What is the "TIMING" of an OLLIE?

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  • čas přidán 30. 08. 2020
  • People always talk about the "timing" of an ollie. But what does that really mean?
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Komentáře • 491

  • @TangoDown357
    @TangoDown357 Před 3 lety +743

    This may be the best ollie tutorial on CZcams... If you or someone you know is struggling with ollies, this is the vid to watch. No joke.

  • @PaulHindt
    @PaulHindt Před 3 lety +488

    Key words: LIFTING UP your BACK foot

    • @LickyMyNippy
      @LickyMyNippy Před 3 lety +52

      My biggest struggle. If I could get the muscle memory better my ollie would be so solid.

    • @phykin
      @phykin Před 3 lety +13

      I'm still trying to get that better but when I lift it high wow, right away it's high!

    • @paxpapo7179
      @paxpapo7179 Před 3 lety +6

      I have problems sliding me foot

    • @paxpapo7179
      @paxpapo7179 Před 3 lety +1

      My*

    • @courtharson146
      @courtharson146 Před 3 lety +1

      So true! I was ur 100th like btw :)

  • @davidzamora9973
    @davidzamora9973 Před 3 lety +145

    I'm watching this with captions on cuz my kid is asleep on my arm and every time Ben ollies, the pop is captioned as "applause."

  • @drunkindonuts1210
    @drunkindonuts1210 Před 3 lety +359

    No offense to Braille skateboarding but their tutorial was step1: hit your tail . Step 2 drag you foot up. I would recommend this video to someone learning how to ollie

    • @Domieboy
      @Domieboy Před 3 lety +14

      facts

    • @bs000
      @bs000 Před 3 lety +5

      i wan my monie back

    • @funkydankspliff
      @funkydankspliff Před 3 lety +27

      All the offense to Braille skateboarding

    • @Catalist21
      @Catalist21 Před 3 lety +14

      Their videos are much longer too but they're more or less for entertainment purposes with good intentions

    • @stevenewton6776
      @stevenewton6776 Před 3 lety +2

      Not their 3.0 ollie tutorial. That one is good

  • @christopherpetts6599
    @christopherpetts6599 Před 3 lety +149

    This is the TRUE secret to Ollies. Held me back for over a year. When you get it right it's almost effortless. Cheers Ben.

  • @Svromero
    @Svromero Před 3 lety +131

    You just saved my life... I’m crying omggggg I did it guys!!! After six freaking months I did it!!! Ahhh thank you so much

  • @idrkofficial6101
    @idrkofficial6101 Před 3 lety +97

    *has to re learn Ollie after watching this*

  • @airbus-driver
    @airbus-driver Před 3 lety +232

    I just had an epiphany about this a few weeks ago when I'm trying to teach my teenage kids to do an ollie as well.
    You jump off the board not jump off the contact with the ground. As you jump off you just flick your rear foot down more to make the tail pop! And then retract as fast as you can.
    One more important point I learned though is that beginner fixage on the feet sequence and forget to jump correctly.
    When you are standing still and jumping, you compress your body down like a spring and in order to jump high you must release that wind up in sequence before your feet left the ground. My kids have that problem they bent down but did not move their body up before messing with their feet try to pop it.
    So the correct sequence should be like this,
    -Bend your body down
    -Squat your knee
    -Then releasing your body up
    -Unsquat your knee
    -Jump off the board in springy action(with your toe)
    -As your lift off flick your rear foot down to make the board pop!
    -Retract rear foot up by bending knee
    -Then drag your front foot as much as you like
    Houston we have a lift off!!

    • @goldennynja
      @goldennynja Před 3 lety +9

      Really helpful comment thank you

    • @FreakUrbanProfessional
      @FreakUrbanProfessional Před 3 lety +17

      Talking about jumping, one thing that is always not included in Olli tutorials, is the arm movement and technique. Proper arm action is needed in every jump movement to gain height.

    • @villeberger4530
      @villeberger4530 Před 3 lety +3

      This man is a genius!

    • @porgiepugson4489
      @porgiepugson4489 Před 3 lety

      Thank you

    • @actionjessie
      @actionjessie Před 3 lety +1

      100% I've been trying to teach myself ollies and I basically erased 80% of all videos advice I've watched they are very misleading. This comment and this video is how you do it.

