Lockdown spurs 11-year-old to shatter record
The closure of schools in Brazil due to the coronavirus pandemic gave 11-yearold prodigy Gui Khury plenty of time to perfect his skateboarding skills as he became the first person to land a 1080-degree turn on a vertical ramp.
More than two decades after Tony Hawk completed the first 900-degree turn, Khury shattered a longstanding record by flying off the top of a ramp and completing three full spins in the air before landing cleanly and skating off. The maneuver has long been one of the holy grails of skateboarding.
“The isolation for the coronavirus helped because he had a life that was about school, and he didn’t have a lot of time to train, when he got home from school he was tired,” the skater’s father Ricardo Khury Filho said.
“So now he is at home more, he eats better, and he has more time to train and can focus more on the training so that has helped.”
During lockdown, Khury’s family made the 20-minute journey to his grandmother’s house on most days to deliver food and drop him off so that he could train on the course they had built in her back garden. It was on that vertical ramp that the he completed his feat.
He was already the youngest skateboarder to complete the 900-degree turn, a feat he pulled off at age eight.
“I was like, oh my God, what did I just do?” Gui Khury said, two days after his 1080. “I was just like OK, I landed it. Now I am going to celebrate.”
The boy’s celebration was “mac and cheese at home” with his family.
Skateboarding great Hawk landed the first 900 in 1999, nine years before Khury was born.
Hawk was 31 when he successfully completed the trick calling it the biggest moment of his competitive career.
Fewer than a dozen skaters have achieved the feat in the years since.
American Tom Schaar completed a 1080-degree turn in 2012 but on a mega ramp that gives skateboarders a higher speed and elevation.
Khury’s triple spin was recorded by his parents on their phone and posted on Instagram.
“I sent it to all my favorite skaters, like Tony Hawk, Bob Burnquist and Neal Mims,” Gui Khury said from his home in Curitiba, in southern Brazil.
“Some posted it on their stories and some actually posted it on their Instagram. I was like that’s so crazy, because it’s like a once in a lifetime experience.”
The skater’s next task is to keep practicing the 1080-degree turn so he can complete the trick in competitions.
Then, with the confidence that perhaps only an 11-year old can pass off, he imagines attempting skateboarding’s next big milestone.
“1260. One person has done it only but it was on a mega ramp so it will be way (more) difficult for me,” he said.