@Allenkeylighting Not much ice in Australia....none outdoors and very little in the way of ice rinks so getting time on ice is difficult and expensive.
@SuperSunwind It is harder to learn/do on bigger wheels, partly because of the distance from the ground to the deck height of your skates making control more difficult and partly because bigger wheels generally means longer frame making entering the turn to start the slide more difficult. It also doesn;t help that a lot of wheels in that size are normally designed and formulated to be grippy. But it can be done...don't be discouraged. Just armour up and find some slick flat concrete to carve.
Are you rolling your ankles a little bit right before you go into the slide? At first I was kinda jumping into the slide. I don't understand the act of how you enter the slide.
@SuperSunwind Look for a video on youtube called "Shifty Flat by Luc Bourdin" (type that exact phrase into the search). It is a really good video for showing you the action of entering the slide. You d roll your ankles in to start the slide. It is like attemting to do a sharp turn but instead your wheels lose grip and they slide.
if you dont want to go through wheels get labeda asphaults they take forever to wear down i have had mine for about 5 months and almost no wear at all but you still have to rotate them alot
@spidey20 Not normally. You are more likely to touch down on the outide of you boot than on the frame, but it may be possible to do some damage to your frame.
i've just learned how to stop from my friend in campus...but to perform this stop requires quite a lot of guts for me....logically, i think having a harder wheels are better...i have 80A but i'm wondering if this set of wheels can be possible???
Not if you ae learning to slide. Long strides are not critical when learning. But once you have it down, then coming back to a softer wheel. It also depend on the surface.
Hey man Im a good skater also but I dont think I could use this technique in the local rink I go to. The floor is rubish-like and I have gel wheels does it make a difference?
Hello. Hey Im a really good skater also but the power slides have been trouble for me since a long time. I usually go to the local rink but the surfaces is kinda rubish-like and my wheels are gel ones does it make it harder or not?
Like I said to the last commenter, look for the video "Shifty Flat by Luc Bourdin". That shows you how to get started. Not sure what you mean by 'gel' wheels, but harder wheels with low grip tend to make it easier. Indoors you will want to be well beyond 85A possibly up tinto the low 90's.
so, lol like all other questions. I'm in hockey so not to brag but i'm a really good skater. Well, i can skate just as well on inline skates but i can't stop. So is it the same concept as getting on the edge of your blades the edge of the wheel. And can you basically stop on any surface? How bad does it wear out your wheels?
The stop on inlines is the opposite to on ice. The further over you lean you skates on inlines the more you slide...ice is the opposite where the further you lean the blade the more it bites into the ice and you stop quicker. You can do it on almost any surface but certain wheel and surface cominations make it harder to do. It will wear out your wheels quickly on rougher surfaces.
I've found, that while you won't come to a perfect stop and you may coast to left/right slightly, making a sharp turn will stop you very well. It also allows you to keep moving if the situation requires it, because you are not fully stopped. Also it makes the wear on you wheels less because you aren't actually stopping, whether on rough or inline surfaces
dude do you know if i can use ice hockey rollerblading for inline skate? alsoi've been skating for 2 and i haven't learned how to stop em yet. do i do what u show in the video without falling into the ground?
i m good at ice skating i can stop realy hard on ice and i thought it would be the same on rollerblades but infortunatly it is not i didn t get it yet!!!
Yeah, the dynamic is different. I'm not an ice skater, but as I understand it you start on top of your blade and if you want to stop quicker dig your edge in/len the skate over further. On inline, you start by leaning the skate over to get on the fat side of the wheel and to stop quicker you rock your skates up to get closer to the point (centre) of the wheel. Total opposite.
I can do it both ways, but I am stronger to the left like in the video (it is a left turn to initiate). It comes from years (since I was 2 yo) of skating anti-clockwise in skating rinks. I had to learn it both ways for hockey, but I am not as comfortable on rough outdoor surfaces both ways as I am on smooth surface or indoors.
on clean asphalt ist hard to slide stop with normal "soft" wheels, must find another surface to learn this.... best learning is on ice with ice-skates and if you learned, go on asphalt and its easy:-)
The way you do it on ice skates is the opposite to inline skates. When learning on inline, you need to lean your skate right over to slide on the fat part of your wheel. On ice, you keep it more upright when learning.