  • @ondramrnustik1714
    @ondramrnustik1714 Před 3 lety +183

    This is definetly the thing all the beginners do wrong i see it all the time. Great video!

  • @PHeMoX
    @PHeMoX Před 3 lety +86

    By the way, to clarify the pop Ben does... he's jumping UP before popping using his ankle motion. It's how you get that millisecond of a difference between pop and jump, otherwise you get this 'stomping' the tail which results in the board coming up too quickly against the back foot, causing a fairly low ollie.

  • @ariekanibalie
    @ariekanibalie Před 3 lety +70

    This must literally be the best ollie tutorial I've ever seen. Spot on: I wasted years of my life following common trick trip advice to 'stomp down on the tail' with all your weight, as if you're trying to dent the pavement, etc.

  • @andrewberg4632
    @andrewberg4632 Před 3 lety +48

    The metaphor I've started using lately is, it's like dribbling a basketball. Using the snap of the ankle through the toe to bounce the tail off the ground.

  • @jjpoltergeist
    @jjpoltergeist Před 3 lety +81

    Dude, I've been telling this to begginers since i've figured it out myself. I always tell them "Think of it as a jump, THEN pop". Most people think that the pop is off the tail, when it hits the ground haha

    • @420gangweedman3
      @420gangweedman3 Před 3 lety +11

      Dude literally this video just opened my eyes up. I’ve been popping with my foot touching the ground with the board! Your comment kinda clicked it for me thanks man

    • @steve00alt70
      @steve00alt70 Před 3 lety +3

      So pop it with your toes?

  • @DavenNashi
    @DavenNashi Před 2 lety +2

    YES. FINALLY. Every tutorial I've seen is just "do this this and this" and not once mention WHEN to jump and HOW to with your back foot. I've been planting my back foot TOO hard and not jumping soon enough.
    I needed this.

  • @mayormaggie
    @mayormaggie Před 2 lety +4

    Level 43 male here, first time skater, and this is the first Ollie video that has actually clicked fir me. Watched it once and was like, oh, that makes a lot more sense. Went out in the garage and nailed an Ollie easier than ever. It’s all about the toe push down/flick at the end of your jump that actually gets the board in the air!!! Thank you!

  • @StephenCh
    @StephenCh Před 9 měsíci +1

    I always regarded the "jump" as simply quickly standing up from crouching. One thing from Braille that really stuck to me is how Aaron kept saying an ollie isn't a jump, it's an ollie.
    Your advice of staying at the ball of your feet allowed me to put more pressure on the board so when I "stand up" and quickly lift my front foot I would release all those potential energy and slightly elevate my whole body and pop the board at the same time.
    So basically I:
    1. Crouch
    2. "Jump" by standing up quickly
    3. Just before my legs straighten I lift my front foot
    4. I lightly push forward to level the board and lift my back foot simultaneously
    Idk the physics of it but keeping my back foot centered on the tail instead of closer to the edge transferred more energy from my ankles and quads onto the tail thus yielding a better pop. I really thought it's the other way around cuz a lot of ollie tutorials recommended placing the back foot closer to the edge.

  • @gaj5701
    @gaj5701 Před 3 lety +6

    As I described to a young kid recently, you don't jump the board, you jump & bring the board with you. Seemed to make sense & worked well for him. Then I put a piece of wood just in front of his rear truck & got him to ollie over that to simulate the forward motion needed for a rolling one which really helped him along 👍

  • @j0p117
    @j0p117 Před 3 lety +4

    It is a difficult thing to explain. You broke it down in a good way. The timing is killer, at the end of the day it tends to be something you discover organically through trial and error. The jump and flick is the killer. We’ll spend weeks pinning our boards to the ground with our back foot before it’s figured out lol.

  • @TheMagicDesign
    @TheMagicDesign Před 3 lety +13

    You made it easier to visualize. Thank you!

  • @ryanhingorani4019
    @ryanhingorani4019 Před 3 lety +12

    My ollies were already good but they leveled up significantly when i started thinking about it more as "jumping and bringing the board up with you" rather than "making the board pop in in the air and jumping with it", if that makes any sense. There is this 2 foot high planter where i skate and i was having trouble to ollie up it, but then i just focused on getting my back foot up it and not worry about the board, the board just seemed to come along for the ride!

