Thursday, November 24, 2011

Halloween Mystery Outlaw 2011

The Halloween Outlaw is SLC’s dopest skateboard race. It’s always had its tricks, and definitely its payout in treats. This year, featured on the University of Utah campus, the race had three parts. First there was qualifying, which was a surprise Chinese-downhill style race that started from a packed public transit train car. With ‘Ready-Set-Go!’ determined by the opening of the Trax trains doors, it was a mad dash through the medical center parking lots, past a single security guard, up a flight of stairs, out the parking garage, and down through the dorms to the finish line at the far end of the Legacy Bridge. After crossing the finish, racers received a qualifying number that respected the order they crossed the line.

Jake Wilkinson Photo: Andrew Madden

Matais, Eric Albee Photo: Andrew Madden

Micah Green, Luis Valladares Photo: Andrew Madden

Knox Heslop Photo: Nicholas Murphy

Micah Green Photo: Nicholas Murphy

Photo: Andrew Madden

The next portion of racing was a mini heat series down three different routes on the U’s HPER (Hyper) Highway. Based off the racers numbers, riders were assigned into three four-man heats ((1heat+4people) X 3) with fresh faces on the starting line for every round. Racers were not racing anybody they had before and nobody was eliminated because there was no disqualification. Everybody accumulated points based on what position they finished on each course.

University of Utah Campus HPER ‘Hyper-Highway’

Photo: Andrew Madden

Each round started with a single kick off the line to lower the playing field and keep competition tight. The courses were tricky enough alone, but being pushed into racing with riders this close to you is never the same thing twice.

Todd Smith, Eric Albee Photo: Nicholas Murphy

Ty Gregg leads Todd Smith Jake Macintosh Photo: Andrew Madden

Colton Anderson, Knox Heslop Photo: Andrew Madden

Jake Wilkinson, Andrew Baird Photo: Andrew Madden

Tommy Watson Photo: Andrew Madden

Eric Albee leads Todd Smith, Ty Greg Photo: Andrew Madden

Zac Baca, Jake Wilkinson Photo: Nicholas Murphy

Knox Heslop leads Micah Green and Andrew Baird Photo: Nicholas Murphy

Kyler Bagley Photo: Nicholas Murphy

Tommy Watson leads Jake Wilkinson, Dorian Rosen Photo: Nicholas Murphy

Tommy Watson leads Jake Wilkinson and Dorian Rosen Photo: Nicholas Murphy
Eric Bremer leads Eric Albee and Brock Warren Photo: Andrew Madden

Niklaus Parcell, EK Shaffer Photo: Andrew Madden

Jacob Macintosh, Dorian Rosen Photo: Andrew Madden

Zac Baca, Todd Smith Photo: Andrew Madden

Andrew Baird, Knox Heslop Photo: Andrew Madden

Eric Bremer, Tommy Watson Photo: Andrew Madden

Ty Greg, Jacob Macintosh, Todd Smith Photo: Andrew Madden

Being a cat can be fast, too.


Kyler Bagley Photo: Andrew Madden


Todd Smith Photo: Andrew Madden

Photo: Andrew Madden

At the end of the three rounds, racers tallied up their points and the top eight finalists were announced. Lastly there was a consolation/final round held from the top of Hyper-Highway. It was a one push start down home run past the student bookstore, to the finish line which was crossing a drain gate under a bridge that leads to the Rice Eccles Stadium parking lot. There were the four consolation finalists and four top finalists, who in the end had the lowest number of points to their name.


Eric Albee Photo: Andrew Madden

Brock Warren Photo: Andre Madden

Dorian Rosen Photo: Andrew Madden

Dorian Rosen, Matais Photo: Andrew Madden

The horn was blown for the loser’s bracket to race the course in a Chinese-downhill style fashion. With only a minute’s time passed the horn was blown again for consi’s and very quickly again thereafter for finalists. This round of finals was designed with a very high sketch-factor in mind. As racers went down the course, they were forced to make passes and take lines through the downhilling losers to hold the lead of their own pack to the finish. However, not all losers ‘lost,’ some did make it passed the line to clap and cheer on the finalists before they finished on their own.

Photo: Nicholas Murphy

With the line at the entrance of the tunnel, this finish was tight with Tommy Watson taking first!

Photo: Nicholas Murphy

First Place: Tommy Watson
Second Place: Jake Wilkinson
Third Place Zac Baca
Fourth Place: Doug Tolman

Photo: Nicholas Murphy

Fifth Place: Eric Bremer
Sixth Place: Jacob Mcintosh
Seventh Place: Niklaus Parcell
Eighth Place: Todd Smith

Photo: Nicholas Murphy

Thank you Sector 9 Skateboards for the gear and prizes for the event!
Also thank you to AstroSlide Pucks, Nersh Wheels, and Gunmetal Truck MFG for swag and prizes as well.

Photo: Nicholas Murphy

Ek Shaffer won the event for the for best costume. Category sponsored by Drang Longboards

Photo: Andrew Madden

Rocking some red Ronin Trucks with a Ricsh on top, Tommy Watson got out in front and won finals using a slalom style wiggle-pump method.


