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Alternative Freestyle – Nate Sutter

August 14, 2013 By Steve Brown

Here’s our next video from the 2013 Alternative Freestyle Invitational…this one from Nate Sutter!

Nate’s smooth, flowy repeaters are some of the best-looking tricks out there. While he’s not usually a freestyle player, it’s great to see him on stage working through some of our favorite tricks.

Filed Under: Contests, Video Tagged With: 2013, alternative freestyle invitational, featured, Nate Sutter, video, world yoyo contest, yoyonews exclusive

Fixed Friday: Sidewinders

February 8, 2013 By Drew Tetz

Ahh, the sidewinder, the most elusive and beautiful bird in the animal kingdom. Did you know that the average sidewinder has a twelve-foot vertical leap and can swallow a Volkswagen Bus whole?

Just kidding, I made that up. Wouldn’t it be crazy, though? Man, snakes are weird. Anyways, this Fixed Friday is all about sidewinder, a classic string adjustment technique with a place in every well-rounded player’s trick vocabulary that’s had a surprising resurgence in modern 1A . Let’s check it out:

First up we got the garden variety sidewinder. You throw down the yo-yo, move your hand to the side as the yo-yo returns, the string makes a pretty lil’ fluttery motion, and you catch it. If you’re having trouble getting the flutter, try throwing a little bit softer. When the yo-yo hits the bottom of the string, tug a little bit harder than usual to return it so that it pops in the air a little bit – only a little bit! Don’t hit yourself in the face, now. As the yo-yo travels up the string, quickly move your hand to the side. If you do everything correctly, you’ll notice that you’re pulling the string against the side of the yo-yo, which causes the fluttering as the yo-yo winds up. After you get comfortable getting one or two flutters, try it on the other side of the yo-yo. Sweet! You did it! Yeah!

…so, a trick that flaps the string. No big deal, right? Well, I personally happen to think it’s beautiful, but more importantly, you’ll probably remember that I mentioned string adjustment. You can use sidewinder to fix your tension! Every time you move your hand to the right side of the yo-yo on a sidewinder, it tightens the string, and every time you move it to the left it loosens it. This is hugely important when playing with fixed axle yo-yos, because string tension actually affects your response. If your fixie is too responsive, trying loosening the string, and vice-versa if it’s not responsive enough. This is definitely one of the fastest ways to fix your string tension, and a valuable tool in any player’s arsenal.

Now that we’ve got the basic one down, let’s talk about some weird stuff. First off, the double sidewinder: you may argue that this trick is pointless, because sidewinding on both sides undoes whatever good it would’ve done… but hey, what’s the point of any yo-yo trick? Yeah, that’s what I thought. Smartypants. What were we talking abou- oh, yeah. Double sidewinder may not fix your tension or get you any points in a contest, but it can be a surprise burner in games of Butterfly Horse, and a surefire way to impress old school players. (Former THP members, of course, won’t be impressed unless you can pull off a triple – what’s up Joseph Harris?)

Next up in the silly trick parade is Vertical Sidewinder. Long considered impossible, still considered a joke by many, and an absolute killer in Butterfly Horse, this one requires high ceilings and a lot of patience – but if you can get used to the timing and have a little luck with gravity, it’s not too bad. (Bonus Points: Show this to anybody on the Werrd team and call it “Sidewinder Down Under.” Trust me, they love it.)

Moving into the modern, string-based tricks, we got sidewinder to thumb stall. This may be the simplest of sidewinder-to-stall tricks, because it can all be handled with one hand: perform a sidewinder, stick your thumb out to intercept the string, and stick the landing on the string instead of catching it like normal. This principle can be applied to pretty much any stall you can think of, and I strongly encouraging trying to land a trapeze or braintwister stall once you get the thumb mount down, you’ll probably just have to move a little faster.

Let’s finish this week off with a short tech stall combo, which is an original that I’m calling LFO. It could basically be described as a Trap Stall > Dumptruck > Sidewinder > Trap Stall sequence, and it should give a little example of how sidewinders can be executed into and out of string trick combos. Pairing sidewinders with dumptrucks is nice, because the flip effectively sets you up with a straight throw that can be regenerated and sidewinder’ed into a stall. These are especially exciting in the field of responsive play, because stalls/loops/etc. allow you to mix in sidewinders on any regeneration, which would be the flutteriest freestyle of all time.

While sidewinder undoubtedly began in the world of response, it does have a place in modern unresponsive play. Palli’s got an amazing trick called grindwinder (see :20 in this fantastic video for the original), and then there’s Vu’s awesome “Hangtime” and it’s not at all uncommon to see players performing sidewinders from binds in competition.

Also, if you do a sidewinder against baggy pants it makes a weird flapping noise, and the trick is called – wait for it – “Rattlesnake.” Need I say any more? I hope not. Go learn this trick and talk about it with other fixed axle fiends on the facebook group. (and hey, why don’t you like YoYoNews while you’re at it?)

Filed Under: Fixed Friday, Trick Theory Tagged With: butterfly, drew tetz, duncan toys, exclusive, featured, fixed friday, sidewinder, video, yoyonews exclusive

Fixed Friday: Reverse Spin & “Give Me That Yo-Yo, Eh!” Results!