  • @notaek3145
    @notaek3145 Před 3 lety +4

    Honestly best and most simple skateboard coach there is. Literally answers questions you didn’t know you had

  • @kevbarron6501
    @kevbarron6501 Před 3 lety +18

    Got back on the board after more than a decades absence but having to learn goofy as I've had a very complicated op done on my left leg and basically I don't have full use of it. Its coming back to me and your videos really help and inspire. I'm pushing 40 but I'm lucky to look ten years younger. Thank you for helping me sort my life out.

    • @justkeepskating8888
      @justkeepskating8888  Před 3 lety +2

      Welcome back!

    • @aaronrice2915
      @aaronrice2915 Před 3 lety +1

      Hey Ben, I noticed the same thing recently when I watched a slow mo video of a kick flip I did. It surprised me too! I just started skating again after 16yr hiatus(37 now) and I never knew I did that. Keep up the great work, really enjoy your skating videos!

    • @jonealpha
      @jonealpha Před 3 lety +2

      I had to relearn after losing more than an inch off my right leg after being hit by a drunk driver ( skate regular) so my ollies have always sucked on flat. Still rolling at 52.

  • @jamiebrown7280
    @jamiebrown7280 Před 3 lety +13

    Recently got back into skating a few months ago and your vids have been a treasure trove of info. Big thanks.

  • @Applesgosh
    @Applesgosh Před 3 lety +5

    You explained this SO much better than all of the tutorials I went through, it explains so much, thank you.

  • @ZombieAssassin1151
    @ZombieAssassin1151 Před 3 lety +1

    WHY DOES NOONE TEACH OLLIES THIS WAY?!?! I've been struggling for 2 YEARS not knowing what I was doing wrong and it's because everyone teaches them the exact same way without getting into these nuances, this video has been a great help, thank you!

  • @Rb-ys6xb
    @Rb-ys6xb Před 3 lety +3

    1:26 this tip took me to the next level. Thanks man you deserve this sub

  • @analog_memories
    @analog_memories Před 3 lety +4

    1) I feel like I'm watching the Alan Thicke of skateboarding. 2) This man is a GREAT teacher. I've been skating on and off for 20 years. I've finally rededicated myself at 35 and my ollies (moving) suck. I really need to work on timing and commitment. I guess the sucky time and the fear of falling create a double whammy that I need to get past. Thank you for your awesome videos!

  • @theoldblood3804
    @theoldblood3804 Před 3 lety +5

    I just started back up after 20 years and it was so weird losing the timing. I got it back within a day but man, if the timing isnt there you dont have anything.

  • @byeonseonbae
    @byeonseonbae Před 3 lety +27

    No one, I mean no one explains mechanics of skateboard well like Ben does.(eg.His wheelbase series helped me a lot when choosing my deck and truck) Glad to see that kinda detailed explanation on skills. Thank you Ben!

  • @zack203ct
    @zack203ct Před 3 lety +4

    Great tutorial, Ben! I've been skating for like 16 years, and I never noticed that we jump before the tail hits the ground. I've never thought about it that much or analyzed footy, but I think this is one of the best explanations of how to properly pop that I've ever watched. one common mistake I see with beginners is that they don't slide their foot all the way up to the nose, but I think that having their weight on the tail is more likely the problem

  • @jessicar4357
    @jessicar4357 Před 3 lety +2

    i’ve been trying to do an ollie for a couple of weeks now and i wasn’t even close but i watched this guys video and i’ve been so close in the matter of minutes

  • @oopla20
    @oopla20 Před 3 lety +8

    I've been skateboarding since 2005 and I've realized I've been skating my boards backwards (been popping my tricks off of the nose instead of the tail) and recently I've been trying to skate my board the "normal" way and my timing is soooo off lol but I'm getting there.

    • @gerbilsk8er
      @gerbilsk8er Před 3 lety +5

      I did the same thing for many years until another skater pointed out to me that my "tail" was actually my nose. Good times. Miss the 90s.

  • @vincentc8692
    @vincentc8692 Před 3 lety +8

    I was looking for this exact title yesterday! I was asking myself what am I missing even though I can ollie. I just wanted to get better. Thanks so much Ben. We appreciate your time and love you put into this. Thanks again.