Can you stop like that on either side, I notice you always go to your right. I am the same way with my spin turns. I think it's a psychological block, I know I can do it, but you have to think about it more & it messes with your head,, am I right, hmm hnmm??
Yes it will wear down you wheels a lot. If you want to minimise wheels wear, you need to use a heel-brake, the stepping stop or possibly the slalom stop.
It is possible, some of the crazy downhillers and sliders do it. From a high speed you would wash off speed with a couple of slaloms or steps beofre throwing down the slide.
lol ya i just saw a vid of it at like what looks like 50 hahahaha, ya i downhill but not inlline tho, but havent really payed attention to the inline guys yet.....
Hi! Many thanks for the great video! I notice that you were also executing a couple of times the edge stop with great ease/precision ! Please kindly give some tips as to how to do the edge stop. Thanks again ! Cheers !
Check ou my blog. Go to the "Skating -> Technique" section from the nav bar on the right hand side. You should see a video in that section of Luc Bourdin....it shows you how to get started.
If you stay on top of your skates too much you are going to end up falling on your face, especially given this was done on a rough surface. A hockey stop on inline skates is a very different to one on ice.
Hey, are you going to ever make any more videos on different skating techniques or like a whole movie on them? :D That would be great. I'm an all inline skater and love to learn how to skate well.
Yeah when i go to roller rinks theres like a flat plastic almost surface. Theres a staff who skates around and watches for people who fall. He is really good and always does these loud stops like the one i just said. I asked him how to do it and he couldn't tell me because he said he doesn't even renember since he's been rollerblading for so long. :P
Have a look at my response to "wristshot527" above. Check that vid on my blog....it give you the basics. It is a bit different doing it indoors because it tends to be a lot grippier.
Hey your really good! Can you do also do the other type of hockey stop , its like this but its more of a half circle and makes a loud sound when done right with skatesA?
That sounds like the way beginners hockey stop, or the way you hockey stop if you are trying to also turn around and see the play. You generally don;t make a loud sound outdoors when doing these stops, more a wooshing/grating sound. Indoors, with soft wheels and the right floor surface, these make a loud chirping sound.
Check ou my blog. Go to the "Skating -> Technique" section from the nav bar on the right hand side. You should see a video in that section of Luc Bourdin....it shows you how to get started.
I have played Ice hockey my entire life and just got rllar blades. I tell ya I like it. it is free and it is the same except for the ability to stop which I cannot do onthese things I qwould have crossed trained if they had these when younger
Hey there, I'm an inline skater too and I do slides. From what I see, you are obviously doing a parallel slide. It has a 5~6 technical points if you look into the WSSA (World Slalom Skaters Association) rule and at max, you are sliding for about 2meters which means 2 additional points for this and for the style points it's probably a 2~3points extra cos it doesn't looks like you are going fast enough. Btw, technical points at max is 10, distance is 5 and style is 5. =)
The video's intent is as a demonstration of the cess slide (or parallel slide to you) as a stopping technique, not as a trick so true technical form and distance is not what is on show in this video. I also don't think the WSSA compete on surfaces as rough as what I was skating on in this video.
yeah.. i get what u mean.. how far u can slide depends on the angle u are sliding at and also the amount of pressure u put and of course, the wheels u are using too.. ^^ normally we get nice smooth concrete surface to compete on, but sometimes it may be grippy too.. anyway, if i'm not wrong, cess slide orginated from the aggressive skaters?? at least there is where i heard that word from..
Yes, typically the term cess slide is associated with aggressive inline skating these days. But from the early days of inline skating, the term originally referred to what many (such as yourself) now call the parallel slide. It was an adaptation of the same term that is used in skateboarding.
