The latest ‘Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater’ game features more awesome women than ever before

The latest ‘Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater’ game features more awesome women than ever before

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Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images

Gone are the days where Elissa Steamer was the only playable woman in the Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater video games. The latest is full of badass women.

Elissa Steamer can remember what skateboarding videogames were like before 1999.

She didn’t play a ton of them, and as a kid she was more likely to fire up Mike Tyson’s Punch Out or The Legend of Zelda when she was skipping school. But there was 720, released in arcades and on the original Nintendo. Similarly, there was Town & Country Surf Designs: Wood & Water Rage, another NES game that combined surfing and skating. Skate or Die! was another with 8-bit graphics.

But as Steamer recalls, “none of them really felt like skateboarding… It was very 1980s.”

Sometime in the late 1990s, Steamer heard that some company was making a video game that Tony Hawk was attached to. At the time, Steamer was then a budding professional skateboarder who had deals with companies like Toy Machine and Baker, and had featured in some of the straight-to-VHS skating tapes that were popular around that time — most notably 1996’s Welcome to Hell where folks can see a then-21-year-old Steamer grinding on benches and pulling off kickflips while sporting baggy pants and some crisp white Adidas kicks as a track from The Sundays plays over the grainy footage.

One day, she found herself hanging out in the garage of fellow pro skater Jamie Thomas who had a sample copy of 1999’s Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater. Steamer fooled around with the game a bit on Thomas’ PlayStation, and she was blown away by its look and feel. Thomas then told her, “I think they’re going to reach out to you too.”

A few days later, Steamer was on the phone with the game’s makers, Activision and Neversoft, who pitched her on the idea of being in the game. Having already played a version of it, Steamer didn’t hesitate to sign up. And that’s how she became the first woman to be featured in a Tony Hawk video game.

Now, 26 years later, the impact of that first game is still being felt. Countless people from in and outside of skating have credited it with pushing the sport into the consciousness of pop culture and making it more accessible to a wider audience. Books have been written about it, documentaries have been produced, and thoughtful essays about its resonance were penned at places like the New York Times and NPR. Game Informer named it one of the 100 Greatest Video Games of All-Time. As kids and adults alike played Graffiti, H.O.R.S.E. and Trick Attack, they were exposed to a gnarly soundtrack and the culture around skateboarding. Many of them fell in love with it.

“I mean, at that time, skateboarding was pretty low key, and I think that just kind of boosted skateboarding into the mainstream,” Steamer recently told SB Nation. “You didn’t have to be able to ride a skateboard to see skateboarding. You could sort of participate in a game that portrayed skateboarding in such a great way. It got eyes on skateboarding and our names and who we were.

“I think a lot of the early 2000s skateboarding boom was kind of due to this video game.”

Since the success of the original THPS in 1999, the game has produced 20 additional variations and sequels. And Steamer has appeared in quite a lot of them, with the latest being no exception.

Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 3 + 4 — the fully remade from the ground up versions of sequels originally released in 2001 and 2002 — dropped on July 11. The remake blends what fans loved about those classics with modern upgrades, new tricks, additions to the soundtrack, unique parks and online play.

And there’s more skaters too. Long gone are the days where Steamer was the only playable woman in the game. Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 3 + 4 features eight women skaters and also Leo Baker, who identifies as transgender and uses they/them pronouns.

Steamer, who recently celebrated her 50th birthday, feels like the game’s growing inclusion of women, minorities and LGBTQ+ folks has played a large role in exposing skateboarding to more people.

“We’ve learned that if you see somebody like you doing something you want to do, then you know you can do it,” Steamer says. “So, yeah, it’s totally been helpful to women, transgender, queer people. The game’s really inclusive, as the world is becoming and should be. The best thing about skateboarding is that there’s no rules. Just anarchy.”

Nora Vasconcellos was 7-years-old when the first THPS hit the shelves of video game stores. She grew up in New England in what she calls “Cranberry bog land” where there were a lot of barns but not many paved driveways. Simply put, she wasn’t surrounded by skate culture. Still, Vasconcellos couldn’t shake her interest in skating and consumed it through books and magazines she would get at the library.