  • @bruhhaha7909
    @bruhhaha7909 Před 3 lety +2

    one little thing that helped me was thinking about the sliding of the front foot as a more forward motion rather than sliding up

  • @digits001
    @digits001 Před 2 lety +1

    One tip for the back foot timing - it’s similar to skipping. When you skip the foot planted on the ground will do a 2 step motion. You bend that foot at the ball and jump off your toes. Try skipping flat footed. You won’t be able to. Same thing for the ollie.

  • @azazelreficulmefistofelicu7158

    Thanks, you talking about little details like this is always interesting, I have internalized this motion years ago but when helping others I make the mistake of explaining in a wrong way.
    By the way, a friend of mine used to do ollies with no pop, you almost never heard the pop. One day we made a test, piece of paper under the tail on the floor, pencil dust on the tail, he did a knee high ollie, the paper was clean. I grabbed his board and slightly touched the tail with the paper, it came black. It looked like the board was stuck to his feet.
    Have not figured it out yet, the worst part is that he had no idea what he was doing. And his board never had razortail, he scratched the sides of the tail from doing varials but the center was always almost new. My guess is perfect timing and a feather touch pop.

  • @skateforever716
    @skateforever716 Před 3 lety +13

    Ben I have been a subscriber for a year now and I started skating because of you I just landed a heel flip after a year of trying today and I’m very proud I got 4 in all out of 100+ try’s thank you for everything you do and keep making amazing content I will always watch

  • @SuperSuperdude88
    @SuperSuperdude88 Před 2 lety

    THIS is the explanation i need!!! so many " tutorials" never actually make this clear

  • @reeceeyles9924
    @reeceeyles9924 Před 3 lety +7

    What a fantastic analysis of the process of an Ollie. This should help so many beginners. Well done Ben

  • @sugaranderson1
    @sugaranderson1 Před 3 lety +1

    after watching this video hundreds of times and other tutorials, im slowly getting it and i just need to be consistent.
    i tried different ways and so far what worked for me is.
    1. placing my fromt foot in the middle of the board. i tried under the bolts like ben and the board not leveling up. maybe im
    not tall so my comfortable foot placement in on the middle.
    2. i placed my back foot half on the edge.
    3. i realized that i dont actually need to force my foot to slide up. once the board lifted up, your front foot will naturally slide up because you jump from the board. placing my fromt foot in the middle gives me a space to slide the board. this helped to level up my board. unlike before, it was rocket ollie.
    4. the more im concious on what im going to do, the more i cannot ollie. all my successful landed ollie has no pressure on my mind.
    Like what Ben used to say, it takes a lot of practice. i just recently started focusing on ollie. i tried it few times before but didnt pay much time on it. i used to cruise on the street and practice carving and downhill. i never skated in the park. im the same age as Ben and he has inspired me in a lot in skatboarding. its truly that age is just a number

  • @tylerhatch8962
    @tylerhatch8962 Před 3 lety +1

    Watched this video this morning, I was able to get my wheels off the ground after only 5 minutes after this advice! Thanks Ben!

  • @Spy1228
    @Spy1228 Před 3 lety

    I swear this is the best ollie tutorial, better than braille because you explain the most important part which is the back foot.

  • @abrarelfatih358
    @abrarelfatih358 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you so much! I’ve literally been trying to Ollie for almost 4 months

  • @Lee-to1im
    @Lee-to1im Před 2 lety

    i've literally never thought of this before, it seriously feels like i understand how ollies work so much better now!

  • @liznarducci3461
    @liznarducci3461 Před 3 lety +8

    Brilliant. I have been analyzing so many videos and I just needed the hear the thing about jumping off the tail, the tail will pop itself. That’s just amazing. Thank you!!!!

  • @allysdaughter1472
    @allysdaughter1472 Před 3 lety +4

    KEEP POSTING THE VIDEOS THEY ARE SOO HELPFUL

  • @TemptedToClik
    @TemptedToClik Před 3 lety +2

    Great technical advice. The best ollie tutorial I have seen on youtube. Thank you

  • @christophermatthews3486
    @christophermatthews3486 Před 11 měsíci

    This tutorial is perfect, it explains everything. I thought it was actually 3 steps not one step doing it all together. Thank you.

  • @maggiekeeler6967
    @maggiekeeler6967 Před 2 lety

    Your point at around 03:05 where you explain that "the best way to get the pop is when the body weight has left the board already" is the key issue I could not figure out what I was doing wrong. Also, I kept thinking I really needed to slide my front foot far up the board. Your video is so helpful!!
    Also, thanks for being realistic with how much time it takes to master the Ollie.

