Chris Miller – Protec

Chris Miller - bluntslide

Chris was last years Vans/Protec Masters winner. He has won many of the contests. I  recently asked him if he felt any pressure coming into this Protec. I questioned him about his preparations for the contest. I wondered if he was working on fresh lines or bringing anything new to this contest. This is what he had to say. – Ozzie

Chris Miller

“I don’t feel “pressured” in any negative sense, but I do care about how I skate and I always want to do well and ride to my personal best. With that comes an internal pressure that is creating a focus on my skating. It’s on my mind a lot right now. I am mentally skating Combi all the time… and I love it.”

“I always want to evolve and do something new every year and I have some new lines and combos this year that I’m really enjoying. Last August I hurt my knee and basically didn’t skate all winter, almost 4 months. Because of that, my greatest feeling is one of gratitude. I have been thanking the universe for my body and the bowl and the ability to fly around it. I love skating the Combi, contest or not.” – Chris Miller

Thank you Chris for taking the time with us & thank you to MRZ for the image. Skate- Ozzie

BIG day out with PLG

PLG- crail

It was cloudy. It had rained the night before. The gutters muttered to me as I picked up the phone and passed around the bad news. No session today. Fortunately, the sun broke through, everything dried and a crew rallied and headed up from San Diego. Pierre Luc Gagnon, Sam Beckett, Chet Thomas & Brian Fick were enroute. Al Brunelle joined me at the house. Bunk was with us as well. We drained the rainwater out of two pools and once they arrived, we quickly moved into turbo mode. PLG is super nice. He was laid back and spent just a brief period of time trying to figure out the shallow end. Once he tapped into the power, he was off & running! There are times when vert riders come out to skate pools. They expect to rip and end up struggling. Many times, the struggle with their own ego becomes the greater battle. Imagine if you will… You can do a head high McTwist on vert but you can barely get a FS grind over a deathbox in a backyard pool. It must be very frustrating.

PLG, Chet, me, Sam and Padawan Al

PLG didn’t really seem to mind the differences between vert and backyards.   He was up to the challenge. He struggled only a few runs and then he was good to go. He let it happen and the fun he started having was evident by the look on his face. He inspired.  He threw down some great crailslides, lipslides and a huge method air that made us all drop-jawed! Sam Beckett stepped up with crails, Smiths and back tail slides, Chet Thomas got his and Al Brunelle ripped feebles, front rocks and BS 360 ollies. We had a fantastic day. I was impressed with how it all came together. Pools are the ultimate equalizer. You either get it… or you don’t. On this day, we all got it! Thanks to the crew for the session & thank you to Brian Fick for the images. Skate- Ozzie

Sam Beckett- back tail

Omar Hassan

Omar Hassan

I’ve watched Omar Hassan and admired his skateboarding talent for many years. I recall his early Blockhead days and his subsequent rise to superstar status. He is always a top contender in any competitive arena. Omar is a skateboarder at heart. He can ride street, vert, pools, pipes and probably anything else that he can find. He is a dominant force to be reckoned with. About ten years ago, there was a contest on the beach in Huntington. The ramp was situated on the sand and the crowd was right up against it. The vert ramp had a huge channeled ‘bar of doom’ at one end. A smaller ramp was set back and situated a few feet from the coping. It created one long unbroken piece of coping that ran from one end of the vert ramp to the other edge. This ‘bar of doom’ was a tall order. To grind across it was gnarly because if you missed, you fell about twelve feet to the flat bottom below. Few stepped up. In Omar’s last run, he popped out onto the deck and stood there. Immobile. His dark eyes scanned the crowd. Finally, he wiped the sweat from his face. The crowd was roaring. Omar took two huge pushes along the deck and threw himself into a lipslide across the ‘bar of doom!’ He spun in a lazy arc like a slow- motion propeller and slammed into the flat bottom below. Dazed, he reached for his board. The crowd yelled his name. He pulled himself to his feet and made his way up the painful twenty stairs to the deck. Omar set his jaw, pushed across the deck and conquered. Indomitable. Will power.

