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The
San Clementean
Ryan
Sheckler 
Sheckler’s
the name,
Skateboarding’s the Game.
by Bill Thomas
He’s
made a couple of movies. He’s traveled to some of the most
desirable spots on the planet. He’s seen both the underside
and over side of the U.S. His face graces the covers and the pages
of numerous magazines in his sport. He’s done demo videos
with the veteran stars of skateboarding, including Tony Hawk.
He has more commercial sponsors than he really needs. His autograph
is a hot item among his contemporaries. A difficult skateboarding
maneuver is named after him. He’s on planes so often he
has to be home-schooled. His email inbox receives more than 700
messages a week, mostly from females. He’s competed in over
70 skateboarding contents. He’s also among the top three
competitors in the world. And he’s only 14-years-old. Who
is he? Local San Clemente resident – Ryan Sheckler.
I first encountered Ryan in September
2002. I was rounding a corner by the stage at the first Skateboard
Tournament at San Clemente’s Steed Park Ralph’s Skate
Court. A huge surge in crowd noise was followed by a small figure
of a boy souring out of one of the skate court’s bowls off
into space with a skateboard miraculously attached by nothing
on his feet, over the stationary wrought iron fence, and landing
right in front of me. The board tumbled to the side.
“He can’t do that,”
I said to myself. “Not only was it impossible; it shouldn’t
be allowed. Kids shouldn’t jump over fences.”
The boy immediately rose, grabbed
his skateboard and ran back into the skating arena. The next thing
I knew, he had done it again. This time he landed squarely on
his board with a confident look of satisfaction. Naturally, he
won the open sponsored skateboard contest with incredible demonstrations
of skill and agility. His brother, Shane, did pretty well, too.
I think he also beat everyone at his 8 to 10 sponsored age level.
Later, Ryan performed another unbelievable leap on his skateboard,
careening down the curvature of a bowl, speeding up the other
side, and clearing the head of a live, 6’3” contest
official. I have a picture to prove it.
This San Clemente-based skateboard
competition didn’t launch Ryan’s career. It had already
started. He’d been skateboarding since before he learned
to read. Starting at four, he had learned to perform the difficult
kick-flip by the time he was six. Spending the next several years
sliding on rails and kick-flipping skateboards so often and with
such skill that, by 10, he had already gained several major
sponsors and was entering contests featuring veteran skateboarders
more than twice his age.
After three international competitions
already this year, Ryan is in second place in the World Cup Skateboarding
(WCS) standings with 1,550 points. Rodil Junior of Curitiba, Brazil
is first, with 1,990. Most recently, Ryan placed third, June 3-6,
in the street finals of the Mountain Dew National Championships
in Cleveland, OH. With a score of 87.50, he was just a whisker
behind second place Kyle Berard of Virginia Beach, VA (87.75).
Champion Rodil Junior was first (88.25). (Perfect score is 100).
At the Globe World Cup event, Feb 14, Melbourne, Australia, he
took fourth; in Vancouver, Canada, Sheckler was 3rd. He’s
so busy with appearances and video making; he’s skipping
the upcoming international skateboarding events in Dortmund, Germany,
and Prague, Czechoslovakia. His next domestic contest will be
the X Games, Aug 5-8, in Los Angeles.
In a skateboarding competition,
each contestant is customarily allotted 60 seconds to complete
an individual routine of intricate jumps, flips, railruns, and
tricks. Each is graded on such factors as degree of difficulty,
finesse, grace, and overall performance. Contestants are given
two to three opportunities to demonstrate their abilities and
receive an overall rating.
What do skateboarding experts write
about him? Here are some examples: After the Gravity Games, writer
Tracy Anderson, identifying Sheckler as “The little man
with the big tricks” wrote: “The 13-year-old prodigy
blew the crowd up today with his clean airs (jumps), ultra-fluid
lines, and his endless trick-combination creativity. It (the contest)
was Sheckler’s from the get-go, scoring high on his first
run and holding the lead the entire three-round contest. With
an impressive silver chain bouncing with each jump, he coolly
busted trick after trick, including in this third run a backside
lip slide to kick flip 180 alley-oop, and a couple of lofty transfers
over the midsection.” In skateboard jargon, this is pretty
great stuff.
In
May 2003, Timothy Nickloff wrote under the heading: “Sheckler
Youngest Ever to Win World Cup Skateboarding Professional Contest
in Vancouver, Canada.” “…his first place finish
at Slam (the arena) has not only earned him the recognition as
one of the youngest skateboarders to win a pro contest within
the WCS, but in skateboarding history, as well. With powerful,
consistent skating that almost seemed on tap, Ryan busted out
with two completely different runs in the finals that were flawless.