  • @jeancampaner5639
    @jeancampaner5639 Před 3 lety +10

    Thanks Ben:) I personnally enjoyed at the end the ollies slowmo high quality filming!!!
    The super quality of your contents is undeniable. Thank you for your continuous efforts to improve your channel (filming, music, montage...).

  • @mattlepke5960
    @mattlepke5960 Před rokem

    this is so comprehensive, thank you dude. i can ollie but like i almost always watch tutorials that look detailed like this so i can find more stuff to try and keep improving it.

  • @varvaranor3151
    @varvaranor3151 Před 3 lety +4

    Hey, i love the quality of your videos. They’re simple, but they are just the right thing. You don’t talk to much, you don’t say a lot of unnecessary stuff, you actually show what are you talking about and i enjoy just watching them. I can’t actually explain it, but yeah. I’ll be waiting for more videos :)

  • @richardwang3778
    @richardwang3778 Před 3 lety +1

    I fixed this in one day by doing this one exercise. I jumped from ollie postion to all four bolts. I figured out that you don't really try to pop the board, if you try to jump it will automatically pop the board and the motion you use to pop the board, is the jump from ollie position to landing on all four bolts. When you ollie, pop the way you jump, like don't try to pop the board, just jump and the board will automatically pop. The board automatically pop, because when you jump, you put pressure on the ground and force, so if you jump on ur board, you will put pressure and force on the tail. The timing was something I couldn't fix in the ollie no matter how hard I tried, so I decided to try this exercise I made up a few times and I DID AN OLLIE WITH CORRECT TIMING.

    • @sugaranderson1
      @sugaranderson1 Před 3 lety

      This make sense. I think the reason why my ollie is low because im concentrating in popping instead of jumping

  • @komoonkh
    @komoonkh Před 3 lety +2

    Thanks Ben. I can ollie for almost two decades but I still watch. You are absolutely right. You and @plantrider do the best tricktips. Taking things more "physics" style, exactly how Rodney Mullen explains tricks. not the obvious pop, flick and roll away clean, haha.

  • @jeddyiii
    @jeddyiii Před 3 lety +1

    After watching this video I was today years old (45) when I finally did an ollie.
    15 mins later my 14 year old niece was doing them too.
    No medals for style or height but we're taking it.
    Thanks buddy 😁

  • @hustain
    @hustain Před 3 lety +11

    i've been skating for 3 years and can barely ollie an inch off the ground. it's always depressing when i even step foot on a board.

    • @memeteamdreamteam3990
      @memeteamdreamteam3990 Před 3 lety +7

      I had a bad ollie for a while, I can only give you some small advice, but think about how high you are actually jumping. If you are not jumping first then the pop has no where to go. A way to trick myself into consistently jumping is thinking a little bit more about my knees and shoulders and trying to feel myself actually spring up. Even if it takes some time to learn to coordinate your feet and land it properly it is really important to jump.
      Also, this channel's last vid on ollies pointed out a really common problem that I had at one point with bending with my back instead of my knees.

    • @hustain
      @hustain Před 3 lety +4

      memeteamdreamteam thanks

    • @equilskateboarding7676
      @equilskateboarding7676 Před 3 lety +6

      You go it bro, I swear I've been trying to ollie for 7 years and just last week I started to figure it out and now I can ollie up curbs. You got it man forreal! Keep at it because it's worth it

  • @oldbonz
    @oldbonz Před 3 lety +1

    You nailed it - I struggle with Ollie's while rolling because I stood on the tail. Then a sponsored guy at our local park said it's in the back foot ankle flicking down as that foot is lifting up from the jump to bounce the tail off the ground. Now I can Ollie, but rolling with any speed or up a bank causes it all to come unglued. Any help there would be massively appreciated. Thanks Ben!!!

    • @komoonkh
      @komoonkh Před 3 lety +2

      Now just think about the outer edge of your front foot. It holds it up and if you suck your feet up, the board will come too

    • @justkeepskating8888
      @justkeepskating8888  Před 3 lety +2

      You just need more time in the saddle.

    • @oldbonz
      @oldbonz Před 3 lety +3

      @@justkeepskating8888 - today is day 90 after deciding to teach my 56yo self to Ollie having never done it before in my life. I do 20 or more daily. It will come, just slowly. Thx for everything you put out there!