Omar- early Blockhead days on early Thrasher page

I sat and asked Omar about bowl riding, the early Combi contests, the changes occurring in skateboarding and how he views it all. He was open, honest and matter-of-fact. I came away with a clearer understanding of the man and his longevity as one of bowl ridings powerful pioneers. We started talking about bowl riding and how things began for him. Omar related to me how he grew up, his crew and what they had to ride. He told me how his brother would take him to the OG Combi at Pipeline in Upland. He stated that this was where he learned. They would ride parks, pools and anything else that was around. In the late 1980′s and early 1990′s, skateparks were almost done. Omar relates, “Well, here in Orange County, we had Belmars and Chickens pools. They were made- to -skate pools but they were the only things around and they felt like backyard pools to us. They had good transitions and concrete coping. Guys like Salba would hunt and find pools. If I didn’t ride with them, I rode what I could. With Belmars and Chickens, it really opened up a door for me because I had a pool at my disposal all the time. We had a really cool scene. All my friends just got together and rode. Of the many guys from my era, I got a real start in how important carving and riding bowls and pools could be. I had that access and it helped me tremendously. Kids from my generation really didn’t have that early education. Maybe guys like Danny Way and  Peter Hewitt… they had Del Mar, they understood it too. For the most part,  the riders of my generation rode street, vert and mini ramps. That was what they had.”

Belmars bowl channel blaster

Omar and I spoke about the early nineties. He laughingly described the small wheels and big pants era. Omar stated that back then there was only a handful of guys riding vert and bowls because parks were gone and as he puts it,  ”… nobody had bowls and nobody really understood.” I asked him about the resurgence of bowl riding contests. He was quick to point out that it was the Marseille bowl contest that he recalled as being a starting point. Omar went on,  ”I think that Marseille was important because it catered to those guys that weren’t labeled as street or vert skaters. John Cardiel. Dan Drehobl. Alan Peterson. In my mind, these guys were the essence of what skateboarding was all about. They weren’t really contest riders but they ripped. The Marseille bowl contest really opened peoples eyes and displayed something that World Cup and other events were not covering. Contests were mostly street and vert. This whole other side of skateboarding on concrete had been neglected. “

Marseille

slob tweak

Omar told me that “… the Marseille contests were almost like a “get together and skate” type of thing. There was money on the line, beer, food and everyone really amped it up. Thrasher and Jake Phelps were involved as was Heineken. Needless to say, it went off! It started a whole trend for bowl riding. Riders respected each other and had fun. There was less pressure because there were no rules at Marseille. The format was loose. When you limit the riders to four or five runs, that’s only four or five lines. In actuality, it limits the level of skating because there are like fifty lines that could be done!”

full speed feeble fakie

Omar grew up with the OG Combi pool in Upland. Once the new Combi was built by Carge in Orange County at Vans skate park, Omar and his friends rode it all the time. Omar described those early Vans Combi days.  ”We rode the Vans Combi for four or five years before they had the first Protec contest. It was usually the same guys. In my opinion, once you add an event to a place like that, all these people start coming out of the woodwork because the competitive skaters want to get in there and… there is money on the line. People start coming and– you know — training for the events. In the beginning, the Combi had gnarly big coping and it was all lumpy. We rode it constantly and there was nothing to gain. It was only for fun. As far as the new 2010 changes go, it’s easier to ride and user friendly  but I liked it just the way it was… I rode it all the time.”

checking lightbulbs on the ceiling

We discussed the bowl contests that are currently being added to the competition schedule the last few years. Omar told me, “This is inevitable. Skateboarding is becoming more mainstream. People are trying to attach themselves to it and also there is the money aspect to be considered. My favorite events are those that are run by skaters. The North Shore Bowl Jam is an example. The organizers chose a few select riders and there was a raw intensity present in that contest. It was the format. There were no rules.”  Omar went on to tell me that he thinks some of best parks come out of Oregon and places like that. Omar- “They become weathered and rough. A park can never be perfect. The best thing is getting into a car and driving out to nowhere and finding a rough, old bowl. Those are still the most fun parks to go and pioneer. It is the search for that feeling… Whether it is a great park done by site people that know what they are doing or by some local guys that want their own scene, it’s the pioneering of that place. Riding something new. This is skateboarding to me.”

Thank you to Omar Hassan for taking the time with us. Thank you to MRZ for the wonderful images. Thank you to Grant Brittain for the Belmars image. Skate- Ozzie

Omar- tuck knee while I take notes

blood brothers?



Paul Constantineau & Jim ‘Reddog’ Muir- Skatopia 1977


Paul Constantineau-Skatopia 1977

Blood Brothers. You don’t have to take an oath. One doesn’t need a knife across the palm and a varied virus exchange in order to seal the deal. You know what I mean? You better! I have friends that I would take a bullet for. Some things transcend this pathetic ‘so-called’ life we live. A parents love for their kids. Siblings. Brothers. Its all one in the same. My old friends Jim Howell and Scott Ward? I’d run into gunfire for those guys. Straight in….not a micro-second of thought. It doesn’t matter if they would do the same. Its only important that I am willing. I wonder how many people view friendship in such a fashion. Do you think it odd? I don’t have very close family ties. My friends are my life…what few I have. I take that seriously. I saw these images and wondered. Blood brothers? Thanks to Jim Goodrich for the images. (Look at the board. The Wes ‘Bulldog’ Humpston artwork is brilliant!) Skate-Ozzie

