Parkour Running Blog

Extreme Parkour Running

Sep-15-2008

Parkour Faceplant at Barclaycard World Championships

Parkour Faceplant - this is why only professionals should attempt these stunts.
http://www.dumpalink.com/videos/Parkour_faceplant-db1a.html

This sucks and it took a toll on him, however he did get up and was able to walk away without any broken bones.

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Posted under Parkour
Sep-10-2008

Freerunning joins sport establishment

A competitor in the world freerunning championships
A competitor in the world freerunning championships. Photograph: Ben
Stansall/AFP/Getty Images

Five years ago, outside Liverpool Street station in London, a group of 13 young men gathered for what was, at the time, the biggest meeting of freerunners in history. The sport, in which participants perform balletic leaps and flips using walls, bars and any other street furniture available, was still in its earliest infancy, mushrooming spontaneously across Britain among young people who had seen films of the French urban sport parkour and wanted to adapt it into a freer and more expressive form.

How times change. Last night, the once underground pursuit declared itself firmly in the sporting establishment by holding its first world championships, hosted in one of London’s top venues, sponsored by a major credit card company, and filmed by Sky Sports.

“I never, ever thought we’d get to this place so quickly,” said John Kerr, or “Kerbie”, one of the event’s organisers. Present at that inaugural gathering at Liverpool Street, he finds himself, at 21, one of the sport’s elder statesmen.

“We all feel amazingly blessed. Freerunning is so young and so new. A few years ago we were getting chased by police on a regular basis and property owners would shout at us. Now they pay us to come and perform on their properties.”

Fifty feet above him, one of the event’s 23 competitors was warming up by balancing in a handstand on the edge of an enormous black box, part of the equipment on which he would later compete, before flipping on to a nearby bar, spinning around it, and dismounting. Below him, his peers - those not already performing “gainers” and “loser flips” and “layout backflips” from a lattice of steel poles - murmured approvingly. The sport might be said to combine the best qualities of gymnastics, cat burglary and teenage mucking about, but the skill of the participants is unarguable.

Few underground activities can claim to have made it into the mainstream with such dazzling speed. Many participants trace the birth of freerunning to a BBC “ident” in 2002, showing a parkour runner adapting his skills on the rooftops of London.

Urban Freeflow, the sport’s central organisation, was founded a year later. Though closely related to parkour, which originated in the Paris suburbs a decade ago, that pursuit prizes speed and efficiency of movement, in contrast to the expressiveness of freerunners. As such, though it is practised worldwide - last night’s competitors hailed from 17 countries - freerunning could reasonably be described as a brand new British sport.

Urban Freeflow now trains the Metropolitan police and Royal Marines, as well as organising workshops in schools, and estimates that 15,000 people now practise the sport in Britain (95% are male).

The organisation choreographed action sequences for the films Casino Royale, the Bourne Ultimatum and 28 Weeks Later, and performs at civic events - an outlet so lucrative that it is able to support 30 professional athletes.

As the founder of Urban Freeflow and the organiser of last night’s competition, Paul “EZ” Corkery could be considered the grandfather of freerunning - at 34, he considers himself retired. He is in discussions with the 2012 Olympic organisers over how freerunning might be involved, perhaps in the opening ceremonies, or in workshops.

“The organisers are really eager to collaborate with anything that gets the kids off their arses,” he said. Does he see a day when freerunning might be an Olympic sport? “I don’t really think it fits. You’d need to put in place a national governing body, things like that, and it would kill the sport, really.”

Freerunning world championships

While there was no doubting the competitors’ eagerness to excel yesterday, freerunners may also have something to learn about Olympic competitiveness. The world champion was to be selected by a vote among his peers. Was there any risk of tactical voting?

“Oh no. These guys are my YouTube idols, it means everything to be here with them,” said Franck “Cali” Nelle, from France. How badly did he want to win? “I’m not really thinking about the podium. It’s just being here alongside the best of the best. The first ever freerunning world championships? That’s a big event. That’s history books.”

Freerunning world championships

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Posted under Parkour
Aug-27-2008

Parkour Festival Scotland

Prodigal Theatre puts on a Parkour Event in Scotland

PARKOUR free-runners and fashion fans will flock to Glasgow’s cultural quarter for this year’s Merchant City Festival.

The seventh annual festival, launched today, is set to scale new heights in making the buzzing area Glasgow’s artistic hub.

The four-day event will feature parkour performers running freestyle over some of the area’s architectural gems, while a glamour catwalk show and designer label shopping extravaganza are poised to enhance the city’s style credentials.

To learn more about this event click below
Parkour Festival Scotland

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Posted under Parkour Running
Aug-25-2008

Parkour meets Gollum, meets Blade2 reaper dancers!

This is one wicked video.

Chemical Brothers has some crazy orc coming out of a dumpster and dancing and doing moves that most Traceurs wish they could do.
What’s up with the outfit?  None the less this thing can get down!
Midnight Madness

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Posted under Parkour Running