Laguna Beachâs Nyjah Huston hopes to add Olympic gold to legendary skate career
Nyjah Huston is widely regarded as the best contest street skateboarder of all time.
Approaching his 30th birthday in November, the Laguna Beach resident has nothing left to prove. The numbers that mean more than his age are the six world championships and 13 X Games gold medals.
After nearly two decades in the public eye, Huston knows that there are plenty of up-and-comers who want his spot.
He isnât ready to give it up just yet. Instead, he has spent this Olympic quad grinding â literally and figuratively â and getting ready for Paris.
âIâve really just got to be thankful and proud of myself for having the chance to be in this moment again,â Huston said Wednesday at his private skate park in San Clemente. âIâm still competing at a winning level and still feeling healthy. Thatâs very important to me, because I really care about skateboarding for as long as possible. Obviously, all of the young guns are getting really good. Weâll see how many years I have out there competing at a winning level. Even aside from that, I just want to be on my board, having fun skating and filming for as long as humanly possible.â
Huston leaves on Sunday for the last Olympic qualifier event in Budapest, but heâs already put himself in a good position to make the team.
Skateboarding makes its second Olympic appearance this summer. Huston finished seventh in Tokyo in 2021, followed by a lengthy social media post apologizing to his five million fans on Instagram.
He vowed to put less pressure on himself this time around. It seems to be working, like most things that Huston does in this space.
Team USA skateboarding coach Andrew Nicholas said Huston is still right there in terms of talent, and one of his countryâs better shots for a podium finish.
âOf our street athletes, pound for pound, he has the highest scoring tricks,â Nicholas said. âItâs like golf. Tiger [Woods] didnât win every weekend, but if you had to bet on someone who could pull off a shot out of the hazards, itâs him every time.
âNyjah dominated an entire decade, and heâs still hanging with all of these young kids today. They try to write him off like heâs older and all of this, but heâs still dominating. By the numbers, heâs still dominating.â
Much of the credit for that goes to his seriousness to his craft and keeping his tattoo-inked body in the best shape possible. But there are other fun diversions. Huston said heâs started to DJ over the last year or two, and he also enjoys riding dirt bikes.
When it comes to competition day, heâll put a good house music mix on his AirPods.
âWe always get nervous as skateboarders because we all want to do good out there,â Huston said. âItâs really easy to let those nerves take over you in skateboarding and mess up on easy tricks that you should be landing every time. Itâs really about trying to transfer those nerves into being hyped in the moment, trying to transfer those vibes.â
Huston has had a long-term sponsorship with Monster Energy, and itâs obvious why the partnership works.
Monster senior vice president of marketing Sam Pontrelli said that Huston transcends the skate culture, not overstating things when he calls Huston the Tony Hawk of his generation.
âHe went from just a street skater, to now, a celebrity,â Pontrelli said. Thereâs a few people who have been able to do that over the years, and heâs probably one of Monsterâs best who was able to do that. You see him in fashion magazines, you see him on TV a lot. Heâs kind of the face of street skate, which is just absolutely phenomenal for us.
âHeâs good looking, heâs got the tats, heâs got the lifestyle, heâs got the great cars, heâs got the girls. Heâs like the perfect spokesperson for our type of brand.â
Huston and fellow Monster team riders Liam Pace, Grace Marhoefer and Ruby Lilley took part in Wednesdayâs media day. At one point, Pace tried to do a trick and planted his foot through the drywall of Hustonâs skate park, right on the bridge of the nose of a woman painted on the wall.
Watching from a distance, Huston just smiled, bemusedly asking if Pace was OK (he was).
âI love the chaos of skateboarding, we all do, especially when it comes to street skateboarding,â Huston said. âYouâre out there, youâre skating a city, youâre dealing with outside elements. Youâre dealing with pedestrians that might be pissed off that youâre skating next to them. Security guards, cops kicking you out. Iâve even been put in handcuffs a couple of times, just from skateboarding. I personally love that side to it.â
Thereâs a sort of clash in trying to leverage that rebellious nature to the Olympic stage. Huston said his greatest accomplishment so far isnât even any contest win, itâs the street skating videos, known as âparts,â that heâs put out over the years. Thatâs really how youâre remembered as a skateboarder, he said.
âI have so many kids come up to me like, âoh, I watch this part almost every day to start my day and get hyped to go skate,ââ he said. âIâm like, âYes, I love hearing that.ââ
As for his top contest memories, he said somehow capturing the biggest amateur contest when he was 10 years old stands out. So does winning his third straight World Skateboarding Championship street skate gold medal in Brazil in 2019.
An Olympic gold would also be way up there for Huston, who regardless wonât forget the sportâs history.
âI think itâs sick that skateboardingâs in the Olympics, and I also think itâs sick that you can go out skating and get arrested,â Huston said. âItâs two completely different sides to it, and itâs definitely what makes skateboarding special. Itâs definitely more of a lifestyle and a way of heart than it is a sport.â
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