HOW CAB BEAT TONY HAWK at 1988 SAVANNAH SLAMMA STREETSTYLE
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- Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024
- The year: 1988. Skateboarding was truly at a crossroads and Savannah Slammah, unknowingly at the time, was like a head on collision between two generations. The skate industry, the magazines, and the skateboarding world's collective consciousness was still concentrated on transition, with ramp and pool events being the main focus. But the next generation was street skating worldwide, rising up from the underground, earning more and more media coverage, provoking new events entitled "streetstyle." Participating in these contests you had skaters from three clashing groups competing together: 1) established pros that ripped everything and were adapting to the change 2) new sponsored street pros that has never competed previously on ramps and in pools, and 3) pissed off sponsored pro transition specialists that either could not, or did not care to adapt to the new terrain and format.
No one could have imagine the profound changes skateboarding would go through in the coming years, becoming almost entirely based around street with heavy influence from flatground freestyle, but this was where it all started.
Skaters:
Steve Caballero
Tommy Guerrero
Tony Hawk
Lance Mountain
Mike Vallely
Eric Dressen
Scott Oster
Aaron Murray
Jessee Martinez
Ron Allen
Mark Partain
John Thomas
Eddie Reategui
Keith Meek
Jeff Grosso
Neil Blender
Jeff Kendall
Adrian Demain
Mike Folmer
Per Welinder
Bill Tocco
Steve Van Orden
Jimi Scott
Joe Johnson
Ben Schroeder
kele Rosecrans
Johnee Kop
Chuck Dinkins
Music:
Asylum Party
Awon and Phoniks
Chaser
Delinquent Habits
The Colourfield
Diamondhead
Welelo
Dancing Hoods
Coffee Break Island
Sits Vacant
Humble Beginnings
Reliance
The Count Bishops
The Rescue
Slade and the Wasters
la Danza Moderna
The Expression
Johnny Sevin
Good Riddance
The Professionals
The Collectors
Phoenix
Aimless Device
Additional footage by:
WSAV-6
Jeff Flamer
Eric Caudill
Thrasher Mag
#skatehistory #realskatestories #savannahslamma
RSS's preamble opens my mind and allows me to consider Grosso's run in a new context- that maybe his contest run (displaying his skill, grace, and control combined with a deliberate goofiness) as a reaction against this new wave of skating and this contest format that it inspired. I had previously thought that Grosso just was not "into it" that day and decided to just goof for whatever reason, but now I think maybe it was his way of (maybe a bit of unconscious insecurity coming thru) showing that he was not taking (or didn't want to ) this new direction seriously.
🎯
What stands out to me is that you could see how different everyone's style was. You don't see that too much anymore.
What stands out to me is the absence of Christian Hosoi.
❤
I don’t agree. I have the impression Skateboarding is much more diverse nowadays including style wise
I went to this when I was 16. I went with my friend and his dad and two other friends. We stayed at the motel right beside the Colosseum where they held it. All of the skaters stayed at the same motel. I remember walking by one room and the door was open and all of the bones brigade were sitting on the beds talking and watching TV. We were able to talk with them get autographs and they gave us free stickers. As a 16-year-old kid that was a dream come true. The good ole days.
That is so rad!!
spot on REAL SKATE STORIES, this video has a lot to say about were skateboarding was at this pivotal point in time. Besides the main points you made - you also see "old" street stylists interacting with "newer" street stylists - like Andy Howell (soon to be with NEW DEAL in a couple of years) and Jesse Martinez with an earlier (based in 1985-87 sensibilities) street style (picked up by Rocco for SMA -world industries, but would soon be surpassed by the likes of Jeremy Klein and younger thinkers). Side note - Check out Andy Howells fit (notably the way he wears his backward baseball cap tilted - and then relate that to NEW DEAL deck graphics a couple of years later).
