
F! Archive: Can you do a 360 kickflip?
A few thoughts on trick choices, trick groups, and over-standardisation from Lillis Åkesson in 2001.
A few thoughts on trick choices, trick groups, and over-standardisation from Lillis Åkesson in 2001.
With 2025’s Paderborn BBQ Contest right around the corner, I thought it was worth digging through the F! Archive to look at how the world’s longest-running freestyle contest got started…
Lillis Åkesson and Angela Lamadrid give some thought on how you should name new tricks back in 2004.
In this article from 2001, Bill Robertson tackles a question that young kids have been asking seasoned skaters since the dawn of time.
Rijal Mbamba shares his thoughts on the nature of freestyle skateboarding back in 2003.
This article written by Mark Emmoth in 2002 is one of the more “academic” articles ever published on F!, and we’re glad to be able to drag it out of the archives.
While this article was originally posted 18th February 2011, this now marks fourteen years to the day since Bob Staton left us; without what Bob did alongside Lillis in the 90s and early 2000s, freestyle probably wouldn’t be here today.
Even in the mid-2000s, Tony Gale had strong thoughts on these things. He hasn’t changed much.
A lot of the F! Archive consists of “Thinkpieces” from Lillis, who, as the webmaster and founder of F!, often used it as a personal blog of sorts – making them unique little snippets of freestyle in the early 2000s .
It only seems right to start off the F! Archive with the earliest post we could find, covering the very first freestyle contest of this century. This is where the “freestyle revival” began – none of us would be here without this event.