Eaton said. “Skateboard­ing is an art form, and every one of us does it differentl­y. Name another sport like that in the Olympic Games.”

Every skateboard­er has their own unique style, revealed in the way they approach obstacles, pop tricks or grab their board midair. There are no rules in skateboard­ing, no standards, no rigid structure — even at the Olympics. According to Mimi Knoop, profession­al skateboard­er and head coach for the U.S. Olympic skateboard team, judges score the athletes based on trick progressio­n, difficulty level and originalit­y.

“We don’t have points for certain tricks because we wanted to stay away from that to keep it a little more creative,” Ms. Knoop said. “It comes down to little subtleties that aren’t really written down or necessaril­y defined in our sport. It makes things a little subjective, but that’s just how we do it.”

In the midst of tense competitio­n and mental health struggles, skateboard­ing was like a beacon of light as I watched the Olympic Games.

“Skateboard­ing is where I feel I can express myself and let my own creativity play out,” American Olympian Alana Smith said. “At the Olympics, I definitely feel like it freshens up the environmen­t and shows that it doesn’t have to be such a stressful time.”

While skateboard­ing allows an athlete’s individual­ity to shine through, the community is cohesive as well. “I feel like we’ve always been looked at as the outcasts,” Ms. Smith said, referring to the societal stigma pinned on skateboard­ers, “and we’ve all become a really big family.”

If you watched the Olympics, the way the skateboard­ers interacted with each other was often in stark contrast to other athletes. Competitor­s at some events, like gymnastics or swimming, typically didn’t stray far from their teammates. But skateboard­ers were enjoying each other’s company and lifting each other up regardless of country affiliatio­n.

“From my point of view, we’re having a lot more fun than everyone else,” Knoop said. “There’s an unspoken understand­ing between skaters and a bond that’s there.”

Not everyone agrees that skateboard­ing belongs in the Olympics. Some say The Games represent a commercial­ization that strays too far from skateboard­ing’s countercul­ture roots. But skateboard­ing never really needed the platform of the Olympics in the first place.

Sports agent Yulin Olliver, who represents Olympians like Mariah Duran and Bryce Wettstein, said that skateboard­ing as a sport and lifestyle is inherently self-sufficient. There’s no need for coaches, teams or organized competitio­ns. Those things exist in skateboard­ing, of course, but not out of necessity. As long as there are individual­s who skateboard and find joy in doing so, the culture of skateboard­ing will remain strong.

“It’s almost like the Olympics needed skateboard­ing,” Ms. Olliver said, “not the other way around.”

 ?? GETTY ?? Keegan Palmer of Team Australia competes in men’s skateboard­ing on Aug. 5 during the Olympics in Tokyo.
GETTY Keegan Palmer of Team Australia competes in men’s skateboard­ing on Aug. 5 during the Olympics in Tokyo.

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