From massive kickflip Indys out of the quarter and over the box,
to back flips down the silver rail and frontside flips over the
pyramid, Ryan’s small frame showed the confidence, power
and style of a veteran pro.”
In Thrasher Magazine’s April
2004, edition, Michael Burnett wrote: “Moms love him, punks
hate him, and – with the pads, money, movies and benihanas
safely in the past – most everyone else is waking up to
the fact that Ryan Sheckler may just be the next big thing –
The Prodigy.”
A web-based report recently stated,
“Ryan Sheckler retires from skateboarding…14 long,
hard years of skateboarding and Ryan...has decided to call it
quits…’done it all,’ says a beleaguered Ryan.”
It was April 1, 2004, April Fool’s Day.
By age 12, Ryan had a variety of sponsors,
including Sobe, Volcom Clothing, Tensor Trucks, Nixon Watches,
Almost, Oakley, Boost Mobile, and Yamaha Motorcycles. He had appeared
in motion pictures, commercials and television spots, played two
separate roles in a major film, as a principal actor and as a
stunt double in a costume representing a skateboarding chimpanzee,
MVP 2, Most Vertical Prima released as a video in 2001. He also
had a role in the movie Grind and appeared as an interviewee on
television and cable, including Fox Sports, NBC, ESPN, ABC, MTV,
and local Cox Cable.
Additionally, he shot four commercials
and appeared in countless promotional appearances and skateboard
demonstrations. He’s featured in scores of articles in newspapers
and magazines, both endemic to his sport and mainstream –
including the LA Times and Orange County Register, Sports Illustrated
for Kids, Thrasher, Nickelodeon Magazine, Big Brother Magazine,
Sports Illustrated, and Skateboarding Magazine.
Where has Ryan competed? Overseas,
his event stops have included Australia, Portugal, Canada, New
Zealand, Spain, Germany, and Denmark, proving that, indeed, skateboarding
is now an internationally recognized sport with competitors from
all over the world. Among his U.S. appearances are Santa Monica,
Venice, San Francisco, Florida, Arizona, and Colorado, as well
as the X Games.
By age 13, Ryan had won more than
50 skateboarding trophies including the California Amateur Skateboard
League in his age group. With few additional amateur events to
conquer, no wonder he turned professional.
In the Globe World Championships
in Germany, July 27, 2003, he was in first place until the finals,
where he suffered a severe fall during practice. Later at the
LGS Skateboarding World Championships, he placed first, with a
flawless first run, becoming the youngest world champion in skateboarding
history to win that event. Additionally, he was the youngest skateboarder
to win the overall Van’s Grand Triple Crown in the Gravity
Games in September 2003, with three perfect runs, and last August,
he won a gold medal in the X Games held in Los Angeles.
Ryan
practices 22 hours a week on his own backyard course, which includes
a half pipe, tabletops and several grinding rails. He’s
even developed a trick called the “Sheck-lair,” an
Indy kick flip. Although he loves junk food, his mom makes sure
he takes in lots of protein and good carbohydrates. This year,
Ryan was home-schooled because of his eight-month travel schedule,
finding it harder than real school. He studied during and between
trips with his mother constantly monitoring his work.
Ryan has just finished Tony Hawk’s
Underground Two for Activision, a video game. His whole family,
mom Gretchen, dad Randy, Ryan and brothers Shane and Kane are
preparing for the late July arrival of the MTV Cribs film crew,
which invades the homes of sports and movie celebrities to film
episodes showing what their lives are like.
Gretchen Sheckler, indicated that
skateboarding changed her family’s lives, “Once Ryan
started getting sponsors at the age of eight, and began moving
up in skateboarding ranks.”
The whole family is now totally
involved, and she’s become an authority on the sport. Ryan’s
dad, an engineer, has two successful electronic companies but
enjoys being involved with Ryan, even keeping his own hand in
the skateboard world by manufacturing grind rails for fun.
Shane is an avid skateboarder following
in his brother’s footsteps. Kane, as yet, is undecided;
right now, he likes bicycles and motorcycles. Ryan will attend
San Clemente High School from next August through January, and,
when the international skateboarding season begins in February,
he’ll return to his independent study program. He enjoys
all types of sports besides his current professional pursuit,
and likes to hang out with his friends. No matter where in the
world his daredevil travels take him, Ryan Sheckler always looks
forward to coming back to San Clemente.b
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