Seventeen years after becoming the first skateboarder to land a 900 — the completion of two-and-a-half mid-air revolutions above the ramp — Tony Hawk resolved to throw the trick one last time at age 48. Naturally, Hawk being Hawk, he nailed it after a half dozen attempts.
While Hawk claims this is his last 900, you know its going to be hard for him to resist giving it another go when he turns 50, or even a year later which will mark the 20th anniversary of his history-making spin.
[fusion_title size=”4″]FIRST SKATEBOARD 900[/fusion_title]
When Hawk landed the sport’s first 900 on June 27, 1999 at the X Games in San Francisco, it was still widely considered a pipe dream — akin to running’s erstwhile 4-minute mile barrier.
[fusion_title size=”4″]TOM SCHAAR 1080[/fusion_title]
In the long interim between Hawk’s 900s, young gun Tom Schaar upped the rotational ante by landing a 1080 on a mega ramp — at the ripe old age of 12.
[fusion_title size=”4″]DOWN THE DRAIN[/fusion_title]
Hawk, himself, hasn’t been resting on his laurels. Just last year he pioneered the downward spiral loop — a curvilinear ramp that could find its way into the Museum of Modern Art when it’s retired.
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