Then THPS arrived and she soon found herself playing as often as she could at her cousin’s house or on the small TV in her brother’s room.

“I just feel like everything from the music to literally learning who Elissa Steamer was, that was through a video game,” Vasconcellos, now 33, told SB Nation. “It was one of the avenues that I got to explore skating.”

One of the levels in THPS 3 is called “Skater’s Island.” It’s in the latest re-release too and is based on a real skatepark in Rhode Island that was destroyed in 2004. Vasconcellos never got to skate there despite living relatively close, but got to experience it through the game.

“It’s pretty funny, what gets ingrained in your mind,” Vasconcellos says. “I just remember people telling me how sick it was, and then I get to like, kind of relive it, through the video game.”

After playing as Steamer in some of the old video games, Vasconcellos blossomed into a professional skater. She won a gold medal at the 2017 Vans Park Series World Championships and signed with Adidas. One of her skateboards is in the Smithsonian, but being in a Tony Hawk video game seems to come with more social currency than that or other milestones she’s hit in her career.

“There’s a lot of people from all corners of my life who can’t maybe understand what it means to get a Thrasher cover, or can’t maybe understand getting a pro shoe… But they do understand, like, ‘You’re a playable character on Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater,’ because that’s a lot of people’s only interaction with skateboarding. So, it’s very cool.”

Vasconcellos and Steamer are two of the eight badass women featured in Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 3 + 4. The others are Lizzie Armanto, Letícia Bufoni, Chloe Covell, Margielyn Didal, Rayssa Leal and Aori Nishimura.

For Vasconcellos, she seems to believe that if it weren’t for Steamer in 1999, she might not be making her THPS debut in 2025.

“There wasn’t a whole lot of women who were making careers out of skateboarding. I think seeing how that’s blown up… If you’re a woman, you weren’t getting the bigger deals, you were kind of getting scraps. So, it’s kind of cool to see that full circle aspect of it now,” Vasconcellos says. “Granted, we’re not all buying houses off the Tony Hawk game anymore, but back in the day, they did, and that was an avenue for these skaters to create wealth and be themselves. For a girl like me at the time to play and envision myself in that space, it’s pretty cool.”

Skateboarding is arguably as mainstream as it has ever been and the Tony Hawk video games are a big reason why. In 2028 in Los Angeles, skateboarding will appear in the Olympics for the third time.

Back when she was piling up gold medals at the X-Games in the mid-2000s, Steamer — the first woman to go pro in skateboarding and the first woman ever inducted into the Skateboarding Hall of Fame — thought there was a chance the sport might reach the Summer Games someday. Now that they have, she gets to sit back, watch and check out all the awesome young skaters come through on a path that she helped pave.

“I think the future of skating is in good hands,” Steamer says. “I’m just stoked that the game is back and I’m happy to be involved. It’s really great for skateboarding, and I think Tony Hawk is incredible.”

Knicks closing in on adding Brendan O’Connor to top position on Mike Brown’s staff

Knicks closing in on adding Brendan O’Connor to top position on Mike Brown’s staff

The Knicks are closing in on a deal to add Clippers assistant Brendan O’Connor to a top position on Mike Brown’s staff, league sources tell SNY.

O’Connor, a longtime assistant coach, has a strong defensive acumen. He’s worked for the Clippers under both Ty Lue and Doc Rivers. He will be Brown’s top assistant on defense. The Knicks have been looking to add two coaches to Brown’s staff, and their next hire will presumably be Brown’s associate head coach.

Brown will keep some coaches from Tom Thibodeau’s staff, including Darren Erman, Mark Bryant, Maurice Cheeks, Rick Brunson and Jordan Brink.

New York has been denied permission to speak to several assistant coaches the club had interest in. The Knicks were in touch with Pablo Prigioni for a top assistant spot, but Prigioni decided to stay in Minnesota.

Sirius XM’s Frank Isola first reported that the Knicks and O’Connor were close to a deal. The New York Post first reported that O’Connor will be the top defensive assistant in New York.

