The Bucky Lasek Story - Part I Featured

Written by  Ozzie Ausband Wednesday, 26 October 2011 04:30

Bucky Lasek

image courtesy: Joe Krolick

I have known Bucky Lasek for many years. He grew up as a child of the Maryland area on the east coast. I first saw him skate in 1985 or 1986. Jim Howell and I were riding the Fisherman's Inn vert ramp. Chesapeake. Maryland. It was a big steel ramp and it was awesome. It was growing dark.  I was riding a new green Gator board, Jim was cruising a Chris Baucom 'Rude Boy' and I remember Bucky riding a Jeff Kendall deck. He was working on Gay Twists. If I remember correctly, he made his first Gay Twist out of the top while Jim & I cheered him on...  just as the sun sank out of sight. I have admired his skateboarding skill and have ridden with him--peripherally--over the years. From Busters, Brick NJ, Cheapskates, Encinitas, Vans Combi and into his own backyard bowl... we have crossed paths. He is always friendly, funny and has a calm sense of who he is. I asked him to do an interview with me and it took quite a bit longer than I thought, through no fault on his part. We all get pretty busy. I sat down with him in early June and discussed his skating, life and the future.

 

Bucky Lasek

We met up at a local fish grill and ordered some lunch. Bucky was recently injured as was I. Just before the Protec Combi contest, Bucky fractured his leg. He was on the mend and we both talked about the frustrations of injury. They brought our food as the conversation turned toward his racing cars. Bucky was getting ready to go back east for a race. I asked him if he warmed up--when racing-- like we do in skateboarding and how he got his interest in the sport.

Bucky- Daytona 2011

Bucky moved his plate around and started- " Well, I'm driving a car I've never driven and racing on a track that I haven't been to so... I get one practice, then a qualifier then two races and that is that. I've always been interested in cars. When I was young, I was driving to skate and it started raining. I was going about 100 mph and lost control of the vehicle. I spun a 360, hit a tree and totaled the car. When I got my next car, instead of tuning my stereo...  I tuned my car and started concentrating on the vehicles performance. That was when my interest in racing began. When I visited California, I started karting with Danny Way. I went out with him one time and got hooked on it. It's the speed. I drove Danny's shifter kart and bought one after that. Once I purchased that- it was on. I learned quickly."  I listened as I ate and remarked that he probably hated driving on the freeway. He nodded- "The freeway is harder than the track. I always drive about 10mph faster than traffic so I can see all that is going on around me..."  We discussed his first race. Bucky told me that it was the Toyota Celebrity Race in Long Beach in 2005. "This was my first actual wheel- to- wheel race and it was in a Scion. It was a semi-tricked out Scion tC.  After that, I started racing Ford Mustangs at the Mustang Performance School at Miller Motorsports Park in Utah."

Growl...

 

I asked him if he was ever in a race car and been like - "Damn dude! This is getting scary!" Bucky smiled and admitted to feeling exactly that way  just last year.  "I was in the Poconos racing a Dodge Viper. The track had Nascar banking and we were going 170 mph around it...  it was pretty hairball! I hit a tire barrier and blew a tire. The scariest part is that I went into the pits, they changed the tire and out I went again... climbing back up to 170 mph. I didn't know if anything else was wrong with the car or not. I could've had a broken control arm and just got sent into a wall..." He shook his head and frowned.

Bucky and I ate our lunch. He talked about racing with a passion. He loves what he does and readily admitted that he will race cars after he retires from skating. He told me that he has always wrenched on cars and it is how one learns about them. He explained drafting & 'seat time'. Bucky explained- "The key to racing isn't about being the fastest. It's about 'seat time'. Knowing what to do and when to do it. Just because I may have qualified faster, doesn't mean I'm the fastest guy out there. There are a bunch of drivers behind me that have a great deal of experience... they've done it. " Bucky is heavily involved with Rebel Rock Racing and his partner Jim Jonsin (Grammy award- winning record producer) . Bucky heads a team of Porsches and also races a factory-sponsored Scion as well. He is building on them both. "I plan on being competitive in racing just as I am in skateboarding. "

 

 

Porsches - Rebel Rock Racing

We spoke about his early days... his start in skateboarding. Bucky laughed as he told me about his first board. - "I got it from Atlantic Skates. It was a pink Caballero with Powell wheels and pink trucks! My shit had to match!" I joked about his board probably having a nose bone and rib bones on it.. Bucky admitted to having all of the accessories. He told me of his start- " We rode the hell out of boards and would trade them. We rode a ditch called -'Hollabird'. It had hips and everything. From there, I heard of a ramp called Wa-Wa and we went there. One side was a mini with a channel and the other side went to vert. This is where I first dropped in and eventually learned tranny skills. I believe that this ramp helped prepare me for vertical riding. It made me quickly adapt early on. We eventually heard of the Fisherman's Inn vert ramp."

