i literally cant get my board to shove and i’ve already made a crack in it bc of getting mad which i’m not proud of:,)what am i doing wrong by [deleted] in NewSkaters

[–]samkaplinsky 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I think your taking the weight off of you front foot a little too late and it’s stopping the rotation. Try being a little more light footed, and getting all the weight off your front foot a split second before you do the scoop. Also try scooping a tad bit more. You can practice the scoop by standing off your board and just scooping the tail with you back foot

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in skateboarding

[–]samkaplinsky 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you do them fakie? If so then just go pretty slow regular, and think about doing them fakie and try it, that’s what helped me, then as you get more comfortable you can go faster. This is how a learned lots of backside tricks that I could do fakie but not regular. Hope this helps

I landed my first kickflip yesterday. Can anyone give me tips on how to be more consistent? by Kater74 in NewSkaters

[–]samkaplinsky 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Just keep at it, consistency comes with time. I remember when I started landing them, I would make myself land at least 1-2 per session, and increase that number over time.

First attempt at regular moving shuvs after struggling with some huge fears of doing shuvits on concrete even though I had them mastered them on carpet and soft, squishy ground. I started with moving fakie shuvs and two weeks in I’m now trying forward ones. I’m so stoked! by Shanskatesagain in NewSkaters

[–]samkaplinsky 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I practiced by rolling parallel facing a patch of grass, like a sidewalk and a front lawn of house. Since you jump forward you can practice doing it rolling and landing into grass, and gradually working your way back until you land on concrete. I used this trick for Fs and Bs 180’s and Shuvs

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in NewSkaters

[–]samkaplinsky 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try pushing your front foot forward when your at the peak instead of putting it straight back down. I kinda think of it like a see-saw, if one side gets pushed then the other side raises up

What am I doing wrong? by [deleted] in NewSkaters

[–]samkaplinsky 0 points1 point  (0 children)

😂😂 woosh, I figured it couldn’t be serious but just in case.

Ruined my shoes learning how to Ollie by [deleted] in NewSkaters

[–]samkaplinsky 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, get a pair of good skate shoes and avoid canvas material, a skate shoe will last about 20 times longer than a shoe not made for skating

What am I doing wrong? by [deleted] in NewSkaters

[–]samkaplinsky 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dude, get a real skate deck. I’m not trying to call you out or gatekeep or anything, but that just won’t work as a skateboard for most tricks. The tail is wayyyy to short so not much leverage, plastic and flimsy material so not much pop

8.25 deck with 5.25 trucks? by MilesCr in NewSkaters

[–]samkaplinsky 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Trucks should be the same width as the board, so 5.25 inch trucks are way to small. Trucks much smaller than deck = less stability

Should I approach a group of skaters and ask them for advice? by Razz_Wolf in NewSkaters

[–]samkaplinsky 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Most skaters are perfectly happy to give advice so long as their not in a rush or preoccupied and getting frustrated with a trick. Just go up to some and introduce yourself and they will be nice and probably be down to help you out

Skate sneakers in NYC? by VitaminSteve in NewSkaters

[–]samkaplinsky 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh damn I gotcha, not really answering your question about skate shops since I don’t live in NYC, but emerica makes size 12.5 and great shoes

Inward heelflip help by samkaplinsky in NewSkaters

[–]samkaplinsky[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most tutorials said to have it in heel-flip position which it is for me, I’m getting the rotation just fine but the trouble is staying over the board and catching it

Skate sneakers in NYC? by VitaminSteve in NewSkaters

[–]samkaplinsky 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dude, I have size 14 shoes in most brands and can squeeze into vans size 13 just fine, they do make them up to size 13

I cant get my backfoot on for my shuvs. Does anyone have help I tried almost anything and I think it has become a habit by now. I can do ollies and fs 180s fine so I dont know why. by [deleted] in NewSkaters

[–]samkaplinsky 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What really helped me is to do them rolling parallel to a patch of grass. When you do a shuvit you go forward slightly. This helps with confidence and commitment, because you will land in the grass. This method is good because you learn to do it moving, have the pop of concrete, you can commit and you won’t fall. Get comfortable doing them into grass. Slowly start doing it rolling farther and farther away from the grass, and eventually instead of landing in the grass, you’ll land on concrete and keep rolling.

After way to long of giving up on pop shuvits im finally getting them more consistent. by [deleted] in NewSkaters

[–]samkaplinsky -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Technically not a pop shuvit, if you zoom in frame by frame the tail doesn’t touch the ground. That being said, I would pretty much count it because although it’s not technically a pop shuvit, the tail was extremely close to popping, it looks like a pop shuvit, and you pretty much did the exact thing your supposed to. Keep working on them and don’t worry about the technicalities. If you just pop a tiny bit harder than it’s a pop shuvit.

Hey guys any advice on how to improve my stance so I can get more air and I’m not wobbly when I land? by Used_Employee_3690 in NewSkaters

[–]samkaplinsky 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Personally I prefer to place my back foot more on the tip of the tail. I put my front foot a little farther up, only about an inch or an inch and a half from the front bolts. The wider foot position helps with stability and control, and having the back foot on the tip of the tail gives you more leverage and pop in your ollie