Bucky Lasek- Protec

Bucky Lasek- Stalefish Boneless AKA : 'The Stoneless'

I arrived early and watched Combi Protec practice the other day. The Combi sat there in the morning sun looking like a monolith. It was a huge gray monument to the skate Gods. The pool spread out across the floor of the building and beckoned. It spoke no earthly language but its message was clear: “Come!” A few people stepped up to its huge mouth and fell into it with abandon. Some were chewed up and spit out. Others forced her jaws open wide and fed her. Bucky Lasek arrived. His lines were a thing to be marveled. His trick combinations spoke of another level. He was focus and technicality personified. I shook my head in wonder. After the session, I sat with him and questioned his motivations, last years pre-Protec injury, the differences between vert and bowl contests and how his own bowl has changed his skateboarding. It was instructive.

Bucky sat in his chair and took a drink of water. He ordered some food from a pestering waitress and then smiled. “What were we talking about? Oh yeah. Contests.” I pushed the digital recorder closer to him. “As far as competing, right now I think bowl contests are the most fun. It seems more fluid and you can get more out of skating bowls. Vert seems like work. You show up for work and do back to back tricks… it’s something you don’t really want to do everyday.” Bucky paused and framed his words carefully. I waited.  ”Vert is more technical and its about consistency and repetition. It holds its own for what it is. Basically, vertical skateboarding is a chess game, compared to bowl skating… where you are showing up to have a good time. Bowl contests just seem to have a more laid-back vibe.”

We discussed the vibe at Protec and other bowl contests. How the audience feeds off of the riders and vice versa. I stated that this is sometimes lacking in vert contests. Bucky agreed. “There is a rhythm and there is style to bowl skating. There is a particular feeling. Its more open and free.” Bucky spoke of the differences in vert and bowls. He told me directly: “If I could skate just my bowl and the Combi for the rest of my life, I’d be happy”

“Vertical is a technical challenge. I’m always up for any challenge. I’m out there riding with all these young guys that live, breath, eat and sleep vertical.” I enjoy rising to that challenge and doing the best I can.” I asked Bucky if his backyard bowl has changed the way he skates. He laughed and shook his head. “My bowl has definitely changed the way I skateboard! I think it gave me more power, more heart and more love for going fast. It helped me develop and utilize speed. It changed the way I look and how I feel when I skate.”

I sat back and thought of what Bucky was revealing to me. I remember him from way back. He was a phenomenal trick-oriented vert ramp skater that became something so much more. Different. Driven. Dynamic. He is progression. I wanted to know what Bucky felt about the differences between the Combi pool and his backyard bowl. He pondered the question and started in on the food that the waitress brought.

Moving his plate around, Bucky told me that there are big differences to him. “My bowl is much bigger and faster. It doesn’t have as many lines as the Combi. Its like two different loves. Combi will throw much more variety at you. Lines. It’s endless. If you throw in technical tricks when you ride the Combi, there is no feeling in the world like it.” I asked Bucky if he has to apply the brakes whenever he goes from his bowl to the Combi. “Oh yeah…! My bowl is one where you can open up, go big and develop fast fluid lines. You can blast! With the Combi, I have to slow down and work the lines.”

I asked him about last years injury that kept him out of the Protec contest. “Well, right before the contest, I was filming for a Go Pro video at my bowl and I had cameras all over me.  I bailed and instead of knee sliding I jumped to my feet and snapped my ankle. It was right before the Protec and– up to that point– I was ready. It is the contest that I look forward to the most. Protec is the Holy Grail  of bowl riding.” Thanks to Bucky Lasek for taking the time with us. Thank you to MRZ for the stellar image & Thank you to Jamie Mosberg and Skateboard TV for the video clip. Skate- Ozzie

Wrex Cook

Wrex at Charlotte's

Wrex Cook is a ruler… make no mistake. On the backyard plaster, he can ratchet up any session with speed, power, style & technicality. Wrex has been known to throw down the most difficult things in the most insane terrain. I’m looking forward to Wrex visiting out here in California and taking him around to a few pools. Thanks to Aaron Forjan for the images. Skate- Ozzie

Wrex- standing one up!

Brandon Perelson

Brandon Perelson- handout

I have lauded the talents of the Perelson brothers on numerous occasions and I think I will do so again today. Not to put too fine a point on it…  but these guys are inspiring to skate with. I spent the weekend in San Diego riding the DC vert ramp with Jonathan Spooner, PLG, Alex Perelson, Sam Beckett, Brian Fick and a few others. It was a different world. I came from a vert ramp background and once I moved back to California in 1997, I got into the backyard pool thing and never really looked back. This weekend, I found myself floating a few airs and going fast. It was a nice change. I spent today watching Combi practice sessions. More on all of that at a later date. I’ll keep everyone aware of what is happening with Protec. Here is a great shot of Brandon Perelson and a quick video clip. Ripping! Thanks to Corey Cabrera for the video and Brian Fick for the image. Skate- Ozzie

http://videos.theskateboardmag.com/#!/media/59435/channel/recent/brandon-perelson

why take my word on it?

