The People Behind the Culture
The riders who carved the path. The builders who shaped the tools. The rebels who refused to stop. This is our hall — honoring the people who built riding culture across every discipline.
1825 — 1897
Norwegian
The father of modern skiing. Sondre invented the Telemark turn and the binding system that made controlled downhill skiing possible. In the 1860s, he …
1870 — 1947
Latvian-American
Born Annie Cohen Kopchovsky in Latvia, she became the first woman to bicycle around the world in 1894-1895 — fifteen months on two wheels through a wo…
1874 — 1900
American
A Black cyclist who challenged the League of American Wheelmen's racial exclusion policy in 1895 by showing up to their annual meet with a valid membe…
1890 — 1968
Hawaiian
“The best surfer out there is the one having the most fun.”
Olympic swimmer, waterman, and the person most responsible for bringing surfing to the world. Duke didn't just ride waves — he carried an entire cultu…
1943 — 2012
American
Legendary Hawaiian-born shaper who bridged traditional longboard craft with modern performance design. His boards carried the aesthetic and soul of ol…
1944 —
American
Founded Channel Islands Surfboards and shaped boards for Tom Curren, Kelly Slater, and generations of world champions. His designs defined modern high…
1945 — 2024
American
The first women's national skateboard champion in 1965 — before skateboarding had a real industry, before it had media, before it had respect. Patti w…
1945 —
American
Co-organized the first Repack downhill races on Mount Tam and spent decades documenting mountain biking's origins. While others built bikes and brands…
1945 —
Belgian
“Ride as much or as little, or as long or as short as you feel. But ride.”
Known as "The Cannibal" because he consumed every race he entered. Five Tour de France victories, five Giro d'Italia, and over 500 career wins. Eddy d…
1946 — 1978
Hawaiian
The first lifeguard at Waimea Bay and the greatest big wave rider of his era. Eddie paddled out in waves that made other surfers walk away. In 1978, h…
1950 —
American
Co-invented the mountain bike on the slopes of Mount Tamalpais in the 1970s. Gary took a cruiser bike, added gears and better brakes, pointed it downh…
1951 —
American
Sued the American Motorcyclist Association in 1971 for the right to race motocross against men, after being barred from competition solely on the basi…
1953 —
American
Won the first women's world surfing championship in 1968 at fifteen years old, then added two more titles. Margo didn't wait for women's surfing to be…
1953 —
American
Built the Breezer No. 1 in 1977, widely recognized as the first purpose-built mountain bike. Documented the early history of mountain biking and advoc…
1954 — 2019
American
“Snowboarding is an activity that is very popular with people who do not feel that they fit in.”
Built Burton Snowboards from nothing in a Vermont barn and then spent decades fighting for snowboarding's right to exist on mountains. Jake didn't inv…
1956 —
American
Created the iconic Powell-Peralta skateboard graphics — the Ripper, the skull and sword — that defined skateboarding's visual identity for a generatio…
1956 —
American
Built the first purpose-designed mountain bike frames in his garage alongside Gary Fisher and Charlie Kelly. His welding and frame geometry innovation…
1956 —
American
Known as "Hurricane," Bob Hannah dominated American motocross in the late 1970s and 1980s with an aggression and intensity that no one had seen before…
1957 —
American
Z-Boy, filmmaker, and the architect of the Bones Brigade. Stacy saw what skateboarding could become before anyone else did, then built the team and th…
1957 — 2018
American
Organized the first-ever BMX races in the early 1970s as a teenager in Long Beach. When there was no BMX, Scot created it — laying out tracks, writing…
1957 —
American
“I didn't ride for a trophy. I rode because it was the only thing that made sense.”
Original Z-Boy. The first person to get airborne on a skateboard, launching out of an empty pool in Dogtown and changing the sport forever. Alva didn'…
1966 — 2003
American
“Snowboarding's not about staying in your lane. It's about finding the line nobody's drawn yet.”
Four-time world champion who walked away from competition at his peak to ride backcountry. Craig believed snowboarding was about the mountain, not the…
1968 —
American
The greatest women's transition skater of her generation and a dominant force in both skateboarding and snowboarding. Cara-Beth competed for decades a…
1969 —
American
Won four consecutive world surfing titles from 1994 to 1997, establishing a dynasty that no woman had achieved before. Lisa ran away from home at sixt…
1972 —
American
“I didn't want to be the best. I wanted to find out what was possible.”
Known as "the Condor," Mat Hoffman pushed freestyle BMX beyond what anyone thought the human body could survive. He broke over 50 bones, had multiple …
1974 —
Norwegian
“Snowboarding is not a sport. It's a lifestyle.”
The most naturally gifted snowboarder of all time. Terje famously boycotted the 1998 Olympics, refusing to let snowboarding be co-opted by an institut…
1978 —
Hawaiian
Broke the gender barrier in big wave surfing by charging Teahupo'o — the heaviest wave on Earth — when no other woman would paddle out. Keala didn't a…
1979 —
Italian
“The most important thing is to have fun.”
Nine world championship titles across multiple classes. Valentino Rossi didn't just race motorcycles — he turned MotoGP into a global spectacle, bring…
1987 —
British
Six World Championships and forty World Cup victories in downhill mountain biking — numbers that place her among the most dominant athletes in any cyc…
1990 —
American
“Courage doesn't mean you don't get afraid. Courage means you don't let fear stop you.”
Lost her arm to a tiger shark at 13 and was back on her board within a month. Bethany didn't just return to surfing — she competed at the highest leve…
Hawaiian
The first surfers included women of Hawaiian nobility who rode royal breaks as spiritual practice and demonstration of mana. Ali'i women were not spec…
Mexican
Rode through the locked-gate era of motocross when women were actively excluded from competition, then turned her experience into action by building y…
American
Founded in 2001, the Texas Rollergirls launched roller derby's third wave and built the organizational model that became the Women's Flat Track Derby …
American
Founder of Dreamland Skateparks. Designed and built concrete skateparks across the Pacific Northwest that set the standard for community-oriented park…
Every discipline has its heroes — the riders who changed everything, the builders who made it possible, the rebels who preserved the soul. If you carry their story, nominate them.
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