Selasa, 27 April 2021

Types of Aggressive inline skating

Founded by company owners/skating legends Brian Shima, Jon Julio, and Kato Mateu and supported by all major skate companies, the World Rolling Series (WRS) links together the best skaters, event organizers, retailers and skate parks and aims to "create a tighter knit community, increase overall awareness and set a higher standard for aggressive rollerblading." The WRS circuit started in 2009 with 10 established professional contests in France, Netherlands, England, Spain, Argentina, Australia and the United States. In 2012, WRS included 100+ amateurs and professional events in over 20 countries.[4]

 


 

IFTT-Inlineskate Community

IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 | IC-00 |


IFTT-Aggressive Inlineskater

WLWI-U37 | WLWI-U36 | WLWI-U35| WLWI-U34 | WLWI-U33 | WLWI-U32 | WLWI-U31 | WLWI-U30 | WLWI-U29 | WLWI-U28 | WLWI-U27 | WLWI-U26 | WLWI-U25 | WLWI-U24 | WLWI-U23 | WLWI-U22 | WLWI-U21 | WLWI-U20 | WLWI-U19 | WLWI-U18 | WLWI-U17 | WLWI-U16 | WLWI-U15 | WLWI-U14 | WLWI-U13 | WLWI-U12 | WLWI-U11 | WLWI-U10 | WLWI-U09 | WLWI-U08 | WLWI-U07 | WLWI-U06 | WLWI-U05 | WLWI-U04 | WLWI-U03 | WLWI-U02 | WLWI-U01|

IFTT-Pecinta Inlineskater

PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII | PII

 

Street

In street skating, also known as freestyle skating, the skater performs tricks by utilizing features existing in a common, everyday environment.[7] This involves skaters grinding hand rails and concrete ledges, jumping stairs, ramping off of embankments and generally turning anything on the regular street into an obstacle, ramp, or grind rail.[7] Creativity is often seen as an important aspect of street skating, since skaters are able to invent or link tricks specific to a unique environment, rather than performing more standard maneuvers on predefined obstacles as in park and vert skating

 

An aggressive inline skater performing a neg acid in Boston, Massachusetts.

 

Park

Park skating refers to skating that occurs in various private and community skateparks. This style differs from street skating due to the specific nature of skateparks, which are designed for skaters to do tricks, e.g. on the top of the ramp (coping). Park skating often emphasizes the technical side of aggressive inline, focusing on the variety of tricks a skater can do and encouraging skaters to connect tricks. A series of tricks connected together in a fluid motion over different obstacles is known as a line. Skateparks often feature quarter pipes and half-pipes, curved ramps, and other features that are not usually found in a regular urban setting. A quality skate park will have good lines — making it easier for skaters to perform tricks – and any highly regarded skatepark will have a good flow, or ease of transition between multiple elements. A lesser known park style, known as Tai chi, Yoga park skating is also popular, and blends the movements of Tai chi and Yoga with grinds and airs, satisfying the requirements of Alberta, Canadas' recent easing of C-19 restrictions. 

 

 An aggressive inline skater at a skatepark in France.

 

Vert

Vert skating is a discipline of inline skating held on a vert ramp. It focuses primarily on air tricks, such as rotations and grind tricks on coping. In this type of skating some of the most famous names are brothers Takeshi and Eito Yasutoko, Taïg Khris, Thumper Nagasako, as well as many others. 

 

Source Article : https://en.wikipedia.org

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar

Types of Aggressive inline skating

Founded by company owners/skating legends Brian Shima , Jon Julio, and Kato Mateu and supported by all major skate companies, the World Ro...

Article