When the second skateboard boom hit
in the 1970's, Rodney was eager to ride a board of his own. He
had been watching the neighborhood kids, envious of their boards.
Rodney had asked his father for a skateboard on numerous occasions,
but everytime, had been told "NO". On New Years Eve,
1976, Rodney decided to ask his father for a board just one more
time. In an article written for Thrasher (January 1996 issue),
Rodney recalls his fathers response that evening: "He reluctantly
made a deal: The first injury I got, or the first time he had
caught me without my pads, I had to quit".
With his fathers reserved blessing, Rodney wasted no time and
marched down to the local shopping mall on January 1st, 1977.
He picked up a black Bonsai aluminum board with precision wheels
and ACS trucks. Prior to this purchase, his father had been concerned
that skateboarding was not a very safe sport. In hindsight, he
needn't have worried. Quickly, Rodney began practicing and learning
freestyle tricks - in full pads. About nine months from the time
he received his skateboard, Rodney picked up his first sponsor:
The Inland Surf Shop.
He started winning contests in his home state of Florida. In 1978,
Rodney blew a lot of the California pros away when he reached
4th place at the Kona contest. In 1979, Rodney took top spot at
the Oceanside contest in California and was immediately sponsored
by Walker. With all this success, Rodney's father realized that
his son had mastered skateboarding. The only problem was, now
his father wanted him to try to master something else. What was
the sport Rodney's father had suggested he pick up?: "Golf,"
say Rodney, with a tinge of disbelief. But Rodney didn't pick
up the clubs and he kept training.
In August of 1980, he received a call from Stacy Peralta inviting
him out to a contest in San Diego. Rodney remembers the time vividly.
"This was to be my last fling." He was 13 years old
and would be competiting with top Sims freestyler Steve Rocco.
The contest was extremely close and the judges kept on awarding
the same number of points to both Steve and Rodney. Eventually,
on the last runoff, Rodney won the contest. It was then that he
officially started riding for Powell Peralto. "After this
success", recalls Rodney, "my father was motivated to
keep me involved in skateboarding."
In the early 80's, skateboarding was very much underground. The
sport had peaked, just like in the 60's and now there was only
a group of hardcore skaters who kept up with the sport. Rodney
wrote articles for Thrasher magazine that explained, step-by-step,
complex freestyle moves. He wound up in 1st place in almost every
contest. In the mid 80's, the sport picked up again, primarily
due to the proliferation of skateboard videos. The Powell Peralta
and Vision Psycho skate videos showcased Rodney's amazing abilities
better than any sequential photo spread found in a magazine. Viewers
were in awe of his command of the board. As Peter Weldrake, owner
of Toronto's famous Hogtown Skateboard Shop, recalled, "In
the mid 1980's, I had a little black and white television hooked
up to a VCR and crowds of people would jam the store in awe of
what Rodney was doing. They had never seen skateboarding like
this before!"
Rodney found signing autographs recently during a Globe tour stop
at Emage's skateshop, in Denver, Colorado! - photos by Lynn Cooper
Rodney Mullen THE KING OF FREESTYLE
For someone who has left (and is still in the process of leaving)
an incredible legacy to the world of skateboarding, Rodney Mullen's
start with the sport was fairly inauspicious. When the second
skateboard boom hit in the 1970's, Rodney was eager to ride a
board of his own. He had been watching the neighborhood kids,
envious of their boards. Rodney had asked his father for a skateboard
on numerous occasions, but everytime, had been told "NO".
On New Years Eve, 1976, Rodney decided to ask his father for a
board just one more time. In an article written for Thrasher (January
1996 issue), Rodney recalls his fathers response that evening:
"He reluctantly made a deal: The first injury I got, or the
first time he had caught me without my pads, I had to quit".
With his fathers reserved blessing, Rodney wasted no time and
marched down to the local shopping mall on January 1st, 1977.
He picked up a black Bonsai aluminum board with precision wheels
and ACS trucks. Prior to this purchase, his father had been concerned
that skateboarding was not a very safe sport. In hindsight, he
needn't have worried. Quickly, Rodney began practicing and learning
freestyle tricks - in full pads. About nine months from the time
he received his skateboard, Rodney picked up his first sponsor:
The Inland Surf Shop.
He started winning contests in his home state of Florida. In 1978,
Rodney blew a lot of the California pros away when he reached
4th place at the Kona contest. In 1979, Rodney took top spot at
the Oceanside contest in California and was immediately sponsored
by Walker. With all this success, Rodney's father realized that
his son had mastered skateboarding. The only problem was, now
his father wanted him to try to master something else. What was
the sport Rodney's father had suggested he pick up?: "Golf,"
say Rodney, with a tinge of disbelief. But Rodney didn't pick
up the clubs and he kept training.
In August of 1980, he received a call from Stacy Peralta inviting
him out to a contest in San Diego. Rodney remembers the time vividly.
"This was to be my last fling." He was 13 years old
and would be competiting with top Sims freestyler Steve Rocco.
The contest was extremely close and the judges kept on awarding
the same number of points to both Steve and Rodney. Eventually,
on the last runoff, Rodney won the contest. It was then that he
officially started riding for Powell Peralto. "After this
success", recalls Rodney, "my father was motivated to
keep me involved in skateboarding."
In the early 80's, skateboarding was very much underground. The
sport had peaked, just like in the 60's and now there was only
a group of hardcore skaters who kept up with the sport. Rodney
wrote articles for Thrasher magazine that explained, step-by-step,
complex freestyle moves. He wound up in 1st place in almost every
contest. In the mid 80's, the sport picked up again, primarily
due to the proliferation of skateboard videos. The Powell Peralta
and Vision Psycho skate videos showcased Rodney's amazing abilities
better than any sequential photo spread found in a magazine. Viewers
were in awe of his command of the board. As Peter Weldrake, owner
of Toronto's famous Hogtown Skateboard Shop, recalled, "In
the mid 1980's, I had a little black and white television hooked
up to a VCR and crowds of people would jam the store in awe of
what Rodney was doing. They had never seen skateboarding like
this before!"
is the 80's progressed, Rodney became increasingly famous. He
has some positive memories of the time: "There was so much
opportunity. My friends were doing well." Rodney wrote in
Thrasher "Skating blew up from around 86 to 91. I felt like
a rock star. I flew on the Concorde." Despite all his success,
however, Rodney recalled some painful truths about fame: "Each
time I thought I got somewhere else, I realized I hadn't gone
anywhere."
Slowly, Rodney entered into the world of new school skating. He
put away the traditional freestyle board and with encouragement
from Plan B's Mike Ternasky and World Industries had Steve Rocco,
Rodney started moving into street skating. His practice paid off
and he can be seen in the 1992 Questionable Video. His blending
of new street style skating with his amazingly technical freestyle
tricks set a new standard and blew many people away.