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Fixed Friday: Duncan Crew USA Chillin’

August 30, 2013 By Drew Tetz

Greetings, Fixed Axle Fanatics! Welcome to another glorious friday, and another clip from your friends at Yoyonews. As an extra special treat, this week those friends are more than just me! We’ve got some of Duncan Crew USA’s finest throwing down fixed axle knowledge—let’s take a peek, shall we?

First up to the plate, we’ve got Isaac Sams bringing his own unique twist to Nate Sutter’s “Pocketwatch” trick (which you can see in both the FACoatW finals and his alternative freestyle). This unique move captured the attention of plenty of top players at Worlds ’13 with its counterintuitive (yet brilliant!) method of stopping the yo-yo halfway down the string. This is normally considered a snag, but when used intentionally (as Isaac does here for a shortened somersault before entering 2or0) it can really mix up your tricks. What makes pocketwatch even better is how simple it is to learn: catch the yo-yo in your non-throwhand as it’s responding, give it a good hard yank, and then let that baby twirl.

I bump the tech level up for the next combo, which utilizes dump trucks to maneuver between more technical mounts. It opens with one of my favorite chopsticks stalls—I don’t know if it really has a name, as it’s just landing between the non-throwhand thumb/finger after a double or nothing, but I call it “ice cream cone”. I call a lot of tricks that, I guess. The trickiest part of this trick is swinging the yo-yo forward into a chopsticks dump truck, which puts a kink in the string. We get rid of the kink with another dump truck through the bucket before entering a reverse bucket with yet another dump truck. So many trucks!!

World Champion Hank Freeman brings us back to reality and shows that you don’t need string hits for tough tricks with his newest signature move, “The Turbo Rotary Hankinator.” (I name most of Hank’s tricks, btw.) If you wanna try this, just start with a shoot the moon down under, but when you get to the punches turn 180 degrees each rep. You’ll never stop punching! Just like Hank.

Takeshi has something very special this week, showing once again why he’s one of the best modders in the world with a fixed axle Exit 8. He powers through one of his signature 1A combos, a decidedly new school twist on the fixie formula, and proves that wood & metal yo-yos can live in harmony.

Isaac shows us more unconventional uses of the pocketwatch with a trick that could be considered even stall-ier than normal stalls, a pocketwatch to thumb mount. This trick is great because it’s simple, immediately understandable… but still challenging and entertaining. Dig the pacing.

The next trick that I show in the video is actually an ingenious technique for kickflip suicides pioneered by five time national offstring champ, Bryan Figueroa. Before you throw the suicide, if you wrap a bind of string around the axle, the loop will hang on through anything—clearly demonstrated by my even-sloppier-than-usual knee bonk suicide catch. You do have to keep an eye out for the yo-yo twisting around after the wrap, but if you’re the kind of player who likes risky tricks with big rewards and you want to take your kickflips to the next level, it’s definitely worth learning.

Hank takes it back to 2A town with possibly one of the first tricks ever to include both a loop wrap and a green triangle. The loop wrap (using your non-throwhand wrist to control loops) is an invaluable regen tool, but Hank kicks it up a notch by using the wrist twist to create a triangle and catch the yo-yo in a stall. Daaang! Bust this one out on all your friends for butterfly horse, they’ll be salty.

My last trick in the video is another dumptruck-heavy tech trick, titled “Peanut Butter Loves Honey.” This one opens with a wristmount stall, turns it upside-down, and after remounting into a fake bucket goes into some hyperspeed knee bounces.

Finally, Isaac closes out the fixed portion of the clip with a burly variation on his wrist magic drop straight into a thumb stall. Gnarly! Stick around after the credits for some bonus bearing booty from the boys, and don’t forget to comment below about your favorite tricks. Oh, and you can download the song here if you’d like. Until next week, Fixed Axle Aficinados!

Filed Under: Fixed Friday, Players, Trick Theory, Video Tagged With: butterfly, drew tetz, Duncan, duncan crew USA, fist salud, fixed axle, fixed friday, hank freeman, Isaac Sams, lil' ripper, takeshi kamisato

3A World Champion Hank Freeman – Alternate Angles

August 17, 2013 By Steve Brown

We’ve got multiple angles of Hank Freeman’s winning 3A freestyle from FOUR angles, for all you players obsessing over how to take next year’s title. Now you just need a decade of practice like Hank has, and you’re all set. Good luck!