I was skating at about 15km/hr, a fast cruising speed. I would like to see the people you skate with do it and the surface they are skating on, feel free to provide a video response). I can pull up on a dime doing this on a hockey rink from a full sprint (grippy wheels and a good surface). This video is evidence you can do this anywhere as a stop (the surface I was on is exceptionally rough).
I will see what I can do for an on rink video...perhaps when I am doing suicides (the drill) so you can see me do it both ways). I would really like to see you do it on a rough surface, feel free to post the video response.
That is true for aggresive skaters, but it depends on your skating style. If you are a more of a general street-skater/free-skater, then a cess slide like this may be used for stopping, or as a trick.
This video was originally meant as proof to a fellow inetrnerd who claimed all skaters should have heel brakes becasue there was no better/quicker way to stop.
Good video. One of the best tutorials on the parallel slide is by danielel73, called:
Parallel Slide: "how to"
djuatdelta123 7 months ago
wtf everytime i try to do dis i slip and fall
FireJon145 8 months ago
@FireJon145 You probably need to bend your knees more. This enables you to widen your stance and control the location your centre of gravity better.
originalinlina 8 months ago
@FireJon145
Skate more. (On ice, that is.)
Allenkeylighting 3 weeks ago
@Allenkeylighting Not much ice in Australia....none outdoors and very little in the way of ice rinks so getting time on ice is difficult and expensive.
originalinlina 3 weeks ago
@originalinlina
Shit man, that sounds like hell.
Allenkeylighting 3 weeks ago
Another question for you. Does the wheel diameter matter doing the hockey stop? I am using 90mm. Thanks dude love your videos!
SuperSunwind 9 months ago
@SuperSunwind It is harder to learn/do on bigger wheels, partly because of the distance from the ground to the deck height of your skates making control more difficult and partly because bigger wheels generally means longer frame making entering the turn to start the slide more difficult. It also doesn;t help that a lot of wheels in that size are normally designed and formulated to be grippy. But it can be done...don't be discouraged. Just armour up and find some slick flat concrete to carve.
originalinlina 9 months ago
Are you rolling your ankles a little bit right before you go into the slide? At first I was kinda jumping into the slide. I don't understand the act of how you enter the slide.
Thank you.
SuperSunwind 10 months ago
@SuperSunwind Look for a video on youtube called "Shifty Flat by Luc Bourdin" (type that exact phrase into the search). It is a really good video for showing you the action of entering the slide. You d roll your ankles in to start the slide. It is like attemting to do a sharp turn but instead your wheels lose grip and they slide.
originalinlina 10 months ago
Hey can i ask what is that sharp turn that is done when you're going back each time. Like at 0.16
turn1round 11 months ago
@turn1round It's a flick turn or toe weighted turn.
originalinlina 11 months ago
I can stop like that I just don't slide as much as he does
TheHockeyGoalieman 11 months ago
That's cool. I hadn't tried that one yet. Sure it is rough on the wheels, but never know when it might come in handy.
oneaware 1 year ago
Dat a boy!!
dennisredsox 1 year ago
if you dont want to go through wheels get labeda asphaults they take forever to wear down i have had mine for about 5 months and almost no wear at all but you still have to rotate them alot
SlapshotD74 1 year ago
Hey, what is the song?
jeuxvideooriginal 1 year ago
@jeuxvideooriginal Crown City Rockers - B-Boy
originalinlina 1 year ago
will this ruin your wheels by any chance?
thugboy10b 1 year ago
@thugboy10b Yes
originalinlina 1 year ago
my wheels r too grippy for that slide, i just hockey stop, kick stop, and stuff like that
EmoVolcomSk8er 1 year ago
@EmoVolcomSk8er If you can can do a hockey stop with a bit of a slide, you can do this.
originalinlina 1 year ago
love it as usual
rbscarlett 1 year ago
can u ruin a frame doing this?
spidey20 1 year ago
@spidey20 Not normally. You are more likely to touch down on the outide of you boot than on the frame, but it may be possible to do some damage to your frame.
