From street culture to Paris Olympics: how Japan’s skateboarding youth turned tide
- Children as young as six can be seen zipping up ramps and grinding down rails at skate parks
Japan used to think skateboarding was a pastime for delinquents but the country has grown into a global powerhouse in the sport and is expected to dominate at the Paris Olympics.
Children as young as six can be seen zipping up ramps and grinding down rails at skate parks all over Japan, with instructors teaching tricks while parents wait patiently nearby.
It is a far cry from skateboarding’s original street culture image, but it is producing spectacular results, with Japan winning three of the four available golds on the sport’s Olympic debut in Tokyo three years ago.
National team coach Daisuke Hayakawa told AFP that the number of skaters in Japan had tripled since. He said his team can clean up at the Paris Games and have a steady production line of talent for years to come.
“It’s become something that kids take lessons in,” the 50-year-old said. “Parents used to tell their kids to stop skateboarding.
“Now parents take their kids to skate parks. If their shoes or boards wear out, they buy them new ones. It has become a very well supported sport.”