Nicklaus-Jacklin Award returns for 2025 ahead of Ryder Cup at Bethpage

Nicklaus-Jacklin Award returns for 2025 ahead of Ryder Cup at Bethpage


The Nicklaus-Jacklin Award has returned ahead of the 2025 Ryder Cup at Bethpage Black.

There is no sporting event, no event in general, in the world like the Ryder Cup. It stands alone.

Part of the lore behind the Ryder Cup is the intensity of it all. The United States squares off against Europe in a battle that is bigger than any individual and that transcends golf in a lot of ways. Major Championships are all incredible, but like most things in golf they are individual accomplishments. The Ryder Cup is played for and ultimately won in the name of something bigger than any single person. It is about who you are and who you belong to.

The Ryder Cup carries a high level of intensity obviously, but it also carries a high level of prestige and honor. Many have come through and won it and done so with extreme dignity and grace. That is golf in its purest sense.

The Nicklaus-Jacklin Award presented by Aon is and was designed to honor these overall qualities. Ultimately it honors the player who best represents the spirit of the Ryder Cup and it is officially back for 2025 and for all of the glory that we will see at Bethpage Black.

Justin Rose received the award following the 2023 Ryder Cup where he and his fellow Europeans emerged victorious in Rome. His overall story was told in a documentary that can be seen below.

Obviously the 2025 winner of the Nicklaus-Jacklin Award will be chosen at the culmination of the Ryder Cup. It stands to reason that Justin Rose is rooting for another European to win it, but if Captain Keegan Bradley has anything to say about it then an American will take it home.

This year’s Ryder Cup has had a build up like no other and is surely going to deliver well over our expectations. It goes without saying that the Nicklaus-Jacklin Award will as well.

Sources: Kuminga still declining Warriors’ terms

Sources: Kuminga still declining Warriors’ terms

Jonathan Kuminga’s decision to continue to decline the Warriors’ offer is due in large part to Golden State’s insistence on having a team option for the second season and unwillingness to let him maintain the built-in no-trade clause, sources told ESPN.

‘It was a no-brainer’: Paul celebrated in L.A. return

‘It was a no-brainer’: Paul celebrated in L.A. return

Eight years after he last played for the franchise, Chris Paul was reintroduced as a member of the Clippers on Monday, calling his return to Los Angeles a “no-brainer.”

Golden State's best offer to Jonathan Kuminga reportedly two years, $40 million, well below what he seeks

Golden State's best offer to Jonathan Kuminga reportedly two years, $40 million, well below what he seeks

There are other restricted free agents still hanging out in the wind without a contract, but none have been quite as dramatic as the stalemate between Jonathan Kuminga and the Golden State Warriors.

The Warriors’ offers to Kuminga have topped out at two years, $40 million, reports Marc Stein in his Substack. That is well short of the at least three years and closer to $30 million a season that Kuminga reportedly is seeking.

This has Kuminga and his representatives still looking for a sign-and-trade, and they spoke recently with the Kings’ front office, reports Anthony Slater of ESPN. Theoretically, Sacramento could offer a contract closer to Kuminga’s desired terms, along with a larger role in the offense. However, assembling a sign-and-trade deal with Golden State would be a challenge. At best. The Warriors want a first-round pick and a promising young player in any trade for Kuminga, plus they don’t want to take back any long-term bad contracts. It’s unlikely any team would give up a first-round pick for Kuminga at this point, at least one that wasn’t heavily protected. As for the young player, the Kings are not deep with those kinds of guys. Sacramento isn’t surrendering Keegan Murray, so that leaves players such as Devin Carter or just-drafted Nique Clifford, and the Kings aren’t eager to include them either.

This likely gets resolved closer to the start of training camp, with Kuminga accepting the very tradable two-year contract but at a slightly higher price point than has been offered (not wrapping up Kuminga has the Warriors in limbo, not having signed guys lined up already such as Al Horford and De’Anthony Melton, because they need to see where they are after the Kuminga signing).