February 1, 2013 By Ed Haponik

First things first: CONTEST WINNER!

The Fixed Friday group on Facebook saw a number of quality entries over the last few weeks for the chance to win a one-of-a-kind maple leaf-branded SPYYxTMBR “Eh”. The Light Sleeper Society (which DOES exist, though they would have you believe otherwise) convened to pick a winner. On the combined basis of pushing boundaries and adherence to the contest’s theme, the winner is…

KYLE NATIONS

Congrats, Kyle. Your super-special “Eh” is on its way, and it’ll be lucky to get thrown by someone who legitimately rips fixed axle.

 

Alright, on to the trick premise for this week: Question everything.

If you want to do anything meaningfully, you kind of have to have that approach (or at least willfully ignore it).

In my last column, I suggested that yo-yo tricks don’t need to start with the yo-yo wound up. This time, I’m going to operate from the premise that you don’t need to throw them “right”.

Reverse spin tricks have a unique appeal with regard to fixed axle. For much of an unresponsive-bearing yo-yo trick, the direction of spin is something you are welcome to ignore. The yo-yo is spinning, which gives it the angular momentum to resist turning against its primary axis, which keeps you in your intended trick, and that’s good enough. When it’s time to bind back up, spin direction matters again, but only kind of, for most people. When you’re rocking wood though, it matters big time.

For one, nearly all of the progressive fixed axle play going on now involves some version of staccato, stall-based or stop-n-go-based play. I used to feel like a trick had some old skool flavor if I ended with a phat flyaway dismount, but now I feel like regenerating from some kind of stall has taken over as the fixed axle modus operandi. As I’ve said every week, when stalling out a yo-yo, spin direction is your first concern. If you throw a standard breakaway, you can go right to a trapeze stall, but not to a man-bro stall. But what kind of bull-jive is that? And who says you have to START from a standard breakaway?

In these tricks, the yo-yo is thrown or regenerated “backwards” at some point. There are two main ways to do this. You can either throw down with the yo-yo wound in reverse (the way you teach kids NOT to throw down), or you can regenerate in such a way that the yo-yo DOES NOT flip over, resulting in a backward spin. Either way, if you can keep it straight, you’ve entered a cool, “Bizarro World” of mirror-image stall possibilities. Check out these examples, and then find your own methods of getting that sweet negative spin.

In the first one, I demonstrate a nice, clean way to go right into a reverse-wind without an audience really noticing (not that most would care). Bob Rule taught me this one on stage at Worlds. The subtle nuances and tricks that guy has locked away in his noggin would stun almost any modern performer in his tracks. Just throw forward pass, and catch it with your fingers pointing up. We’ve all done it, but how many people do it purposely to seamlessly move into a reverse wind? I’ma say “few”. Throwing a breakaway with a reverse wind takes some practice. You tend to put it on its side, and there’s a weird, sketchy feeling that you have to overcome. Once you do though, going right into a free-hand chopsticks man-bro stall (there has to be a better name for that) feels pretty rewarding.

Another option is the “bowling” throw. Drew and I have both come up with variations of this trick independently. Hold the yo-yo “regular”, but let it roll off your hand in reverse as you do a kind of “softball throw”. You can’t do this quickly, which is great because it gives your throwhand time to get into position and land in a neat Bird-In-Hand which would be impossible using a normal throw. There’s a lot of potential in this sort of throw, and I love tricks which I can do with my hand stylishly enclosed within my pocket.

Trick #3 is one of my babies (albeit, a kind of lame baby that no one loves or appreciates besides his father). Anti-loops are a great way to get into a reverse spin. Yeah, an Anti-loop is basically a Gravity Pull done “outward”, but try doing 5 of them in a row. Once you’ve switched the direction, you really have to switch the side you’re stalling out on. On a normal forward pass, your freehand would have to be in front. The Anti-loop lets you switch it.

Last trick is one of my favorite fixed axle repeaters. Watch the pogs on the yo-yo. Notice that they’re always on the same side. Between the two stalls, there’s an inside-loop regen. If the yo-yo flips over, the stall (just like the one in trick #1) is a no-go. If, however, you can purposely KEEP it from flipping on the loop, the spin direction will be reversed and the stall will work. This is a great test of your loop control. We’re all used to Moons and Planet Hops where the yo-yo isn’t “supposed” to flip, but keeping it from flipping on an inside loop feels strange… in a good way.

And that’s kind of the whole thing. We’re collectively deciding right now where fixed axle yo-yoing can go. By limiting our options with respect to hardware and spin time, we’ve got no choice but to open our minds to other aspects and dimensions within our play. If there’s something we’re taking for granted (how the yo-yo is wound, thrown, caught, stopped, started, etc), then it’s worth examining. If we want to transcend the notion that fixed axle yo-yo’s are primarily a good training ground to practice the same tech tricks we’d do on a modern metal yo-yo, then it’s on us to develop the trick vocabulary that suits the medium. That’s what’s going to take fixed axle yo-yoing from being a useful and fashionable novelty to being something we can really consider a “style”.

 

 

Filed Under: Fixed Friday, Trick Theory, Video Tagged With: contest, ed haponik, featured, fixed friday, reverse spin, winner, yoyonews exclusive

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