Balancing act
Mike Sciacca
While most toddlers are learning to find their legs, wobbling
their way up into those first few stances, Nathan Groff was doing so
with flare.
His balancing act not only consisted of mastering the flat floor,
but also whatever skateboard happened to be laying around.
You see, Nathan’s father, Eric, an avid skateboarder in his youth
and part of the sport’s “old school,” collected vintage skateboards.
And, whichever of those rare finds happened to be within reach,
Nathan would climb aboard.
“He used to roll around and play with them before he could walk,”
said Nathan’s mother, Sue. “Before the time he turned 1, he went from
playing with a skateboard to standing on one. I took a picture of him
and thought -- ‘how cute.’ Never did I think that his standing and
trying to ride a skateboard back then would lead to this.”
Nathan, now 8, is becoming somewhat of a mini-master of the
skateboard. Just last weekend at Boomers Skatepark in Irvine, the
Huntington Beach youth became the overall series winner for Southern
California in the 2002 California Amateur Skateboard League’s
8-and-under division.
That title earned the Hope Christian Academy student a spot in an
upcoming state event that will pit Southern California athletes
against their Northern California counterparts.
The state meet will be held Dec. 5 in Milpitas.
“Mostly, I just go out and have fun,” Nathan said of his
skateboarding adventures. “I’ve always liked skateboarding. The
competitions are a lot of fun and I have a good time going out there.
If I happen to win, it’s great.”
Nathan has been competing since the age of 4 and has routinely
competed against skaters twice his age. He has traveled all over the
country doing demonstrations, exhibitions and grand openings with the
Vans Shoes Pee Wee amateur team, a squad consisting of 13 youngsters
13 years old and younger.
Nathan also does demos and exhibitions for other company teams
such as Hurley International, Deathbox Skateboards, Ninja Bearings,
Jokers Grind Rails, Pro Tec Safety Gear, Crooks Rails, Webb Trucks
and Gale Webb’s Ride Hard, Ride Safe Xtream Team.
His touring schedule this past summer included joining his
teammates for a demonstration for a crowd of nearly 200 attending the
Hollywood premiere of “Scooby Doo, The Movie.”
One day later, he was in Brentwood doing a demo with skateboard
phenom Tony Hawk as part of the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS
Foundation’s annual fund-raiser.
At the age of 3, Nathan had been hand-picked by Vans to do a
national commercial with skateboard legend Tony Alva for their line
of shoes.
Nathan, who said he’d like to be either a professional
skateboarder or baseball player, said he likes the skateboarding
styles of Hawk and Bucky Lasek, and Major League Baseball legend Hank
Aaron.
Gale Webb, who has been in the skateboarding industry for 26 years
and has worked with the likes of Hawk before he soared to stardom, is
the team manager of the Vans Pee Wee group.
Webb, a former Huntington Beach resident, says she is the
originator of safety in sports shows and has staged such shows
throughout the country urging America’s youth to get “high on life --
not drugs.”
In 1976, she started the “Say No to Drugs” program.
Webb says that Nathan, like Hawk, has a bright future in the sport
of skateboarding.
“I really encourage these young kids to follow their goals and
dreams and Nathan is doing just that,” she said. “He’s a great little
skater. He’s more of a ramp and street skater who works hard and can
do a lot of tricks, and do them quite well for someone his age.
“Skateboarding is such an individualized sport and if he sticks
with this, I believe that Nathan has the talent to take him very
far,” she added. “You will be reading about him in the future -- mark
my word.”
* MIKE SCIACCA covers sports and features. He can be reached at
(714) 965-7171 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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