Hank Freeman – Angle 1

Hank Freeman – Angle 2

Hank Freeman – GoPro Slow Motion

Hank Freeman – GoPro Regular Speed

 

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: alternate angle, barracuda, duncan toys, gopro, hank freeman, world yoyo champion

2013 World YoYo Contest Winning Freestyles (VIDEO)

August 12, 2013 By Steve Brown

2013 World YoYo Contest – 1A Division – 1st Place  – Janos Karancz

2013 World YoYo Contest – 2A Division – 1st Place – Takuma Yamamoto

2013 World YoYo Contest – 3A Division  – 1st Place – Hank Freeman

2013 World YoYo Contest – 4A Division – 1st Place – Michael Nakamura

2013 World YoYo Contest – 5A Division – 1st Place – Takeshi Matsuura

2013 World YoYo Contest – AP Division – 1st Place – Spination

Filed Under: Contests, Video Tagged With: 2013 world yoyo contest, featured, freestyle, hank freeman, janos karancz, michael nakamura, spination, takeshi matsuura, takuma yamamoto, video, winners, winning

Top 5 3A Yo-Yo Players of All-Time

July 31, 2013 By Patrick Borgerding

As we gear up for the 2013 World YoYo Contest, we take a step back to appreciate and admire the greats of years past. We will be posting the top 5 in each division in the weeks leading up to the World Yo-Yo Contest.

Triple A is another style that has roots in the Duncan demonstrators of the 50s and 60s, but it took a modern player to see the potential and bring it into the current day. Early promotional images of Duncan demonstrator Wayne Lundberg show the most rudimentary of 3A play….a Sleeper with one hand, a Trapeze from the other. With the wooden yoyos of the 50s and 60s, this is generally all that was possible, but with the move from fixed axles to ball-bearing axles in the 90s, suddenly the equipment could handle a lot more. In 1998, Mark McBride created the first string trick involving two spinning yoyos, Velvet Rolls. Created as part of a bet with Steve Brown, Velvet Rolls is the trick that served as the catalyst for modern 3A play. From there, McBride worked on dual-mount tricks and kink mounts, while Brown focused on “assisted” 3A tricks…using one yoyo as a slave to create an additional anchor point within a trick. From early tricks like Assisted Suicide (ironically still one of the most difficult single tricks) and Blue Line Rolls came the foundation of modern 3A play; brought from being a “parking lot” division held for fun after established contests to one of the most complicated and difficult divisions in competitive yoyoing, 3A has grown tremendously and is one of the fastest growing divisions today.

Top 5 3A Players of All Time

5. Paul Yath – USA_flag

  • 1x World Champion, 4x National Champion, 4x Regional Champion

A huge early innovator with concepts that combined 2A and 3A, Paul paved the way to what is now modern 3A. Complex tech tricks, visually appealing mounts and tangler combos, Paul had it all. Capturing a world title in 2006, as well as multiple National titles over some others players on this list, Paul demonstrated why he is one of the greats.

4. Hiroki Miyamoto – japanese_flag

  • 1x World Champion, 2x National Champion, 1x Regional Champion

Bursting on the scene at the Central Japan regional competition, Miyamoto brought to the stage tricks that had concepts never before been attempted. His unmistakable methodical style saw him to the top spot in the world of 3A in 2008. Many of his tricks from 2007-2008 would still hold up against todays competition. He injected a level of innovation that took 3A to a whole different level and thus earned his spot as one of the greatest to ever throw the style.

3. Hank Freeman – USA_flag

  • 2x World Champion, 3x National Champion, 1x Regional Champion

With unmatched flow and ease, Hank is quickly cementing his place in the 3A hall of fame.  With three National titles and back-to-back World titles, Hank proved what so many knew for so long—he’s incredible.  Hank’s personality shines bright on stage with his laid back attitude when performing extremely difficult tricks.  If Hank decides to continue competing, he may take over the greatest of all time in 3A.

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 2. Kentaro Kimura – japanese_flag/ USA_flag

  • 1x World Champion, 1x Asia Champion, 2x National Champion, 4x Regional Champion, 2x State Champion

The single most incredible 3 minutes of 3A yo-yoing belongs to this man. After several previous years of disappointment, Kentaro beamed with confidence after he completed the legendary 2009 routine. Kentaro is perhaps one of the fastest 3A players of all time and innovated a style of 3A that is very popular today. He is undeniably one of the greatest, and with his recent decision to compete again he may have more to add to his list of achievements.