originalinlina 1 year ago
@spidey20 only if you fall
SlapshotD74 1 year ago
i've just learned how to stop from my friend in campus...but to perform this stop requires quite a lot of guts for me....logically, i think having a harder wheels are better...i have 80A but i'm wondering if this set of wheels can be possible???
thanks from Toronto, Canada
driftworld86 1 year ago
@driftworld86 Yes, it can be done on 80A but it will make it harder. Looking for a hard smooth surface with those softer wheels will help.
originalinlina 1 year ago
okay thanks!
canadia7x 1 year ago
How hard are the wheels you're using. I'm looking to use my skates outdoors almost all the time.
canadia7x 2 years ago
I had 85A wheels on for this.
originalinlina 2 years ago
Oh ok. Do you think 84a could work too?
canadia7x 2 years ago
Yes...should be no problem. Find a reasonably smooth/slick surface to start with.
originalinlina 1 year ago
Not if you ae learning to slide. Long strides are not critical when learning. But once you have it down, then coming back to a softer wheel. It also depend on the surface.
originalinlina 2 years ago
whats the name of the song
iluvdcigs1 2 years ago
Can't remember but it is by Z-Trip
originalinlina 2 years ago
Hey man Im a good skater also but I dont think I could use this technique in the local rink I go to. The floor is rubish-like and I have gel wheels does it make a difference?
seafoodble 2 years ago
Hello. Hey Im a really good skater also but the power slides have been trouble for me since a long time. I usually go to the local rink but the surfaces is kinda rubish-like and my wheels are gel ones does it make it harder or not?
seafoodble 2 years ago
Like I said to the last commenter, look for the video "Shifty Flat by Luc Bourdin". That shows you how to get started. Not sure what you mean by 'gel' wheels, but harder wheels with low grip tend to make it easier. Indoors you will want to be well beyond 85A possibly up tinto the low 90's.
originalinlina 2 years ago
I have 90mm 84A wheels... that makes it harder right??
quutamo87 2 years ago
how do you do it? is there a technique to start the slide? cos i dun dare to slide.. i can acid slide though.
miishiahboi 2 years ago
Look fir a video on YouTube called "Shifty Flat by Luc Bourdin". That will get you started.
originalinlina 2 years ago
so, lol like all other questions. I'm in hockey so not to brag but i'm a really good skater. Well, i can skate just as well on inline skates but i can't stop. So is it the same concept as getting on the edge of your blades the edge of the wheel. And can you basically stop on any surface? How bad does it wear out your wheels?
supsupification 2 years ago
The stop on inlines is the opposite to on ice. The further over you lean you skates on inlines the more you slide...ice is the opposite where the further you lean the blade the more it bites into the ice and you stop quicker. You can do it on almost any surface but certain wheel and surface cominations make it harder to do. It will wear out your wheels quickly on rougher surfaces.
originalinlina 2 years ago
I've found, that while you won't come to a perfect stop and you may coast to left/right slightly, making a sharp turn will stop you very well. It also allows you to keep moving if the situation requires it, because you are not fully stopped. Also it makes the wear on you wheels less because you aren't actually stopping, whether on rough or inline surfaces
ZRAMPEDproductions 2 years ago
dude do you know if i can use ice hockey rollerblading for inline skate? alsoi've been skating for 2 and i haven't learned how to stop em yet. do i do what u show in the video without falling into the ground?
dancewithahero 2 years ago
Dude...I so don't understand your questions, dude!
originalinlina 2 years ago
i m good at ice skating i can stop realy hard on ice and i thought it would be the same on rollerblades but infortunatly it is not i didn t get it yet!!!
yoyaya007 2 years ago
Yeah, the dynamic is different. I'm not an ice skater, but as I understand it you start on top of your blade and if you want to stop quicker dig your edge in/len the skate over further. On inline, you start by leaning the skate over to get on the fat side of the wheel and to stop quicker you rock your skates up to get closer to the point (centre) of the wheel. Total opposite.
originalinlina 2 years ago
How long does it take to learn? 3 days and I haven't gotten it.
zen03y 2 years ago
It depends on what skill level you come into it with. You need to be good at craving hard turns before you'll hit this kind of slide or stop.
originalinlina 2 years ago
Do these stops wear out your wheels?
