Tampa Pro 2026: 32 Years of Legend, and Street Skateboarding Isn’t Slowing Down
From April 9th to 12th, the Skatepark of Tampa hosts the 32nd edition of Tampa Pro. Thirty-two years the world’s best skaters have come here, to this Floridian concrete, to decide who’s truly the strongest. No circus. No safety nets. Just pure street skateboarding.
⏱ Reading Time: 5 min

1994 — The Birth of a Legend
It’s 1994. Street skateboarding has barely existed in its modern form for ten years. Mike Vallely wins the very first Tampa Pro. The skateboarding world barely notices. No one knows yet they’ve just witnessed the first page of an encyclopedia.
The Skatepark of Tampa isn’t a converted concert hall or a stadium rented for the occasion. It’s a real skatepark, built by skaters for skaters. Bob Lofino and Gary Lofino opened it in 1993 with a single obsession: to create the most honest place in American skateboarding. Tampa Pro was born from that obsession.
Back then, no live broadcast. No astronomical prize money. Just the best on a course, judged by people who truly knew skateboarding. It was radical. It was pure. It stayed that way.
What Makes Tampa Pro Unique
There’s one thing Tampa Pro does that other contests don’t. They put everyone in the same run. Rookies and legends, locals and Olympic champions — same course, same obstacles, same pressure. The concrete doesn’t lie.
The setup is known for its 4, 6, and 8-stair sets, its raw concrete ledges, its twisted rail that has broken ankles and dreams. No foam quarterpipe. No hidden trampoline under the floor. If you fall, you fall for real.
No other contest on the calendar has operated like this for 32 uninterrupted years. Even the Olympic Games struggle to maintain their format for two consecutive editions. Tampa, it hasn’t budged. It grew, but in its own direction, not its sponsors’.

Moments That Wrote History
Three decades of Tampa Pro, that’s a dizzying list of names. Mark Gonzales, Daewon Song, Chad Muska, Eric Koston — all have left something on this Floridian concrete. Every generation has had its Tampa moment.
Daewon Song, the Misunderstood Artist
Daewon Song won Tampa Pro three times. Not because he crushed the highest stairs or jumped the widest gap. But because what he did on the obstacles left other skaters speechless. Tampa has always rewarded intelligence as much as power.
Nyjah Huston, the Machine
From 2010 to 2020, Nyjah turned Tampa into an extension of his living room. Six wins. A dominance score unlike anything in contest history. His Nike SB Nyjah Free on his feet, he was doing tricks on obstacles others avoided. Tampa Pro is partly what it is today thanks to him.
The Post-Olympic Era
Since Tokyo 2021, something has changed. Skaters we never saw in contests — too pure, too independent — are starting to show up at Tampa again. As if the Games had liberated something. Tampa Pro has become a choice again, not an obligation. And that changes everything about the contest’s energy.
Tampa Pro 2026: Names to Watch
This week, the lineup is historic. Four names are drawing all the attention.
Ginwoo Onodera — The Prodigy Arrives
Sixteen years old. SLS Super Crown Champion 2025. 7 tricks at 9+ in the Sydney final — an absolute record in SLS history. Tampa Pro will be his baptism of fire on a less codified format than SLS. If he performs here, the discussion is over.
Nyjah Huston — The Return of the King
At 29, Nyjah still has the most precise hand in global street skateboarding. His last victory at Tampa dates back to 2019. Since then, he’s accumulated injuries and varying contexts. This 2026 edition has a special flavor for him: can he still be the best at the contest that gave him everything?
Chris Joslin — Courage as Style
Chris Joslin doesn’t skate like others. He attacks the most brutal obstacles with an aggression reminiscent of the 2000s. On Tampa’s stairs, his Independent setup under his feet, he’s capable of anything. Including spectacular falls. That’s part of the show.
Chloe Covell — The Women’s Revelation
Pick #1 of the XGL Draft 2026. Australian. 17 years old. The Tampa Pro Women’s division has long been as fierce as the men’s. Covell comes to dominate, not just participate.
Why Tampa Pro Resists Everything
Since 1994, skateboarding has gone through cultural revolutions, commercial crises, a global pandemic, an entry into the Olympic Games. Contest formats have been born and died. Tampa Pro is still here.
The answer is simple: Tampa never tried to please everyone. It didn’t seek to be televised, then streamed, then viral. It just aimed to be the best street skateboarding contest in the world. And that unique obsession made it immortal.
In a world where the X Games League introduces AI as a judge and city teams like in the NBA, Tampa remains the only skateboarding institution that doesn’t need to reinvent itself. Because it never betrayed what it was.
We’ll be there from April 9th to 12th. Not for the show. To see who’s truly the best on concrete that doesn’t lie.






