1. Daisuke Shimada – japanese_flag

  • 4x World Champion, 1x National Champion, 4x Regional Champion

Daisuke Shimada brought so much to 3A, it is very easy to put him at the top. With four World titles as testimony, his level of play was far beyond anyone at the time;  creator of possibly the most visually impressive single trick in Sword Dancers in 2004, Daisuke still blows minds with his trick in 2013. He has proved his influence on the style and inspired many to start. Daisuke is the greatest 3A player of all time.

Honorable Mentions: Yuki Tanami (World Champion), Minato Furuta (World Champion), Maya Nakamura (National Champion), Jun Aramaki (Regional Champion) , Masanobu Iwata (Regional Champion)

Who do you think are the greatest 3A players of all time? Feel free to post your thoughts below!

As a reminder, these rankings take into consideration competitive players from around 2000 and on.

Filed Under: General News, Players Tagged With: 3A, daisuke shimada, featured, hank freeman, hiroki miyamoto, kentaro kimura, mark mcbride, masanobu iwata, Maya Nakamura, minato furuta, paul yath, steve brown, top 5, top five, triple a, yuki tanami

News – Prague YoYo Scene

May 23, 2013 By Steve Brown

Prague YoYo

Expats.cz posted a nice “outsider view” of the yoyo scene in Prague…definitely worth the read!

While yo-yos can typically be found in hobby shops alongside juggling pins and frisbees, it is incredibly rare, even in a major city, to find a store that exclusively sells yo-yos. Slusny and the Yo-Yo Store are not just Prague’s only brick-and-mortar yo-yo stores, but the only ones in Europe.

Located on either side of the Vlatva river, the shops are rivals—the Montagues and Capulets of yo-yo, but without the messy violence. Both stores opened up around the same time in 2010—first the Yo-Yo Store, and then four months later, the Slusny store. Also, both are sponsored by rival yo-yo manufacturers—the Yo-Yo store by Duncan, Slusny by YoYoFactory. “The kids take the rivalry more seriously than the owners,” says Hank Freeman, an American Yo-Yo champion living in the city. “It’s not like West Side Story, though.”

Click through for the rest of the article: Prague’s Underground YoYo Scene (via Expats.cz)

Filed Under: General News Tagged With: Czech Republic, duncan toys, hank freeman, jan kordovsky, korda, prague, slusny, vashek kroutil, yoyo store, yoyofactory

Hank Freeman Promo Video

March 14, 2013 By Steve Brown

World YoYo Champion Hank Freeman gives us another round of densely-packed 3A tricks, courtesy of Japanese retailer, Rewind. Watching this it’s hard to believe that 3A started off as a bet between Mark McBride and I, then became a running joke, and now it has its own division at contests worldwide.

History is weird.

Filed Under: Players, Video Tagged With: 3A, duncan toys, hank freeman, japan, rewind, video, world yoyo champion

Hank Freeman – 2013

March 5, 2013 By Steve Brown

Hank Freeman went to Europe last year and hasn’t come back yet.

COME BACK TO US, HANK. OHIO MISSES YOU. STEVE AND BRANDON MISS YOU.

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: barracuda, duncan toys, featured, hank freeman, video

Trick Theory: 3A Quickmounts

December 7, 2012 By Drew Tetz

A yo-yo trick can be as simple or as complicated as you let it. Many players like to elevate their craft by pushing tricks in previously unseen directions, exploring nuances in presentation, inventing new styles, or breaking the contest system wide open. Let’s take a closer look at some tricks from world champion Hank Freeman.

Hank is well known throughout the community for his smooth style, unique tricks, and complete dominance of the American 3A scene. He is generally considered to be one of the best (in my opinion, THE best) 3A players in the world, and his back-to-back world titles support this. He’s also a fiend for good ramen and knows all the words to “Rappin’ Duke” – but enough about that, let’s get to the tricks. Specifically, let’s look at some of his signature quickmounts.

The blueline mount is a standard in 3A, and the basic form of blueline rolls is one of the first tricks that 3A players learn. Hank kicks the trick twenty years into the future by performing all the steps at once, performing what is called a “quickmount”.

