Rodney Mullen — The Godfather of Street Skateboarding Nobody Saw Coming
He invented the kickflip, the heelflip, the 360 flip, and the flatground ollie. Without Rodney Mullen, skateboarding as we know it simply wouldn’t exist. A portrait of a shy kid from Florida who rewrote the rules of the game with his bare hands.
⏱ Reading time: 5 min


Rodney Mullen
Inventor of the kickflip, the heelflip, the 360 flip, and the flatground ollie. Considered the most influential skater of all time.
The Gainesville Kid Who Skated in Secret
John Rodney Mullen was born on August 17, 1966, in Gainesville, Florida. His father, a strict surgeon, forbade him from riding a skateboard. Too dangerous. Too thuggish. The kind of activity that leads nowhere. Rodney negotiated for months. At 10, he got permission, on one condition: the first serious injury, and it was over.
He never stopped. Not because he never got injured — he broke pretty much everything that could be broken. But because skateboarding became his language. This introverted, almost pathologically shy kid found in the skateboarding what words couldn’t give him: a way to express himself.
Every day after school, he skated alone in the family garage. No spots. No crew. Just a kid, a board, and hours of obsessive repetitions on flat concrete. It was in this solitude that everything began.
Freestyle King Before He Was 18
At 14, Mullen joined Stacy Peralta’s Bones Brigade team, alongside Tony Hawk, Steve Caballero, and Lance Mountain. He was the youngest, the quietest, and by far the most technical. While Hawk redefined vert, Mullen rewrote freestyle.
Between 1981 and 1992, he won 35 freestyle world championship titles. Thirty-five. A record that will probably never be broken, because the discipline simply disappeared. He dominated the scene so much that other competitors knew, upon arriving, that they were fighting for second place.
But Mullen wasn’t content with just winning. He was inventing. The flatground ollie — the absolute basis of every modern trick — that was him, in 1982. Before that, no one knew how to get a skateboard off flat ground without a ramp. This single trick changed the history of skateboarding forever. To discover another founding member of the Bones Brigade, check out our article on the Bones Brigade and Powell Peralta.
The Street Revolution — Reinvent Everything or Disappear
In the early 90s, freestyle died. Street exploded. Sponsors disappeared, contests evaporated. For anyone else, it would have been the end of a career. For Mullen, it was the beginning of the craziest chapter in skateboarding history.
He took every trick he mastered in freestyle and transposed it to the street. The darkslides, Casper slides, primo slides — movements no one had ever seen in street skateboarding. He wasn’t adapting. He was rewriting the rules. Again.
The Inventor of 40 Tricks
The list of tricks invented by Rodney Mullen reads like an inventory of the impossible. Flatground ollie, kickflip, heelflip, impossible, 360 flip, kickflip underflip, Casper slide, darkslide, primo slide, half-cab kickflip. And dozens more. Each of these tricks has become a pillar of every skater’s vocabulary on the planet.
The most striking thing is his method. Mullen didn’t discover tricks by accident. He designed them. He broke down each movement into micro-sequences, analyzed the physics, tested hundreds of variations. An engineer of movement on four wheels. To learn the most iconic trick he invented, check out our complete kickflip guide.

Mullen’s Legacy — From Concrete to TED Talk
In 2012, Rodney Mullen took the TED stage to talk about innovation. Not technological innovation. Innovation through skateboarding. His talk, « Pop an ollie and innovate! », went viral. Millions of views. Silicon Valley engineers discovering that the most innovative guy of their era wasn’t a developer, but a skater from Gainesville.
His approach to creativity — iterate, fail, restart, decompose, recombine — has become a reference in the world of design thinking. Mullen proved that skateboarding isn’t just a sport. It’s a method of thinking.
In March 2026, he was in Ocala, Florida, to inaugurate the extension of the local skatepark. At 59, he continues to ride. To create. To push the limits of what’s possible on an Almost deck. Not for glory. Not for money. For the same reason as when he was 10, alone in his garage: because that’s who he is.
The Silent Godfather
Rodney Mullen never had the media charisma of a Tony Hawk or the attitude of an Andrew Reynolds. He doesn’t need to be loud. Every kickflip landed on this planet bears his signature. Every heelflip, every tre flip, every flatground ollie — that’s his legacy. Silent, permanent, indestructible. To discover another architect of street skateboarding, read the portrait of Natas Kaupas.






















