The 13-year-old is changing the world of skating two revolutions directly.
Australian skateboarder Arisa Trew became the first woman to land a 720 on the Tony Hawk Vert Alert competition in Utah on Saturday.
The group burst into applause after witnessing the monumental moment during which the teenager successfully accomplished two full rotations within the air off a vertical ramp before landing solidly on her board.
“I can not imagine I landed my first 720!!! and be the first girl on this planet to rating 7 points within the competition” Trew wrote on Instagram before thanking her trainer Trev Ward and others.
Trew made a historic maneuver in front of Hawk, who said he was a teen “He demolished the home.”
The skateboarding legend was the first to land a 720 – which was considered next to unimaginable on the time – while competing on the X Games in 1999.
He gave some suggestions to Trew moments before she landed the trick, in addition to 16-year-old German Olympian Lilly Stoephasius, who was also going for the record, according to Ward.
“When the most effective trick got here, I asked her what will we do? She replied 720. I knew Lilly would go for it too. What an incredible scenario. Two top vertical skaters go head-to-head to land a 720 ahead of trick inventor @tonyhawk” Ward wrote on Instagram.
“We knew it was coming soon. We just didn’t expect it to be a spot on the world stage and never on our vertical ramp back home in Australia. Arisa has an incredible mindset and willpower to succeed. Congratulations Aris, you’re amazing.
![Trew skateboards.](https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2023/06/NYPICHPDPICT000013303783.jpg?w=1024)
The coach said he and Trew only competed on the Utah event because they found a while between the Argentina and Rome competitions.
Trew did the breakthrough trick right after the timer ran out within the Best Trick category, but he already did secured first place in the ladies’s final.
Trew is training for the 720 ahead of the 2024 Olympics in Paris, where she is going to compete for Australia if chosen.
The teenager is currently ranked 14th on this planet.