In his 2012 title-winning freestyle, a full half of his combos opened with quickmounts. This is significant for a few reasons:

  1. By throwing straight into a mount, he shaves off a good 3-6 seconds that 3A players are used to spending on individual throws. Those seconds add up, and being able to start every trick sequence with a quickmount could open up enough room for a whole new combo in the freestyle.
  2. Opening with a quickmount gives the trick a sense of momentum that can be difficult to capture in a slow-moving style like 3A. Not only does it grab the audience’s attention and set a strong pace, but it can actually make certain tricks (like some of Hank’s double zipper sequence) easier than starting from a dead stop.
  3. Hank’s quickmounts are astonishingly difficult, and are scored accordingly. Hitting a quickmount right at the beginning of a sequence guarantees you 5-10 extra clicks right off the top, essentially giving you an extra banger every time you throw.
  4. They look freakin’ sweet. I mean, c’mon, it’s just like “pow” and you’re all like “woahhhh” and Hank’s like “yeah man.”

As you can imagine, these tricks can take years of practice, and are only just beginning to show up even at the top level of play. With high level players like Ken Takabayashi, Taiichiro Higashi, and Yasuki Tachibana integrating them more and more, though, it’s easy to see that quickmounts are marking a paradigm shift in 3A. Hank has expressed a desire to begin every trick in his 2013 freestyle with a quickmount, and it’s not hard to imagine them becoming as standard as the double trapeze sequence is now… provided that any of us can ever catch up to Hank.

As a bonus, let’s take a look back at some of Hank’s b-sides (and some quickmounts from yours truly) in the 2011 pure 3A clip “Chos”.

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS AND FURTHER READING: Remember when Jensen did his Worlds 2011 Freestyle in one throw? You know how weird and amazing Christopher Chia’s regens are? Will regen- and stall-heavy one throw freestyles eventually become the norm in 1A freestyles as contests become closer and closer and competitors cram as many points in as they can? Are 3A regens ever going to become feasible? Can anybody tell me how to do Velvet Quickmount without hitting myself in the face? Talk about it in the comments below!

Filed Under: Trick Theory, Video Tagged With: 3A, drew tetz, duncan toys, featured, hank freeman, trick theory

Hank Freeman, Isaac Sams, and Ben Conde win Triple Crown!

July 28, 2012 By Rafael Matsunaga

The 2012 Triple Crown of Yo-yo took place today in sunny Chicago and the results are in!

Duncan Crew had a most excellent day, with World Champion Hank Freeman taking the Dual Trick division, and Isaac Sams and Tomás Bubak taking the top spots in the Standard (1A) division.

Ben Conde took the Aerial Trick division, followed by Miguel Correa and Ian Johnson!

Check the results below:

Standard (1A):

  1. Isaac Sams
  2. Tomás Bubak
  3. Michael Ferdico
  4. Alex Berenguel
  5. Ray Godefroid
  6. Shane Lubecker
  7. Connor Seals
  8. Vu Ho
  9. Eric Tran-Ton
  10. Tylor McCallumore
  11. Yu Tsumura
  12. Juno Motzko
  13. Philips Nguyen
  14. CJ Atkinson
  15. Slade Riggs
  16. Nehemiah Peterson
  17. John Wolfe
  18. Shakeem Anderson
  19. Nathan Tyler
  20. Chase Baxter
  21. Lucas Blackburn
  22. Nic Patane
  23. Stephanie Haight
  24. Quinton Fox
  25. Ryan Dembiec
  26. Alex Wedow
Dual (2A + 3A):
  1. Hank Freeman
  2. Shane Karan
  3. Yu Tsumura
  4. Eric Tran-Ton
  5. Connor Scholten
  6. John Wolfe

Aerial (4A + 5A)

  1. Ben Conde
  2. Miguel Correa
  3. Ian Johnson
  4. Connor Ebbinghouse
  5. Ian Cole
  6. Tylor McCallumore
  7. Chase Baxter
  8. Hiro Koba
  9. Shane Karan
  10. Shane Lubecker
  11. Jumario Simmons
  12. John Wolfe

Filed Under: Contests Tagged With: 2012, Ben Conde, chicago, duncan crew, hank freeman, Isaac Sams, tomas bubak, triple crown, triple crown of yo-yo

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