Tom Groholski

For those of you completely in the dark and new, here you go. BS and FS Ollies were done at different places in history and were called different things. Jeff Tatum: JT Air (BS Ollie), Alan Gelfand: FS Ollie. Frontside airs were done in different places and in a totally different fashion : TA & George Orton.  Who was first? Hmmm… Rock-n-Rolls were first done by Tim Marting but Steve Olson supposedly received the first photograph in the magazine. Hence, people think Steve Olson was the first to do them. It is also rumored that Chris Strople–the inventer of the Alley-oop air–did Rock-n-Rolls at this early stage. The Smith grind. Was it done by Alan Losi or Pat Ngoho or Mike Smith first? There are photographs and accounts that support all three. Gunnar Haugo did the Gunnair which is Duane Peter’s Indy air a few years before the fact. Documented. History.  Questions. Questions. To my thinking, there was a huge period of discovery and possibly even these facts are not all together factual. Maybe there was a guy somewhere in Nebraska hucking frontside airs before others! Who really knows!? Does it all really matter?  Credit has gone to others. A place in the sun denied. Some people have knocked back that bitter pill. Sadness. I feel for them.

In Jeff Grosso’s Love Letters,  Jeff Tatum posed the question perfectly: “Who really invents anything?” I have to agree with him. They say that history is written by the victors and that half the world believes what the other half invents. Well… that might be so. The truth is the truth. There are no versions of the truth. Will we ever know? Will the Indy Air  become the Gunnair? Will the BS Ollie become the JT Air? I don’t know. I think that they’ve become ingrained into the collective skateboarding consciousness as what they are. A BS Ollie and an Indy Air. It might be a shame, it might be untrue but its the way things are. I think it is amazing that these things were invented and passed on at all. I think that we are supremely lucky that Gunnar Haugo did the Gunnair. We are blessed that Jeff Tatum did the JT Air. I think we are fortunate that Ngoho, Losi and Smith were ripping and inventing things simultaneously. I think we were privileged to see Tim Marting, Chris Strople and Bulky Olson doing Rock-n-Rolls! I’m happy that Duane did his version of the Gunnair & named it an Indy. This is only my opinion and  I hold the skaters that I’ve named in the highest regard and they should know it. I intend absolutely no disrespect. That being said, I simply thought that some of this should be illuminated.  I may catch a bunch of angst for this. It matters not. One salient fact. The most important thing is that ALL of these guys  collectively pushed skateboarding ahead to new uncharted territory for a billion of us to follow!   Without each and every one of them… things might not be. Here is an epic Love Letters episode on Tom Groholski. He rules…  and you can take my word on that one!  If not, click the flick. Skate- Ozzie

http://offthewall.tv/video/tom_groholski

learning

I started doing rock-n-rolls in pools around New Years Day. I stand up too much, slide down the wall, almost die and bail about eight out of ten attempted. Saturday, Lance and Salba were riding with me. Lance leaned over and said – “Stay closer to the wall and inside the pool. Turn as you approach the lip…” Salba told me to approach the coping straight on. I did just what they said and it clicked. I did a few and the next day Brian Fick took this image. I am happy. I find it interesting that I can still learn at 48 years old. I feel like I’ve accomplished something. I’ve always wanted to do rock-n-rolls in backyard pools. I can die happy. Thanks Lance. Thanks Salba. Thanks to Brian Fick for the image. Skate and learn something. – Ozzie

Jeff Grosso

Jeff Grosso- sky climber above the OC Combi

Power. Ferociousness. I wasn’t sure if Jeff was going to be riding in the Vans/Protec extravaganza next month. I’ve recently heard that he is. I like this. I recall his 50-50 grind to fakie around the whole damned planet in the one contest and his slide and rolls are not to be trifled with. Big on speed, style and power, Jeff can bring the beatdown when he wants. Last year, I asked him if he was nervous on contest day. He was pacing back and forth on the deck and looked over at me as if to say- “Really?! Do I look calm to you in any way?!” To be honest, my question defied a polite response. I can’t wait to see what Jeff brings to the contest this year. It should be insane! Thanks to Grant Brittain & MRZ for the images. Skate- Ozzie

Jeff- OG Pipeline Combi

Jeff Grosso- 24 coping block punisher-