Daily Dispatch

Upbeat CT star tells of Olympic dream

- DAVE CHAMBERS

Skateboard­ing will feature at the Olympic Games for the first time in 2020‚ and Capetonian star Jean-marc Johannes is dreaming of being there.

Johannes‚ 27‚ from Athlone‚ will become the first skateboard­er to receive special recognitio­n in the Cape Town Sports Council awards today‚ but his dreams are firmly fixed on Tokyo.

“It’ll be the fulfilment of a lifelong dream to respresent my country‚” Johannes told SportClub Magazine.

“So I’m going to work hard on performing well around the world and hopefully qualify,” he added.

The Cape Town Sports Council awards honour athletes in all sporting codes that fall under the Western Cape cultural affairs department‚ and Johannes is being recognised as South Africa’s most decorated skateboard­er and a world recordhold­er.

He snagged the record by performing 14 “nollie heelflips” in one minute at the Shred Skatepark in Paarden Island‚ Cape Town.

The trick involves using the front foot to push the nose of the skateboard down while the backfoot slides backwards‚ spinning the board‚ before the rider lands on it.

“Attempting to break the nollie heelflip record was one of the most fun and challengin­g things I’ve ever tried to do‚” Johannes said.

“It brought me back to where it all started‚ when I learnt it years ago and tried to lock it down every day.”

Johannes started skateboard­ing when he was nine‚ won his first competitio­n at 11 and was in SA’s top 10 by the time he was 15. He is now one of a handful of South Africans competing internatio­nally‚ mainly in Europe.

He said he was humbled to be honoured at today’s event at the University of the Western Cape.

“It is a huge milestone in my career to be the first skateboard­ing athlete to be honoured at the Cape Town Sports Awards‚” he said.

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