Jebusjoose 2 years ago
Yes....a lot.
originalinlina 2 years ago
yeah. it completely depends on what surface you're on
MrStyxnaz 2 years ago
ohhh so thats how you do it on concrete anyway what kind of skates do you have tours?? whats the best wheels to have for a hockey stop??
crztrod 2 years ago
My hockey skates are Tours, but the skates in this video are Salomon FSKs. Depends on what the surface is as to what wheels you use.
originalinlina 2 years ago
i can do it on iceskates would it be they same? im thinking of buyring rollerblades haha
Townsend1337 2 years ago
No, it is a bit different. You need to get over onto the 'edge' more on inline to get the slide to start.
originalinlina 2 years ago
i thought this was a parallel slide, srry if i'm mistaken????????
heyaanimerocksheya 2 years ago
Yes, it is also sometime called a parallel slide AFAIK.
originalinlina 2 years ago
parallel and hockey is different
RazCrush98 2 years ago
youll ruin ur chasis after a while tho. shit will be as sharp as razor blades
MakaveliTheDon96 2 years ago
I don't touck my chassis when I do it. It is all on the wheels.
originalinlina 2 years ago
werd, maybe not to you, but ive seen it happen to plenty of people. what kinda skates u use for hockey?
MakaveliTheDon96 2 years ago
I can do it both ways, but I am stronger to the left like in the video (it is a left turn to initiate). It comes from years (since I was 2 yo) of skating anti-clockwise in skating rinks. I had to learn it both ways for hockey, but I am not as comfortable on rough outdoor surfaces both ways as I am on smooth surface or indoors.
originalinlina 3 years ago
can u only stop like that when you have bigger wheels or wat?
goose003 3 years ago
No...the smaller and harder your wheels are the easier it is.
originalinlina 3 years ago
on clean asphalt ist hard to slide stop with normal "soft" wheels, must find another surface to learn this.... best learning is on ice with ice-skates and if you learned, go on asphalt and its easy:-)
prokysoft 3 years ago
The way you do it on ice skates is the opposite to inline skates. When learning on inline, you need to lean your skate right over to slide on the fat part of your wheel. On ice, you keep it more upright when learning.
originalinlina 3 years ago
I'll bet you go through alot of wheels!!
HeadNtheClouds 3 years ago 6
Yes!
originalinlina 3 years ago
Can you stop like that on either side, I notice you always go to your right. I am the same way with my spin turns. I think it's a psychological block, I know I can do it, but you have to think about it more & it messes with your head,, am I right, hmm hnmm??
HeadNtheClouds 3 years ago 6
wow so you know to stop?
ikertupapi 3 years ago
Um, yes...see video!
originalinlina 3 years ago
Doesnt this wear down on the wheels? I dont want to use this as my main stopping method if it makes me spend more money on new wheels all the time.
Eithros 3 years ago
Yes it will wear down you wheels a lot. If you want to minimise wheels wear, you need to use a heel-brake, the stepping stop or possibly the slalom stop.
originalinlina 3 years ago
so do i do the same thing going 35+?
jhon13lolok 3 years ago
It is possible, some of the crazy downhillers and sliders do it. From a high speed you would wash off speed with a couple of slaloms or steps beofre throwing down the slide.
originalinlina 3 years ago
lol ya i just saw a vid of it at like what looks like 50 hahahaha, ya i downhill but not inlline tho, but havent really payed attention to the inline guys yet.....
jhon13lolok 3 years ago
Hi! Thanks for the great video. Any tips for how to do the edge stops as shown a couple of times in your video ? Cheers !
cjvictory 3 years ago
Hi! Thanks for the great video. Any tips for how to do the edge stops as shown a couple of times in your video ? Cheers !
