The story of women in skateboarding is often told as a recent breakthrough, as if the sport opened its doors only when it became Olympic. The reality is older, stranger, and more stubborn. Women have been skating since the sport had a name, sometimes celebrated, more often erased, occasionally tolerated, and only recently invited to compete on equal terms. Charting the path from Patti McGee in 1965 to Sky Brown on the Olympic podium reveals less a rise than a long, frustrating climb against an industry that wasn’t sure what to do with them.
The pioneers nobody filmed
Patti McGee made the cover of Life magazine in 1965, freestyling on a wooden board with a confidence that should have launched a generation. Peggy Oki rode with the Z-Boys in the 1970s, the only woman in a crew that became the founding myth of modern skating. Cara-Beth Burnside dominated vert in the 1990s when there was barely a contest series for her to enter. These weren’t anomalies, they were simply the women who broke through despite an industry that refused to fund them, film them, or pay them. Sponsorships went to men. Magazines covered men. The cultural memory of skateboarding’s golden eras is overwhelmingly male because the cameras were pointed in one direction.
The gatekeeping economy
Skateboarding’s industry structure made the imbalance worse. Sponsorships, board sales, and magazine coverage formed a feedback loop where visibility produced money, and money produced visibility, and women were systematically locked out of the entry point. Contests offered smaller purses for women’s divisions, when they offered them at all. Skate parks became hostile spaces, not always overtly, but consistently enough that many women found community in informal sessions and women-only events. The 2010s saw the emergence of brands like Meow Skateboards and crews built around riders like Lacey Baker and Leticia Bufoni, who refused to wait for permission. The progression of tricks accelerated once the resources finally caught up to the talent that had always been there.
Sky Brown and the new ceiling
When Sky Brown took bronze in Tokyo in 2021 at thirteen, it marked a shift that had been building for a decade. Olympic inclusion forced equal prize money in the qualifying circuit, opened federations to women’s programs, and drew sponsors who suddenly cared about the demographic they had ignored. Brown’s medal mattered, but so did Momiji Nishiya’s gold, Rayssa Leal’s silver, and the visible pipeline behind them. The kids skating now have something the pioneers didn’t, a public record of women landing the same tricks under the same lights. The ceiling is still there, but it’s higher and visibly cracking.
Bottom line
Women didn’t arrive in skateboarding, they were always there, and the sport spent decades pretending otherwise. The arc from Patti McGee to Sky Brown is a story of talent waiting for an industry to catch up. The current generation skates harder, lands bigger, and films more because the infrastructure finally exists, not because the ability is new. The next chapter belongs to the kids watching now.
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