  • @Caddrel
    @Caddrel Před 3 lety +1

    Great video again! So much of this is not covered in most ollie tutorials

  • @knittingkninja
    @knittingkninja Před 2 lety

    I haven't been able to get my Ollie down yet. This was a good tutorial.

  • @q7Hx
    @q7Hx Před 3 lety +11

    Appreciate the knowledge as always, Ben

  • @_Alfa_Channel
    @_Alfa_Channel Před 2 měsíci

    Wow! - I've been trying to ollie forever and the toe flick might be just the little bit of advice i needed - thank you so so sooooo much!

  • @306_cstm
    @306_cstm Před 25 dny

    Going out to practice right away after watching this...still haven't got it yet but i'm close. I can feel it!
    I am learning that an ollie is a lot like trying to make a golf swing. There is a whole bunch of little things and movements that you need to do all at once and you can't really be thinking about any of them as you do it...challenging.

  • @kenneththam2480
    @kenneththam2480 Před 3 lety +3

    TOE! Never occurred to me how important the toes of your popping foot play in help you get a solid pop. I think that's the difference you get when you compare someone who pops heavy (with their entire foot and calf) verus nimble (mostly toes and foot, some calf)

  • @m3kkanic
    @m3kkanic Před 3 lety +2

    Best explanation on how to do ollies on CZcams so far, because you describe perfectly the most important part: the timing! I just disagree with the footpositioning. You'll get the pop more efficiently (i.e. same force with less effort), with your toes tipping the tail more towards the end of the tail and not that close to the pocket. In addition, I'd go with the frontfoot a little further to the center of the deck. Let's say, about an inch. Then you achieve a better leverage effect to level the board. But still, the best how-to I've seen so far. And I watched probably the 10 most watched tutorials on CZcams.

  • @thanoswebb5240
    @thanoswebb5240 Před 3 lety

    Thank you Ben, the best description and advice I have heard!

  • @theequasian3823
    @theequasian3823 Před 3 lety

    This tutorial makes way much more sense I'm going to use this learning my nollie/switch tricks. I never thought about it this way.
    BACK TO THE FUNDAMENTALS

  • @tara12318
    @tara12318 Před 3 lety

    THIS IS MUCH BETTER THAN ALL THE OTHER TUTORIALS

  •  Před 2 lety

    At 3:52 his front foot actually moves more forward than it seems, because while lifting the front foot it actually "moves backwards" as he "folds" the lower leg under him a bit. The front foot then "kicks forward" from this retracted position and lands on the bolts. It looks like the front only has moved a very short distance, but in reality it has moved a bit more.

  • @christianjarvis5729
    @christianjarvis5729 Před 4 měsíci

    Dude these tips helped so much!! Gonna try to put them into practice!!

  • @Skybij
    @Skybij Před 3 lety

    Man these are good! Such detailed trick videos, just as your board set up videos, that what we need from you Ben. Keep em coming.

  • @ROME2RARE
    @ROME2RARE Před 9 měsíci +1

    When he showed how little the slide was I burst out laughing 😂☠️😭 here I am tryna slide far asf

  • @BlackMarketHoney
    @BlackMarketHoney Před 3 lety +2

    Great Video Ben! I have had to study this too as my daughter is learning to ollie. She is stamping her back foot down rather than jumping up. It is really hard to explain this part. One example I use is when you do a lay up in basketball, you lift one knee first so your other foot leaves the ground after and the board will follow. Or if you imagine you are playing Super Mario, when there is a barrel or something coming towards and you have to hop over it. I try to emphasise that it is all about jumping as the point of an ollie is that you will want to jump up or over something.
    I noticed that you have quite a wide foot position. I do too. I think this is partly relative to your height. I am 6'2" and if I try to ollie with my feet closer together, I find it harder to balance. One of my buddies is 5'8" and he he ollies with his front foot starting in the middle of the board and this is comfortable for him.
    I also noticed that your front foot slides all the way to the nose and then moves back to the bolts. So your foot moves more than you think. I think this is an advanced technique which comes from years of skating. Your foot moves back to a normal riding position so you are poised for your next trick. I do the same. When I have been trying to improve my ollies, I aim to deliberately kick the nose, so I can dip the ollie. Thinking of a kick rather than a slide helps me to bring my foot back to the bolts.
    There is a lot going on with ollies isn't there? There are differences between a basic ollie, a decent ollie and an ollie where someone adds their own flavour. You can't possibly teach every subtlety, just practice practice practice!
    All the best, Rich in Sweden.

