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Academy Member

Tony

Hawk

A legend of skateboarding, Tony Hawk’s 20 year competitive career made him a role model to millions around the world.

The best-known Action Sportsman in history, Tony defied gravity with his outlandish tricks and was acknowledged as the best skateboarder in the world. In 2009 he was the first ever inductee to the Skateboarding Hall of Fame.
Born in San Diego, he was given his first skateboard at the age of nine and turned professional at 14. He won 12 World Championships, 13 X Games medals and invented over 80 tricks. He entered 103 professional contests, winning 73 of them and was second in 19.
His defining moment came on June 27, 1999 when he made skateboarding history at the X Games by performing a ‘900’ - the first ever seen in the sport. He had first attempted the trick, which requires two-and-a-half full rotations while flying through the air, ten years earlier and had been working on it ever since. It was his final target on a lengthy wish list of tricks, which included the Ollie 540, the Kickflip 540 and the Varial 720.
He retired from competition in December 1999 and received ESPN's first Alternative Sports Performer of the Year ESPY award. He was also one of three nominees for the inaugural Laureus World Alternative Sportsperson of the Year Award in 2000. He became a Laureus World Sports Academy Member in 2003.
Concurrent with Tony’s rise in popularity, skateboarding itself has evolved from a street pastime to a respected sport, requiring talent, discipline and training. He has a worldwide body of fans in the United States, Europe, Australia, Asia and South America and, although he no longer skates competitively, he makes regular exhibition tours and appears on television, videos and in computer games.
His fame transcends traditional sporting arenas. He was twice named Favourite Male Athlete at the Nickelodeon's Kid's Choice Awards - in 2001, when he beat Kobe Bryant, Shaquille O'Neal and Tiger Woods, and again in 2003.
Tony was invited to President Barack Obama's June 2009 Father's Day celebration and skated in the hallways of the Old Executive Office Building which is on White House grounds. It was the first time someone had skateboarded on White House grounds with permission!
With the creation of the Tony Hawk Foundation, he has also made an effort to give something back to the sport that has given him so much. Designed to promote and help finance public skateparks in low-income areas, the Foundation distributes funds to non-profit groups building skateparks throughout the United States. He owns skateboard company Birdhouse.
Skating Central Park with the legendary Tony Hawk

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