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 27, 2014 11:11 am
This happened within the golf industry too. It used to be that you would have to go to a specialty golf store or an actual golf course to buy the equipment, shoes and clothes. Eventually Dicks Sporting Goods game into play and basically took over the industry. Eastbay sucks, but wait until you see Dicks adding a skate shop section to every one of their stores.
June 30, 2014 4:09 pm
There already is.
June 27, 2014 12:29 pm
I moved around a lot growing up, and started skating at age 10. Some of the places we lived were a 3-hour drive from the nearest skate shop, and still had a thriving skate scene. This was due largely to CCS. While my broke, nomadic family could rarely spare enough cash for a proper set up, I would order a deck and use hand-me-downs from neighborhood kids to make a complete. While I seldom ordered from CCS after we returned to metropolitan areas (yes, yes, support your local shop (if you got one)), I always think back to towns like that whenever I talk about CCS. That scene would not have existed without their catalogs. Yeah they’re corny, and they might even put your trucks on backwards if you order an assembled custom, but CCS HAS contributed to skateboarding as a whole. So it saddens me to see it phased out. And I’m bummed about their team! R*I*P
June 27, 2014 1:44 pm
Got shitloads of catalogs era 1991/1998 see ya all on Ebay in ten years time. Saved our asses in Iceland in the early90s.
June 27, 2014 1:56 pm
First skateboard – Tom penny mushroom from CCS, going to miss those calendars. Maybe if people at the local shops weren’t such cool guys they would actually have business