cjvictory 3 years ago
Hi! Many thanks for the great video! I notice that you were also executing a couple of times the edge stop with great ease/precision ! Please kindly give some tips as to how to do the edge stop. Thanks again ! Cheers !
cjvictory 3 years ago
Check ou my blog. Go to the "Skating -> Technique" section from the nav bar on the right hand side. You should see a video in that section of Luc Bourdin....it shows you how to get started.
originalinlina 3 years ago
And PLease try and stay completely ontop of your skates not inwards even a little bit
zminker11 3 years ago
What do you mean? Like a hockey stop on ice skates? Doing this on ice is completly different to doing it on inline.
originalinlina 3 years ago
No What I mean is when you push out you go inwards too much you need to stay on top of the skates
zminker11 3 years ago
If you stay on top of your skates too much you are going to end up falling on your face, especially given this was done on a rough surface. A hockey stop on inline skates is a very different to one on ice.
originalinlina 3 years ago
Well Even With Inline.If you bend your knee's bend back a bit and stay ontop of your skates its just fine.I do more inline than Ice
zminker11 3 years ago
Lol Its kindaof like an Ice stop lol.I roller stop or Blid Stop Blid is like hell and makes so much fucking noise though
zminker11 3 years ago
Never heard of a Blid stop!
originalinlina 3 years ago
I only heard of it about 1 year ago.Its the Sideways stop i beleive inless theres another name for it.
zminker11 3 years ago
Hey, are you going to ever make any more videos on different skating techniques or like a whole movie on them? :D That would be great. I'm an all inline skater and love to learn how to skate well.
XbowmenB 3 years ago
I wish I had the time!
originalinlina 3 years ago
Yeah when i go to roller rinks theres like a flat plastic almost surface. Theres a staff who skates around and watches for people who fall. He is really good and always does these loud stops like the one i just said. I asked him how to do it and he couldn't tell me because he said he doesn't even renember since he's been rollerblading for so long. :P
XbowmenB 3 years ago
Have a look at my response to "wristshot527" above. Check that vid on my blog....it give you the basics. It is a bit different doing it indoors because it tends to be a lot grippier.
originalinlina 3 years ago
btw, this is a really good stop method!
XbowmenB 3 years ago
Hey your really good! Can you do also do the other type of hockey stop , its like this but its more of a half circle and makes a loud sound when done right with skatesA?
XbowmenB 3 years ago
That sounds like the way beginners hockey stop, or the way you hockey stop if you are trying to also turn around and see the play. You generally don;t make a loud sound outdoors when doing these stops, more a wooshing/grating sound. Indoors, with soft wheels and the right floor surface, these make a loud chirping sound.
originalinlina 3 years ago
Do you have to have, like, those $200 dollar skates do stop like this?
WristShot527 3 years ago
You don't have to...but better skates tend to have better support in the right places making it easier.
originalinlina 3 years ago
Well, how can you stop, like what you're showing on this video, to make it easier if you don't have the best of skates?
WristShot527 3 years ago
Check ou my blog. Go to the "Skating -> Technique" section from the nav bar on the right hand side. You should see a video in that section of Luc Bourdin....it shows you how to get started.
originalinlina 3 years ago
I have played Ice hockey my entire life and just got rllar blades. I tell ya I like it. it is free and it is the same except for the ability to stop which I cannot do onthese things I qwould have crossed trained if they had these when younger
skates89 3 years ago
Hi can you tell me summit please i now how to hockey stop i do , do it but i dont now how to slide and do the hockey stop please reply
Dudereecere 3 years ago
Hey there, I'm an inline skater too and I do slides. From what I see, you are obviously doing a parallel slide. It has a 5~6 technical points if you look into the WSSA (World Slalom Skaters Association) rule and at max, you are sliding for about 2meters which means 2 additional points for this and for the style points it's probably a 2~3points extra cos it doesn't looks like you are going fast enough. Btw, technical points at max is 10, distance is 5 and style is 5. =)
hope this helps.. ^^
ZeroGraviity 3 years ago
Thanks for your input.
