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FEATURES :: A JUDGE'S PERSPECTIVE INLINE

Of all the subjective sports – and in action sports, that means all of them – rollerblading stands out as the most fair. Sure, rollerbladers have gripes. They fume, scream and even bombard the judges’ tower with water bottles. But at the end of the day, when the scores come in and the results are posted, everyone is generally in agreement.

So what makes the rollerblading system such a paragon of ethics? It could be the fact that all the judges were skaters themselves at one time, and continue to stoke the fires of involvement in their industry. It could be that the skaters themselves are involved with the criteria, even as the winds of change sweep through the competitive landscape. Or it could be system itself.

Difficulty – The harder an athlete’s tricks, the higher the score. A 720 is more difficult than a 360. A ten foot air is more difficult than a five foot. It becomes more difficult to weigh a backside unity vs. a topside pornstar, but that’s where the next three come in.

Consistency – A skater has to stay on his feet to get full credit for a trick. Of course, there are shades of gray. “Sketching” the trick by putting a hand down or stepping out is considered more consistent than a fall, but scores less than a perfect execution.

Style – It’s hard to put it into words, but style is a characteristic that some judges consider to be the most important. Simply put, a skater should make skating look good. How that gets interpreted is up to the individual judge.

Line – Whether on the street course or the vert ramp, a skater should put together a line of tricks that makes full use of his/her run time. A skater is considered to have a good line if s/he executes many different tricks over many different obstacles.

And then there is that feeling. “Sweaty palms,” head judge Ethan Jenkins calls it. “At the end of a run, I want to have sweaty palms and I should wonder where all the time went.”
It isn’t a science, but a mathematical art. When the scores are in, the skaters who win are the ones taking the sport to a new level.

 



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