Ollie (skateboarding)

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Modern ollie technique Ollie skateboarding trick.jpg
Modern ollie technique

The ollie is a skateboarding trick where the rider and board leap into the air without the use of the rider's hands. [1] It is the combination of stomping, also known as popping, the tail of the skateboard off the ground to get the board mostly vertical, jumping, and sliding the front foot forward to level out the skateboard at the peak of the jump.

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Julio Pineda with the bowl ollie at Owl's Head Skate Park - October 2019 Julio Pineda with the bowl ollie at Owl's Head Skate Park - October 2019.jpg
Julio Pineda with the bowl ollie at Owl's Head Skate Park - October 2019

The ollie is a fundamental skill in skateboarding. Ollies are necessary to leap onto, over, or off of obstacles. As most flip tricks depend on it, the ollie is often the first skill to be learned by a new skateboarder and typically takes considerable practice to learn.

Origin of the technique

In 1978, Alan Gelfand, who was given his nickname "Ollie" by Scott Goodman, learned to perform frontside no-handed aerials in bowls and pools using a gentle raising of the nose and scooping motion to keep the board with the feet. [2] [3] There are numerous references to Alan Gelfand's ollie, most notably pictures in the 1970s skateboarding magazine Skateboarder. Jeff Tatum is credited as the first person to perform a backside ollie in a bowl, which he initially named a "JT air". Both ollies were invented around the same time and it is unclear if the backside or frontside was done first, but Gelfand's frontside got the most initial media attention.

An April 1981 issue of Thrasher notes that the vert ollie was quickly adapted to flatground use, observing that "skaters now hop effortlessly from street to sidewalk with just a tap of the tail." [4] In 1982, while competing in the Rusty Harris contest in Whittier, California, Rodney Mullen debuted an ollie on flat ground, which he had adapted from Gelfand's vertical version by combining the motions of some of his existing tricks. Mullen used a "see-saw" motion, striking the tail of the board on the ground to lift the nose, and using the front foot to level the board in mid-air. [2] While Mullen was not initially impressed with his flat ground ollie, and did not formally name it, the trick is now considered to have transformed the practice of skateboarding. Mullen himself realized it opened up a second, elevated plane on which to perform tricks, stating that "Skating might easily have petered out due to lack of progress if nobody had invented this trick." [5]

Rodney won the Rusty Harris contest, was afterwards asked by many riders to demonstrate the trick, and later in the year it would appear with the name "Ollie-pop" as a "trick tip" in the skateboarding magazine Thrasher . [2]

The flat ground ollie technique is strongly associated with street skateboarding; mini ramp and vert riders can also use this technique to gain air and horizontal distance from the coping, but half-pipe riders typically rely more on the board's upward momentum to keep it with the rider, more similar to Gelfand's original technique.

Execution of the flatground ollie

Public exhibit at the Exploratorium science museum in San Francisco explaining the physics of the ollie. Public exhibit on skateboarding ollie physics at the Exploratorium.jpg
Public exhibit at the Exploratorium science museum in San Francisco explaining the physics of the ollie.
Video of several attempts to ollie over a rail

The rider begins the ollie by crouching and jumping directly upward. As the rider begins to leap, instead of lifting the feet from the board, they "pop" the tail by striking it against the ground while the rider jumps into the air, which raises the board nose-first. Maintaining contact with the board, the rider lifts the front leg and bends the front ankle so that the outer or top side of the shoe slides towards the nose of the board. The friction between the shoe and the board's grip tape helps to guide and pull the board upward, while the rear foot only maintains slight contact with board to help guide it. When nearing the peak of the jump, the rider lifts the rear leg and pushes the front foot forward, which levels the board and keeps it in contact with the back foot.

The skater can gain greater clearance from the ground by jumping higher, popping faster, sliding the front foot farther forwards (starting the jump with the front foot farther back), and pulling the legs higher into the chest to raise the feet higher. Skaters attempting record-setting ollies even contort the legs so that board and feet are not directly below them, allowing the board to rise at or just below the level of the pelvis.

Very low ollies can be achieved using the same technique, but without the tail making contact with the ground. Even basic flip tricks can be achieved without the "pop" of the tail.

The principal components of an ollie are force and friction. The more energetically one pushes on the rear end of the skateboard, and the more friction generated by the foot sliding along the board, the higher the athlete will travel. [6] Increasing the friction of the board's surface through the use of higher-grit deck tape would thus greatly increase performance, as would the development of the skill to more quickly and energetically slide one's foot along the board.


Records

A skateboarder performing an ollie over a gap TonySruntul HugeGapOllie.jpg
A skateboarder performing an ollie over a gap

The highest unofficial ollie was 46.1 inches (117.0 cm) performed by Jack Asani at Hyde park, Sydney, Australia on the 4th of June 2023 in a small event held by Integrity Skateboard company.

The highest official flat ground ollies are generally performed in ollie contests.

The Guinness World Record for the greatest number of consecutive ollies is held by David Tavernor of Norwich, United Kingdom, who successfully performed 323 ollies on 23 August 2021. [10] David beat the record despite being diagnosed with arthritis in 2015, winning a £5 bet with a professional comedian in doing so. [11]

Main variations

Skateboarding at Mexico City - Ollie - 032.JPG
Skateboarding at Mexico City - Ollie - 033.JPG
Skateboarding at Mexico City - Ollie - 034.JPG
Skateboarding at Mexico City - Ollie - 035.JPG
180º ollie technique. Alameda Central, Mexico City, 2015

Other variations

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References

  1. "Ollie". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary.
  2. 1 2 3 Mullen, Rodney. "The Mutt: How To Skateboard and Not Kill Yourself". Archived from the original on 1 June 2009 via Mumble Magazine.
  3. Cave, Steve. "Ollie - Skateboarding Dictionary". About.com. Archived from the original on 18 October 2007.
  4. "Modern Moves: Ollie Air". Thrasher Magazine. Vol. 1, no. 4. April 1981. p. 18.
  5. "Ollie: the trick that revolutionized skateboarding". surfertoday.com.
  6. Parks, Deborah A. (2003). Getting Physical: The Science of Sports. New York: Scholastic, Inc. p. 45. ISBN   978-0-439-59811-8.
  7. "Maloof High Ollie Finals". Thrasher Magazine. 16 February 2011.
  8. "ollie". Archived from the original on 12 February 2002. Retrieved 20 October 2007.
  9. Powell Peralta (16 February 2011). "Aldrin Garcia Official World Record High Ollie". Archived from the original on 20 December 2013 via YouTube.
  10. "Most consecutive skateboard ollies". Guinness World Records.
  11. Hannant, David (28 August 2021). "Man with arthritis earns 'cool dad' points with skateboarding world record". Norwich Evening News .
  12. Bull, Larry. Hop Nollie: Hollie? via Vimeo.