The challenge is that Steve Kerr will have to highlight Kuminga and give him a real chance — and stick with him through some mistakes. That’s challenging on a roster with Stephen Curry and Jimmy Butler as primary ball handlers and the guys who should have the ball in their hands. Plus, Kuminga is really best at the four, but that is Draymond Green’s slot, and Kerr can’t play Kuminga (30.5% from 3 last season) and Green (32.5%) together because of the lack of shooting.

Kuminga and the Warriors may be a marriage of convenience to start the season, but it may be the only option for the two sides that makes any sense.

3 WNBA teams that could get shaken up if they miss the playoffs

3 WNBA teams that could get shaken up if they miss the playoffs

Las Vegas Aces v Dallas Wings
Photo by Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images

Every team wants to make the WNBA playoffs, but the implications for these teams are little more serious.

Winning is what it’s all about, and to win, you need to make the WNBA playoffs. And with further league expansion on the horizon and a potential CBA dispute on the line, everything feels higher stakes this season.

Bearing that in mind, let’s take a close look at three teams that could face serious consequences if they fall short of making the postseason.

Las Vegas Aces

After winning back-to-back championships in 2022 and 2023, the Las Vegas Aces were favorites to win three in a row in 2024. A combination of fatigue and increased competition from other teams saw the Aces eliminated in the semifinals last season, but things did not seem too bad. Going into the 2025 season, the Aces were still projected to be a top team, a lock for the playoffs, and in contention to win their third title in four seasons. Yet, nothing has gone to plan for Vegas so far this year.

They are lingering at the bottom of the playoff race, struggling to maintain an even record and battling for every win they do get. 3x MVP A’ja Wilson is playing phenomenally, of course, but their other offensive options can’t get into scoring rhythm, and their defense lacks effort most nights.

Their off year isn’t just an off year, though. Due to trades already made, Las Vegas does not own its first-round draft picks for 2026 or 2027. So, if they fail to make the playoffs, they will not even be rewarded with a lottery pick in 2026. If they end up blowing up their team and still not doing well next season, they wouldn’t have their pick the following year, either. Safe to say this scenario was not expected, and could lead to more seismic changes than previously expected in the desert.

Chicago Sky

Chicago has been in a rough patch after winning their championship in 2021. It seemed like things were heading back in the right direction after they drafted both Kamilla Cardoso and Angel Reese in 2024, and many thought they were on the path to a full rebuild. They were awarded the No. 3 overall pick in the 2025 WNBA Draft this year and then… traded it away to Washington. In return, they got Ariel Atkins, a great player, yet the move was not the type of win-now push a “rebuilding” team would usually make. It burned a little more when that No. 3 pick turned into Sonia Citron, who has played so well for the Mystics that she took a trip to the All-Star Game as a Rookie.

The Sky have not been stacking wins this season either. At the time of the trade for Atkins, Sky front office members were confident in this team’s ability to be in the playoffs. A few weeks into the season, Courtney Vandersloot tore her ACL, and they now sit in the lottery. Yet, they don’t even own their first-round pick for next season, either. That was traded away to Minnesota, meaning that the Sky look like they are headed for the lottery this season, but will not even have the chance to decide if they want to keep or trade the pick.

Indiana Fever

The Indiana Fever’s situation isn’t dire in the sense that the future of their team depends on them making the playoffs. Yet, it would be a little disappointing to have them miss the playoffs entirely, given how much they have rebuilt in the past few years. Yet, as Caitlin Clark continues to be out indefinitely with her third injury in the regular season alone, the hopes for the Fever’s success this season are not as solid as they once were.

Clark is a player who thrives in high-pressure games, and her runs in the NCAA March Madness tournaments are such a huge part of her history. Seeing her make a deep playoff run is inevitable, and it’s going to be fun. Sure, there will be disappointment if it doesn’t happen this season, but the hope surely is that she can heal up in time AND her Fever team can stay afloat while she is out to stay in a playoff position. While the repercussions of the Fever missing the playoffs would be more emotional than transactional (like the Aces and Sky), it’s still worth noting that it would qualify as a sad ending to an initially promising season.


As July leads into August, it’s go time for all three of these teams as we head into the final third of the 2025 regular season.