Photo: Andrew Madden

This grom, Jake Wilkinson, taking second place, lives up to FBGM all day e’ry day. There isn’t much more that needs to be said about him.


Photo: Nicholas Murphy

Officer Dick appeared to shut down the event, but chased skaters all day until he found himself taking 3rd place in race. No titles were awarded until after admitting to identity fraud and claimed Zachery Baca as his true self.


Photo: Nicholas Murphy

Thank you to everyone who dressed up. This race was meant to be fun and I appreciate those who took their own time to make it that way. :)

Thursday, November 10, 2011

2011 Squaw Peak Outlaw


Mount. Timpanogos , Provo, Utah Photo: Nicolas Murphy

This year was definitely for the dedicated racers, and those who really wanted skate. To even be out participating in these conditions meant that you really wanted something. Whether it was to be a winner, the most steezy or to simply lurk the scene, nobody there was letting the bitter cold slow them down.



Portland local and downhill skateboarding world rednowned photographer Jon Huey shaking hands and meeting new faces.
Photo: Chris Campbell

Downhill skateboarding is such a wonderful thing, with so many locations with even more familiar faces. With all the guests that came to town, the meet and greet sesh didn’t seem, even though it did we all were made friends, to return another day.



Huddling around the blasting heater. Photo: Chris Campbell

The conditions were terrible, it was so cold and freezing. People were wearing jackets over and under the leathers, and filling any open space around the fire pits. There was even a ‘blasting heating thing’ that came in handy for de-thawing people’s sleds back into skateboards.



Zac Baca Photo: Nicholas Murphy

Flying through the freezing cold, SL,UT local Zac Baca rocks an unzipped overcoat for some extra steeze.



SL,UT Eric Albee Photo: Chris Campbell

The road conditions, if you could imagine, weren’t much better at all. The road was patchy to the depth of three. In some sections it was dry, you’d think that’s rad, but the road was still sub-zero, and skating on such extreme conditions your wheels do not respond the same. Though, it’s all the same when you’re mindset it to go fast. Then there was the wet patches of the course that could have been anywhere from a color change to a puddle. Skating turned to splashing in sections where the water was unavoidable. Finally, there was literal ice and snow on the road. The course alone is technical enough, but threading the needle in and out of turns on water through ice was scary to say the least.



Alex Silva and Zac Baca Photo: Chris Campbell

At Squaw this year the skaters turned shredders and became frozen-solid standing on their skateboards going fast for so long. Especially in the faster sweeping section of the course where you can really feel the wind fully surround your body. Speeds fast enough to make you feel held in place by the cold airflow while diving down and around turns.



Micah Green Chip Wood Photo: Nicholas Murphy

Tight and wet… this came out wrong.



UT Locals Trevor, Andrew, Jake and Brock Photo: JJ Slack

Brock Warren cleaning leading the pack toeside through lookout corner on a practice run. The first day of the event was all freeride fun runs. With no competition and no worries, the day was just friends going fast and sliding sideways together.



Chip and ’50-Cal’ Photo: Chris Campbell

Chip Wood and previous two-time Squaw Peak champ Calvin Staub gripping lines and going fast. These two were undoubtedly the fastest on the hill. Racing, literally on ice with their skate components frozen together by quarter-inch layer of ice, Chip and Cal were still able to maneuver their way down the course with grace in order to both secure a spot on podium.



Trevor Ovenden Photo: Cameron Kramer

Salt Lake City skater Trevor Ovenden killed it with consistency. Dedicated to downhill skating, it shows that he has experience on this hill that not many other riders have. Executing slides, breaks and turns with absolute control, Trevor as well had a spot of his own on the podium awaiting him.


The kick-off at the start of the final heat. Photo: Chris Campbell

The final heat was very surprising with a rather incredible performance by Chip Wood. Starting off the line in first, he wrecked in the upper-mid section of the course. Nearly halfway down, coming into the lookout corner was Calvin Staub with a heavy lead in first place, he was untouchable. In second place leading what was the rest of the pack was SLC local Trevor Ovenden. Gripping the turn, he then led the rest of the very tightly packed Sterling McGregor, Elliot Newey, Zac Baca, and Chip Wood down the faster sweeping section of the course. Chip, now in last place, pre-drifted, hooked back up and gripped out of the lookout hairpin with rocketing exit speed. Now being set up in the back of the pack for the faster, less technical portion of the course, Chip took the opportunity to draft and pass every single rider down the course back into a leading position of the pack.



4th: Sterling McGregor, 3rd: Trevor Ovenden, 2nd: Charles ‘Chip’ Wood, 1st: Calvin ‘Fifty-Cal’ Staub
Photo: Nicholas Murphy

Though he never made it back to first, he held a well-deserved second place instead, with Trevor Ovenden in third and Sterling McGregor in forgotten fourth, Calvin Staub had now won the Squaw Peak Outlaw for his third consecutive year!




Jake Wilkinson FBGM Photo: Nicolas Murphy

Squaw Peak 2011 first annual Jr. Downhill Champion ‘SL,UT’ Jake Wilkinson.


Bryce Brady and Calvin Photo: Nicolas Murphy

The Squaw Peak Outlaw 2011 Winner and Third Time Champion Calvin Staub!