Bucky at the WaWa ramp

 

Bucky - Fisherman's Inn -  Hell Ramp

 

Bucky and I traded stories of the Hell Ramp at Fisherman's Inn. He told me of his first visit there. Bucky took a sip of water, looked at his cell phone and went on- "The first time I went there, all I did was fakie and then shoot my board out of the top as high as I could. I'd do that all day.." We both smiled and he continued- "Derek Krasauskas would drive over and give me rides. If not, I would take an hour and a half bus ride just to get there. The locals were rad. Some of the sessions included, Derek, Peanut Brown, Dan Brown, Kentucky, Mike Ryan, Paul Wisniewski, John Farlow, Jay Henry, Ed Hicks, Buster, Squim... it was pretty unreal. None of these sessions would've been possible without Ed Hicks. He was not only the owner but a mentor/motivator to us all. " He had a quote-  "Second wall is ALWAYS higher."

I knew that Bucky and  Derek were close,  so I put a call in to him and he filled me in on some early details. Derek-  "Once I got my license, I started riding with Bucky often. He was already super good. I was sort-of jealous. Here was this little kid just destroying... I remember the first day he tried frontside inverts, he did them on coping perfectly. That was just the way he did things back then...  he was so far ahead in his learning curve. I would pick him up at the local supermarket that Bucky lived behind and we would ride vert. He was one of the only guys that I skated with who would push me to learn. Most of the crew were just happy to cruise. Bucky always wanted to progress. One of the most amazing things about him was that he knew that skateboarding was his deal. This was what he wanted from day one. He was so dedicated to his dream. "

Derek Krasauskas & Bucky - Mt. Trashmore

 

Bucky explained that he was always that way. Driven. He always wanted to learn. He started entering contests. Local shop contests. Wave Dancer, Island Dreams, Sports Elite, Reach the Beach, Clearlight... he started winning them. Once he won, he kept trying to better himself.  Bucky summed it up himself- " I just kept pushing myself harder. I still do that. I still learn and try my best. It has become my program." We discussed his early sponsorship. Local shops and a Skull Skates flow period ended when Powell Peralta came for a local shop demo. Afterwards, the team came to the Fisherman's Inn ramp. Bucky smiled- "I was so stoked. I mean, it would be like me meeting the Dalai Lama now!  Stacy, McGill, Hawk !!  After the session, Stacy pulled me aside and said- "I want you on the Bones Brigade." That was how I got on Powell Peralta. Tony then got me on Airwalk and Tracker."  I interrupted and asked him what it was like to be on such an elite team.  Did it really sink in? He'd made it!

Bucky wiped his mouth with a napkin as the waitress took our plates away. He stabbed a finger in the air- "You know-- at that time -- I was so young, I only knew skateboarding. I didn't know what I thought. I didn't know how to act. They had me call in everytime I learned something, just to spread the stoke. It was unreal." I asked Bucky if it ever dawned on him how good he was. He hesitated, framing his words carefully. "Back then, it was different. It was like being in an orphanage and getting adopted by the Spielberg family. I was in a 'larger than life' family and it was all overwhelming. I know one thing. I received awesome packages every month... the best packages ever!"   Bucky and I both sat there laughing...

Bones Brigader - Bucky Lasek - Ventucopa Ramp

Bones Brigade. Public Domain. Bucky elaborated-  "I flew out to California and we filmed my part pretty quickly. Back then, we filmed a video part in one long weekend.   We were to stay and ride in Ventucopa. Steve Saiz and I drove with Danny Way. Chris Borst met us there. There was a vert ramp out there in the middle of nowhere. The guy who owned it was a doctor. He built it for his son who could barely skate. There were rattlesnakes that lived under the ramp and  I almost stepped on one going up the stairs. I  threw a board at one and it was stunned and writhing about. Then,  the doctor came out and chopped off its head with a shovel. We ate it that night."  Bucky shook his head at the memory then continued-  "We stayed in a mobile home and practiced on the vert ramp for a few days. I landed a 540 the day before Stacy came but on the day we filmed, I couldn't make one. In the Public Domain video,  one 540 attempt is included. I landed on the deck!  Yet, it was around this time that Stacy told me that he could see me turning pro in two years. I was stoked!  I was in awe...  to know that I had that in my future. Unreal. I must say that being in the Public Domain video gave me an inner confidence and opened the door for me to progress in the future."

Please check in tomorrow for Part II of the Bucky Lasek Story. Thank you to Joe Krolick, Geoff Graham, Colour Tech South and the Lasek archive for the images. Skate - Ozzie

 

 

 

 

 

Last modified on Friday, 20 April 2012 10:37

1 Comment

  • Comment Link Clearlight Skater Thursday, 27 October 2011 08:49 posted by Clearlight Skater

    Ozzie, one little correction, it was Clearlight, not Clearwater, and one of the big local shops Island Dreams is missing. Denny from Island Dreams was the one who put on all of the ESA events locally (Bucky got a lot of local exposure from those contests). Also Reach For The Beach, the ones that brought the Bones Brigade to Baltimore, cannot be left out. Other than that thanks for bringing back some great memories, great job, can't wait for the next installment

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