In case you weren’t aware, CCS—the longest running, most recognizable mailorder in the skate game—was acquired by Foot Locker in 2008. That’s old news. What’s new is that the refs at Foot Locker just blew the whistle on CCS, ostensibly calling it a wrap. As of today, CCS employees are quitting and getting laid off as CCS will be phased out entirely. Customers will now be directed to Eastbay for their skate product needs.
So what does that really mean other than the fact that you will no longer be getting catalogs mailed to you with four hundred pages of sneakers and two of actual skateboards? Not much really, as the importance of CCS to the average skateboarder is at an all time low, but that’s another big declaration about where skateboarding is headed in the weird ass year of 2014.
I know you’re saying, “Who gives a shit?” as your small brand board snaps another no comply. But aside from the hit the CCS riders and employees are taking, it does reinforce the idea that skateboarders ARE rapidly becoming athletes. Wait, I just talked about small brands and creative skateboarding and said we’re athletes? Huh? Just give me a second.
By shifting CCS, such an iconic brand—albeit now largely irrelevant to the true pulse of skateboarding—from their own home to Eastbay’s blanket, a part of skateboarding has symbolically just become just another sports category. Yup, you’ll now be able to see skateboarding slotted next to rugby, volleyball, and lacrosse, because… well… to the world at large it’s just another sport.
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June 26, 2014 11:22 pm
This article is engulfed by a Street League ad.
June 27, 2014 2:07 am
Comin for nz I’d buy a lot of footwear from ccs because of the shipping prices and that local shops around here only stock canvas vans and Kustom, so I’m kind of sad to hear ccs is closing. Ok carry on with the support your local statement you lucky Americans
June 27, 2014 9:38 am
Damn, I almost took a job with them a couple months ago. Really glad I decided not too.
June 27, 2014 10:43 am
holy shit, i had no idea CCS was sold to foot locker. i did think it was weird how many shoes were on there vs everything else, now it makes sense! i haven’t bought from them in a long time, but i still have my first catalogs i got from 15+ years ago and will hold onto them forever.
remember CSE? i remember them being the cheapest at the time but for some reason i liked CCS more.
i don’t buy decks nearly as often anymore, but looking at the ones from the late 90s, most every board was 7.5″ to 8″ at the very most, with the oddball being a donny barley or chris senn toy machine or a creature deck. now it seems like everything is 8 and up and you can’t find 7.5s, not even on girl or chocolate. i feel old.
June 27, 2014 12:38 pm
Most tech wizards still skate 7.5-8. I know dudes like Pudwill and Barletta do.
I used to skate 7.5 in high school….I was over 6ft tall with size 12 feet… I could triple kickflip and 540 flip…but I also sprained my ankles on a damn near monthly basis. That all stopped when I sized up lol.
Don’t feel old. All it takes is some “it” guy to go on about his lil board and the trend will be back!