The Citizen (KZN)

Skateboard­ing boom

SOARS TO NEW HEIGHTS AMONG WOMEN & GIRLS AFTER OLYMPICS

- Sao Paulo

When she saw 13-year-old Brazilian Rayssa Leal win silver in the first-ever street skateboard­ing competitio­n at the Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Giovanna Alves Farias only had one wish: to start flying around a skate park herself.

“I nearly cried. Seeing a 13-yearold girl like me win a medal was so unexpected!” Giovanna said. “Before the Games, I was already interested in skateboard­ing, but after seeing that, I told my dad: ‘Let’s go!’”

Leal’s success is fueling a boom in skateboard­ing – long a sport dominated by men – among women and girls in Brazil, who see themselves soaring to new heights, maybe even at the Olympics.

Right after the Olympics ended in Tokyo, the teen started to test out her abilities at a park in Sao Bernardo do Campo, near the mega-city of Sao Paulo.

Ana Clara Agostinni, who is only 12, had already been working on her skateboard­ing tricks for some time, but the frenzy around Leal – known as the “Little Fairy” – kick-started her desire to put her skills to the test in competitio­n.

“I am thinking about what it would be like to take part in the Olympics, and I am training,” she said.

Clad in her helmet and wrist guards, Ana Clara admits she is also looking for the adrenaline rush that hurling herself off obstacles in the park gives her.

“I love the feeling of going fast and going higher and higher, so I get more confident and try some new tricks,” she says.

Leal first jumped to viral fame at the age of seven, thanks to a

video of her doing skateboard­ing tricks dressed as Tinker Bell from the Peter Pan’s children stories.

Julia de Souza Lima Martins, who is eight, wants to follow in her footsteps.

“My aunt recorded the Olympics, I watched the competitio­n and I’m trying to imitate the tricks,” Julia says at the Sao Bernardo do Campo Park with a smile.

For 20-year-old Dora Varella, another member of Brazil’s Olympic skateboard­ing team in Tokyo, seeing more and more young girls take up the sport has been one of the greatest rewards.

“When we came back from Japan, I saw there was a real bump in interest in skateboard­ing, and I said to myself: ‘Mission accomplish­ed!’”

“There are more and more

skateboard­ing classes for small kids and I see there are often more girls than boys. That’s what is really awesome about the Olympics,” added Varella, who is a profession­al.

When Varella started skateboard­ing 10 years ago, she was one of the only girls out on the ramp, but she says she never worried about it.

“In skateboard­ing, everyone shares the same passion. Whether you are five or 40, man or woman, we’re all treated equally,” she says.

But male chauvinism was certainly alive and well in skateboard­ing in the past, according to 46-year-old Renata Paschini.

“When I was younger, boys said to me, ‘Hey, look at the girl here bugging us’ or ‘the girl trying to pick us up’,” she said.

In the 1980s, skateboard­ing was considered a sport for delinquent­s in Brazil, and was even banned at one point in Sao Paulo by city officials.

“I come from a very traditiona­l family and I ran the risk of dishonorin­g them if they found out I was skateboard­ing. I had to hide my board in a backpack instead of carrying it under my arm,” Paschini said.

In 2009, she created the Associatio­n for Women Skateboard­ers, which organised competitio­ns for women and girls and made sure the Sao Bernardo do Campo Skate Park had hours reserved for women.

The sport also became an outlet for at-risk youth, such as those served by the non-government­al organisati­on Social Skate, created in 2012. –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? FLIPPING AMAZING. Brazilian skateboard­er Dora Varella rides at a skate park in Sao Paulo.
Picture: AFP FLIPPING AMAZING. Brazilian skateboard­er Dora Varella rides at a skate park in Sao Paulo.

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