Sports

Mitchie Brusco: Kirkland's World Famous Skateboarder and Regular Kid

"Little Tricky" at 14 is traveling the world and winning acclaim, but says he's just a regular kid from Juanita who loves hanging out with his friends.

Mitchie Brusco was three years old and about three feet tall when he first stepped onto a skateboard and started riding back and forth on a tiny wooden half-pipe at a little skateboard shop in the Totem Lake area.

Now at 14, heโ€™s still a regular down-home Kirkland kid. But heโ€™s jetting all over the planet and flying above mega vert-ramps while riding with the best skateboarders in the solar system, in places like Times Square in New York City.

He won that event, by the way, โ€œAir in the Squareโ€ earlier this month with huge skate names like Bob Burnquist and Andy Macdonald.

โ€œIt was amazing,โ€ he says. โ€œItโ€™s a lot of fun, traveling and seeing the world. But I mean, Iโ€™m just a normal kid. Thatโ€™s my goal, seeing the world and being a kid.โ€

I first saw โ€œLittle Tricky,โ€ as he came to be known, at that long-gone Totem Lake skate shop called Trickwood, where Iโ€™d take my then skate-punk son to get stuff like decks and trucks -- as the boards and wheels are called. Here was this tiny little guy with uncanny balance, totally focused on riding that little pipe, back and forth, back and forth.

โ€œI knew there was something there,โ€ says his mom, Jen Brusco, who now accompanies Mitchie in his world travels -- this week he was in Brazil, where he became the youngest rider ever to land a 900, or 2.5 aerial spins.ย 

The rest of us knew he was good, especially for being 3, but never imagined heโ€™d go so far. The list of his accomplishments could hang from the highest air he can get -- and thatโ€™s plenty -- to the bottom of the vert ramp.

Heโ€™s been on national television about 20 times -- Good Morning America, The View, Jimmy Kimmel, etc., etc.

He was the youngest athlete ever to compete in the Gravity Games.

Two months before he buried the wow hammer at Air in the Square, he iced first place in the Tampa Am Vert Contest in Florida, with tricks like his switch backside air.

In the whole world there are 12 to 20 top-level extreme vert skateboarders, and 14-year-old Mitchie Brusco from Kirkland is one of them.

This is a kid who last year toured Australia with skateboard legend Tony Hawk. Seriously, check out the attached You Tube video of the pair doing simultaneous 720s -- double aerial spins -- high over a ramp down under.

โ€œNormally when I go out of the country it's with Tony,โ€ he says with absolute nonchalance.

Yet heโ€™s seems modest and unpretentious, almost embarrassed by his success, and for a 14-year-old, even spiritual. He says skateboarding is not really about competition, it's about expression.

โ€œSome people use drawing, some people use music, and I skateboard,โ€ he explains. โ€œItโ€™s just what I do all the time. Itโ€™s never the same beat or the same painting. If youโ€™re down, you go skate it out.โ€

Back home in his Juanita neighborhood, what he enjoys best is hanging with his buds, walking around, to Juanita High School, Dairy Queen, 7-11.

โ€œI love Kirkland. All my friends are there. Thereโ€™s nothing I would change.โ€

The first skate park he ever rode was the tiny, outdated one (circa 1993) at Kirklandโ€™s , and he has fond memories of hanging out there and at the across the street.

When heโ€™s at home now, he usually sharpens his technique at the Skate Barn in Renton, but sometimes heโ€™ll ride at the fairly rockinโ€™ outdoor skate park at Woodinvilleโ€™s .

Thatโ€™s where we met him recently, and watching him ride, he seemed indistinguishable from all the other kids on wheels.

โ€œHeโ€™s just so humble,โ€ says his mother. โ€œHeโ€™s so easy to be with. He takes nothing for granted.โ€

Mitchie seems like a pretty clean-cut kid, and says one thing he doesnโ€™t like about skateboarding is its image - or more accurately, the perceptions others might have of it.

โ€œEverybody thinks itโ€™s all these rebels, smoking weed, breaking things and getting into trouble. Itโ€™s not like that anymore. It might have used to be, but itโ€™s turning into a sport.โ€

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Remember the bumper-sticker that said: "Skateboarding is not ย crime!" Says Jen: "They're athletes, and they're intelligent and very artistic. That's what's frustrating."

What skateboarding means to most riders, Mitchie says, is being yourself.

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โ€œSkateboarding is about self-motivation. Itโ€™s about doing something for yourself. You can do whatever you want, however you want.โ€

Mitchie is home-schooled through an on-line program, which fits his busy schedule, and says he plans on graduating high school right along with his friends.

โ€œItโ€™s really beneficial for me,โ€ he says. โ€œBefore, Iโ€™d go to school, get home, go skate, eat dinner, do homework and then go to bed. This way I have time to hang with my friends.โ€

Girlfriends? No time. โ€œThey just cause problems,โ€ he says, before reflecting for a moment. โ€œMaybe if I met someone cool.โ€

Foolishly, I ask him what he wants to be when he grows up.

โ€œI want to be a policeman,โ€ he says with mock seriousness, before breaking into a grin. โ€œI just want to skate for the rest of my life. I just want to do it until I canโ€™t.โ€

But Mitchie, what about college and all that?

โ€œCollege is to get a normal job and I never want to have a normal job.โ€

You leave with the feeling that just maybe, heโ€™ll be โ€œLittle Trickyโ€ enough to never need one.

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