I lived in savannah. After the event our local shop had a couple of the ramps. What fun to see some of the same ramps i skated on. It was a section of the 4 way i do beleive.
Opening with Guerrero, he just style flowed like water- wish I could see more footage of him during this period (even though he was being superseded by numerous up and comers at this point).
Check his part in my movie Goin' Off. Mad slept on.
Crazy how it changed from then to about 1990 when I turned pro.
Cab had a great style 💯
Awesome 😎👍
Rock on !!!! 🤘
I think it started earlier, like Oceanside street style, the Sacramento contests, and Streetsyle in Tempe. Savannah and Ohio Cow skates were where it became obstacle style and more vert pro’s started entering
Started way earlier than that but this was a turning point, only three years later street had taken over.
@@RealSkateStories As far as I am concerned (outside of the skate industry level- skaters on ground level (those not connected with the skate industry) knew by the end of 88 that street was were it was at - center of gravity wise).
@@jamponyexpress7956 My observation from the inside is that the difference in how much of skateboarding's collective consciousness was concentrating on street comparing 88 to 91 goes from 20/80 to 95/5
@@RealSkateStories I was in NY. For about 4 years we had 3 ramps on Long Island, all within a 1/2 hour skate from each other. There was a whole other crew we knew, they were scared to drop in on our death ramps, so we would just skate street with them . Then, dont remember if it was Transworld or Thrasher , but the cover of the mag said "Vert is Dead" That entire street crew quit on the the spot. They took it as skateboarding is dead. I know quite a few others did the same. Kinda backfired 🤣 The vert crew kept skating till college split us all up, then the neighbor used that as a good time to use the Variance law and get our last ramp taken down. Thank god the reissue craze hit and got me back on 20 years later .....
@@woodnbikes Thats wild. Most places it was the vert dudes who quit.
Growing up Lance Mountain was my next door neighbor in Costa Mesa. Would skate with his son all the time as there was a 6 stair right to the right of our place.
TR the skateboarding Historian who shreds, so fn Rad . Thanks for throwing these edits out here for the grems…and the Barney’s ,,,
This made my Saturday morning, thank you. Jeff Grosso was hilarious, awesome historical footage on the evolution of skateboarding and what a great soundtrack, nice work!
This was a weird time. The vert skaters and the am street skaters were better than the pro street skaters? 🤔
Now, a couple of these guys went on to be legends, but one guy did a freestyle run. A PRO street skater did freestyle run, hang 10 dudes 🤙🏻
Grosso was too funny at this contest 😂
Doug Smith all the way! Loved his public domain part!
His style looked so good in Public Domain- shame wanted to see more of his skating (did see some of it later in some Gordon and Smith vid).
Kele Rosecrans @ 16:25 flyout to upper bank was bonkers😳 respect
No doubt. He was ripping.
That launch off the jump ramp up the rail board slide that Gonz did was the best trick on that video in my opinion.
Dressen, Tommy G, Jeff Kendall top 3 for me.
I had a Caballero board with slime-ball wheels in the late 80's
Surely Grosso should have won🎉
TG was the only guy to Ollie grab the whole box. Can Early grabs.
I'm sorry but can didn't beat Tommy.
Tommy was always a bit overrated imo
@@bangmateo7481 TG was way ahead of everyone else mid 80s
They chose not
Wish u played songs from that era
Most are actually recorded in the mid 80s and the others are 80's/90s style.
Crazy 🤣 times mostly embarrassing but definitely some awesome skaters out there. Julian, Tommy Jim Andy gonz jesse and some straight up kooks. Jomi Scott paul van doren? Danforth actually ripped and he mongo kele roscrams is i ripper but you can't tell here. Whii was working at thrasher then and i wish o was there because i could of plaotop 10 gor sure. But at the same time i may of forgihow to skate for those 2 minutes 😂😂
miss og soundtracks
nowadays the black dude would of one guaranteed because he's the only black dude in the event. truth.
So what's it like being autistic?