Does anyone skateboard?

I did through my 20s and 30s, slide gloves and steep hills mainly, skated with Cliff Coleman once, and the Faltown boys a few times. Park and street a bit, but mainly hills and a little racing. It waa before good phone cameras so I only have a few pics and vids.

 
Just wanted to see if anybody skates or has before. I noticed like there's a lot of MMA fighters who have skated in the past (ex. Chris Leben, Luke Rockhold, Nick Diaz, Kron Gracie to name a few) and I feel like there's a lot of similarities between the 2 arts.

If you got any dope skate clips/footy I'd be stoked to check em out!
Skateboard best base for mma confirmed bro
 
I don't really trust skaters. I heard they're d-bags who like to skate at people full speed, veer into their side of the walkway and purposefully shoulder check them in the face. Then immediately get in their face as they're still dazed and tell them they want to eff them up and have their board up and ready to knock them out.
When that happens you need to apologize and be the bigger man otherwise someone dies and the other goes to jail. Is it worth it?
 
I did through my 20s and 30s, slide gloves and steep hills mainly, skated with Cliff Coleman once, and the Faltown boys a few times. Park and street a bit, but mainly hills and a little racing. It waa before good phone cameras so I only have a few pics and vids.



Wow that's pretty cool man.
 
Yeah, in my late 30s and skate a handful of times a week. Mostly skating curbs and knee height ledges by myself in parking lots. Broke my ankle awhile back and am struggling to get my flick/flip tricks back.

I like how it puts you out there in the streets amongst the people. I know most local business owners in my hood, know the neighbors, even know the homeless folks.

I only go to skateparks at like 7am to avoid the crowds and little 12 year olds who rip much better than me. Last time I was at the park alone trying to land some easy tricks at the crack of dawn avoiding people and PJ Ladd, one of the legendary street skaters rolled up also trying to avoid the crowds. Pretty funny.
 
When that happens you need to apologize and be the bigger man otherwise someone dies and the other goes to jail. Is it worth it?

I would totally GTFO of there and hide.

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I owned a skateboard when I was like 10 years old. I went down a few hills with it, crashing and getting nasty road rash each time.

Then I started rollerblading, which I did for a few years. Then I turned 15 and got a car.
 
Don't know if it counts, but I taught myself to longboard last year. No interest in learning tricks, just wanted a way to have fun getting around town without a car.

There are plenty of crazy downhill longboarding videos out there. But, I can't say I would ever do this since, as the saying goes: "Gravity is undefeated."

 
Have skateboarded most of my life. Made flow team for deck company in early 2000s but wasn't able to break into am; a spot never opened and I didn't want to travel to compete. Getting banger footie for company reels especially at famous nugs like El Toro, Hubba Hideout, and Hamburg's Congress Centre, then placing in comps are how you get tracked for team pro spot, typically. Teams will vibe-check you as you come up from flow and am, to add, so it's important you've potential to get along or fit a kind of attitude local to that team.

Have skated with former Blind teams, Geoff Rowley, Gershon Mosley, Donger, Ed Templeton, Ronnie Creager, Chet Thomas, and some others.

Skating is medicine; it's healing. The pain and pride of every trick, every line, every session tunes you in to that very moment, zooming your mind out of all your yesterdays and possible tomorrows. The sound and feel of your wheels rolling over street as soon as you drop your deck and shove off is...like nothing I've ever experienced. I close my eyes and I'm there. It's forever.

As an entry point to MMA, I could see it from a pain tolerance as well as balancing standpoint and catching yourself, or intuitively self-correcting when imbalanced (like stuffing a single-leg), then in turn manipulating your opponent's balance. Have done judo myself under an Argentine (judo is all about balance conversion – yours and your opponent's) and felt as an extension to skating that I'd learnt transitioning/falling really fast despite being great at getting my butt kicked elsewhere.
 
I occasionally long board babypiss hills because I can't slide, so I just slalom and make sure I have a big landing zone. I'm terrible at it, skiing and surfing, but I do all 3 because they put you in the moment and make you focus only on what you are doing/experiencing at that moment and take me out of my own head worrying about hawks and foxes and hunters with silly hats.
 
Just wanted to see if anybody skates or has before. I noticed like there's a lot of MMA fighters who have skated in the past (ex. Chris Leben, Luke Rockhold, Nick Diaz, Kron Gracie to name a few) and I feel like there's a lot of similarities between the 2 arts.

If you got any dope skate clips/footy I'd be stoked to check em out!

Nobody over 30 should be skateboarding.
 
Have skateboarded most of my life. Made flow team for deck company in early 2000s but wasn't able to break into am; a spot never opened and I didn't want to travel to compete. Getting banger footie for company reels especially at famous nugs like El Toro, Hubba Hideout, and Hamburg's Congress Centre, then placing in comps are how you get tracked for team pro spot, typically. Teams will vibe-check you as you come up from flow and am, to add, so it's important you've potential to get along or fit a kind of attitude local to that team.

Have skated with former Blind teams, Geoff Rowley, Gershon Mosley, Donger, Ed Templeton, Ronnie Creager, Chet Thomas, and some others.

Skating is medicine; it's healing. The pain and pride of every trick, every line, every session tunes you in to that very moment, zooming your mind out of all your yesterdays and possible tomorrows. The sound and feel of your wheels rolling over street as soon as you drop your deck and shove off is...like nothing I've ever experienced. I close my eyes and I'm there. It's forever.

As an entry point to MMA, I could see it from a pain tolerance as well as balancing standpoint and catching yourself, or intuitively self-correcting when imbalanced (like stuffing a single-leg), then in turn manipulating your opponent's balance. Have done judo myself under an Argentine (judo is all about balance conversion – yours and your opponent's) and felt as an extension to skating that I'd learnt transitioning/falling really fast despite being great at getting my butt kicked elsewhere.

that’s cool, never experienced this kind of skate culture. You get any clips at any of these legendary spots?
 
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