#4 of 501
Whilst it was arguably his parts in Think Thank‘s ‘Thanks Brain‘ and ‘Stack Footy‘ that shot Scott Stevens to the insane level of fame and universal acclaim that he occupies within the snowboard universe these days, it was his segment in 2006’s ‘Patchwork Patterns‘ that made the world sit up and take notice.
Style, board control and a flair for spotting the new and never-been-dones are what makes this stand out even today
Style, board control and a flair for spotting the new and never-been-dones are what makes this stand out even today – it may look relatively tame compared to his opener from DOA or first first foray with the Videograss crew, but comparing this against himself is unfair.
Instead, see how it stacks up against most one minute forty five clips you see dropped online today and then you’ll realise the genius of Scott Stevens: this was amazing, but he was only warming up…
The handrails, the flip in-flip out combos, the beginnings of the one footed magic, this is magical, nay legendary stuff from one of the most important riders today. Feast your eyes.
Psssst. For a cheeky look at the full film, head over here.
Click here for more in our series of ‘501 Parts to See Before You Die’.
Video parts are an essential component of the people that love snowboarding. As big as contests are in the moment, these are the artifacts that will survive each generation of rider and be passed down to the next as gospel.
From wearing out favourite sections on VHS, taking great pains to keep treasured DVDs scratch free to counting down the minutes to a new online release, everyone has cherished memories of their favourite era.
In keeping with ethos we present to you 501 video parts that define the length, breadth and depth of snowboarding and its special culture. From park to pipe, urban missions to powder explorations, Betamax to Youtube, Sims to Halldor – these are the parts that form the DNA of shred, miss them at your peril.