    • @sugaranderson1
      @sugaranderson1 Před 3 lety +1

      I like the way you describe it as lay up in basketball. Will keep this in mind and
      Will give it a go

    • @sugaranderson1
      @sugaranderson1 Před 3 lety +1

      UPDATE: this video made my ollie consistent. Firstly, i followed Ben’s advised about foot positioning on the pop.
      Secondly, i placed my other foot near the bolts.
      Thirdly, is the jump!! Before i kept popping without realizing that i must just simply jump like going to lay up.
      Im not aiming for a high ollie, im fine with the normal height. Now i need to try moving ollie
      The ollie tutorial thats says step 1 pop step 2 slide etc.. is so damn wrong!

    • @BlackMarketHoney
      @BlackMarketHoney Před 3 lety +1

      @@sugaranderson1 your ollies should get higher when you are rolling. Just remember to keep your shoulders over your feet to avoid rotating. Good luck!

    • @sugaranderson1
      @sugaranderson1 Před 3 lety +1

      BlackMarketHoney thanks! I will
      Keep that in mind. I hope i can make it. My second problem is, i couldnt find time to skate :-(

    • @sugaranderson1
      @sugaranderson1 Před 3 lety

      BlackMarketHoney hi, i tried moving ollie and the board slides off and i fell on the ground :-(. The board slides when i landed on it. Maybe im nervous.

  • @yazmuraben8462
    @yazmuraben8462 Před 3 lety +4

    Hey, I really enjoyed this video and was wondering if you could help explain the full body process of flicking a kickflip? I don’t what is a good way to get my ankle to the corner of the board (do I used my hip to rotate my whole leg, do I bend my knee so me lower leg goes behind me, etc). I find that most kickflip tutorials don’t really focus on this. I can occasionally land kickflips, but I don’t have a solid idea of which way would be most helpful for me to comfortably flick the board, or flick it at all. I have the most trouble when my shoulders are fully square, I have a lot of trouble getting my ankle to properly get to the corner of the board and end up dolphin flipping the board. Thanks so much, love the videos on the main channel so much, keep up the great work!

    • @justkeepskating8888
      @justkeepskating8888  Před 3 lety +2

      😂 You sound like an older skater. I have noticed skaters over 30 tend to overthink the tricks. Regardless, just go out and try it a little everyday. You can't think your way into kickflipping. The body learns by doing.

    • @yazmuraben8462
      @yazmuraben8462 Před 3 lety +2

      Just Keep Skating hahaha, I’m 17. Funny enough, went out today after leaving the comment and figured out the flick. Turning backside a bit, but just the board not me. I think I need to flick out more, and I’m able to pop them and catch them. Watching the tip on the main channel helped too.

  • @AdventuresInSkateboarding

    I think this is an important video. This touches on my two biggest inconsistencies. 1. My back foot is normally too far on the tip of the tail.
    2. I have to remind myself to snap the tail.
    I don't really think about the front foot. It kind of just happens when I I pop it right. I just think about the pop/jump.
    I don't skate enough to keep it a natural motion so every time I go out I have to readdress it.

  • @SabiaCDO
    @SabiaCDO Před 3 lety

    This guy... every video is spot on! Thank you!

  • @pipgriffiths3328
    @pipgriffiths3328 Před 3 lety +1

    It’s probably the best Ollie tutorial I’ve seen man and it’s great to see someone my age still killing it 🤙

  • @davids.816
    @davids.816 Před rokem

    The toes. Yeah there's something there. It's slowly coming back to me

  • @lablunt6190
    @lablunt6190 Před 3 lety

    Most excellent, video! The little thing no one explained, you explained. Super solid, it helps.

  • @beaukaramoy
    @beaukaramoy Před 2 lety

    Started practicing ollies today, this is definitely going to help out tomorrow!

  • @jlmaylan
    @jlmaylan Před 3 lety

    You have the best and correct explanation of all I have seen. Good job, thanks for the effort!