The video's intent is as a demonstration of the cess slide (or parallel slide to you) as a stopping technique, not as a trick so true technical form and distance is not what is on show in this video. I also don't think the WSSA compete on surfaces as rough as what I was skating on in this video.
originalinlina 3 years ago
yeah.. i get what u mean.. how far u can slide depends on the angle u are sliding at and also the amount of pressure u put and of course, the wheels u are using too.. ^^ normally we get nice smooth concrete surface to compete on, but sometimes it may be grippy too.. anyway, if i'm not wrong, cess slide orginated from the aggressive skaters?? at least there is where i heard that word from..
btw, keep up the good work ^^v =)
ZeroGraviity 3 years ago
Yes, typically the term cess slide is associated with aggressive inline skating these days. But from the early days of inline skating, the term originally referred to what many (such as yourself) now call the parallel slide. It was an adaptation of the same term that is used in skateboarding.
originalinlina 3 years ago
i would love to learn it but my wheels are very soft :(
when i tried it it sopped so fast i couldnt stand it
1337Jogi 3 years ago
Try a smooth/shiny surface first....very smooth/shiny concrete or smooth/shiny pavers.
originalinlina 3 years ago
the only problem is you cant make the noise of a hockey stop buuddy
hdhhdhg 3 years ago
yeah uh... that's not a cess slide buddy
darthmooman 3 years ago
Uh...yeah it is. It is what a cess slide on inline skates was before it became an aggressive skating trick.
originalinlina 3 years ago
hey ... do your wheels have to be a certain rubber to be able to do that... or the surface you are skating on?
no way would i be able to stay standing doing that...
sharkiesian 3 years ago
Easiest with hard wheels and a hard, smooth surface. I was skating on medium-hard wheels (about 85A) and a rough ashphalt when I did this video.
originalinlina 3 years ago
FAAAAAATTTTTTT ASSSSSSSSSSSSS
MetalSociety 3 years ago
damn i dont have the guts to try that one :P easier on ice
potetjeger 3 years ago
tht aint a ces slide lol x)
GH3Addiction 4 years ago
It is the classic definition of a cess slide on inline skates.
originalinlina 3 years ago
So much easyer on ice lol
Spencer360pr0 4 years ago
it doesn't work... :(
let's all stick to ice
jaywbe 4 years ago 5
????...works for me => see video!!
originalinlina 4 years ago
i agree iv been playing ice hockey for 8 years....and i kick ass...lol but rolla blading ant my thing...
hockeyguypro2000s 3 years ago
ok im sorry but hw slow do yooh go you shud see the people i skate wid
blondegurlie08 4 years ago
I was skating at about 15km/hr, a fast cruising speed. I would like to see the people you skate with do it and the surface they are skating on, feel free to provide a video response). I can pull up on a dime doing this on a hockey rink from a full sprint (grippy wheels and a good surface). This video is evidence you can do this anywhere as a stop (the surface I was on is exceptionally rough).
originalinlina 4 years ago
ok then put a vid on ov you doing it on a hockey rink at full sprint and i can do it better than that on a rougher surface than you did
blondegurlie08 4 years ago
I will see what I can do for an on rink video...perhaps when I am doing suicides (the drill) so you can see me do it both ways). I would really like to see you do it on a rough surface, feel free to post the video response.
originalinlina 4 years ago
the thing bad about that stop is that if u go too fast ull fall. im an inline hockey player soo....
ghostlyhaunted 4 years ago
I learnt to do this through playing hockey. You need to know how to position your body for the speed of your stop!
originalinlina 4 years ago
most skaters cess slide on waxed curbs and ledges....not to stop...
Fakenamelmao 4 years ago
That is true for aggresive skaters, but it depends on your skating style. If you are a more of a general street-skater/free-skater, then a cess slide like this may be used for stopping, or as a trick.
This video was originally meant as proof to a fellow inetrnerd who claimed all skaters should have heel brakes becasue there was no better/quicker way to stop.
originalinlina 4 years ago
nice stops, and sweet song, not too many people know ztrip
mshark89 4 years ago