  • @GeorgBFH
    @GeorgBFH Před 3 lety

    hey Ben! your new channel is actually a gift for New skaters. you Cover Things in your tutorials that every beginner really needs to think of, instead of all the other experienced skaters that sadly dont even know anymore what the Problems of first learning the ollie is. TY SO MUCH!

  • @kristoffersonDM
    @kristoffersonDM Před 3 lety

    Excellent !!!! You do a Great Service to Skateboarding community !!! I love all of your videos!! Thanks Dude!!!! Keep Pushing it!!! For The Dream!!!

  • @steve-00
    @steve-00 Před 3 lety

    You explain it so well, I already know how to ollie but had to watch to see how you explained it. The way you explained it is better than I've seen in other videos. Keep doing these as i feel you have a knack for teaching skating

  • @JohnAnderson4242
    @JohnAnderson4242 Před 3 lety

    I like what you said about back stomping foot, it's not on the stupid bleeding knife edge of the tail, just parked within the tail. This was working for me tonight on rug. Was landing them both feet.

  • @collinstone7044
    @collinstone7044 Před 3 lety

    Best ollie tutorial I've ever watched

  • @TimofeyEgorov
    @TimofeyEgorov Před 3 lety

    This is the most clear explanation of an ollie. It's in depth. Thank you!

  • @mya6485
    @mya6485 Před 2 lety

    OK THIS GUY IS ACTUALLY MAKING SENSE

  • @Puty0urlipstick0n
    @Puty0urlipstick0n Před 3 lety

    I trained 2 hours today and I cried from frustration haha. Will try again tomorrow with all your wonderful advices! It makes more sense (everything) thanks!!!

  • @Jonty1155
    @Jonty1155 Před 3 lety +1

    Spectacular video, no one talked about the snap before and how your back foot comes off. Will be intersting to see your explanation with this on other tricks too.

  • @PPYTAO
    @PPYTAO Před 3 lety

    Great vid, I’m currently learning to ollie and have been struggling to find a video that actually did a detailed look like this. Thanks!

  • @drgonzonawak6469
    @drgonzonawak6469 Před 2 lety

    I am six month into learning Ollie’s and I am jumping over tiny poles/branches. All he is saying are things that I have discovered by myself over these many months, and I wish I had seen this tutorials instead of the many many other video I saw (and you probably did too...). One last thing that really helped me that I discover on CZcams on one of those story video by an Asian skater (sadly I don’t remember his name I can’t give him any credits) is to have your back leg completely straight. This sounds stupid but if you look at people doing Ollie’s their back leg is complete straight when they jump and focusing on that while practicing really helped me jumping forward and not falling backward and timing my Ollie more properly (specially the when yo jump/when to pop part)

  • @LacedBacon
    @LacedBacon Před 3 lety

    My friend Greg told me a good tip once, he said for ollie's after you pop, suck your legs up like a vacuum lol. I love your tutorials man keep killing it!

  • @harrisjosephschouestjr9696

    Great video Ben Degros 👍 you explained that better than any other video tutorials that I've seen on CZcams and the slow motion was awesome 👌

  • @pawechabrowicz2895
    @pawechabrowicz2895 Před 3 lety

    Found this after you namedropped the channel in your Alien Workshop 7.6 vintage deck video. Instasubbed. Thank you for everything you do!

  • @techdog500
    @techdog500 Před 3 lety

    This was such a helpful tutorial, I wasn't sure how/when the back foot lifted off. Most other tutorials are just explaining the drag of the front foot

  • @MastaKeahi
    @MastaKeahi Před 9 měsíci

    Timing for my Ollie usually refers to the amount of time it takes for me to get back up after I miss it.

  • @DjBaapreB
    @DjBaapreB Před 3 lety

    The toe explanation seems like the next building block in the ollie journey 🛹. Thanks Ben!

  • @Calamity8
    @Calamity8 Před 3 lety

    Legend has spoken and your vids are so helpful sir thank you

  • @TheAwsomeness324
    @TheAwsomeness324 Před 2 lety

    Bro that’s crazy. 1 minute 20 seconds in and broke all other explanations I’ve seen before it. Foot leaves the tail as soon as it hits the ground!! Ok. Time to keep watching so I can nail this!!

  • @faenotfound8184
    @faenotfound8184 Před 3 lety

    ur video makes so much more sense then other tutorials like im practicing and i just stay put..like and i just get so frustrated thanks