Non-binary skateboarder brings joy and pronouns to Olympics

U.S. skateboarder Alana Smith proudly showed off their pronoun pin and they/them board during their event

History was made this weekend in Tokyo when the first Olympic medals in skateboarding were awarded. The gold medals in both street events went to a pair of Japanese teenagers, including 13-year-old wunderkind Momiji Nishiya in the women’s street event. 

The event’s debut was a slam dunk, highlighting the sportsmanship, camaraderie, athleticism and pure fun we all hope to see at the Olympics. 

But another kind of history was made when Team U.S.A. skateboarder Alana Smith hit the park alongside Nishiya and others.  

Proudly wearing a pin with their pronouns and sporting a skateboard with “they/them” written on it, the 20-year-old Smith made Olympic history as part of this year’s wave of non-binary and trans athletes.

And they did it in style.

This is a banner year for queer and trans representation at the Olympics. While Smith is the first openly non-binary person to compete for the United States, they’re joined in Tokyo by the likes of non-binary Canadian soccer player Quinn and trans weightlifter Laurel Hubbard from New Zealand

Smith won their first X-Games medal in skateboarding in 2013 when they were just 13 years old. Since then, they’ve competed on the international stage and set out to break gender boundaries when it comes to skateboarding. They came out as non-binary publicaly in the past year. And while we’re all still waiting for the day that the gender binary isn’t the defining factor in sports, Smith’s participation in the women’s event as a non-binary person is still a big deal. 

They had more than a few tumbles throughout the event this weekend and ended up ranking last, but they obviously had a blast participating. And people took notice. 

 

In a social media post following the event, Smith said they accomplished what they set out to do. 

“My goal coming into this was to be happy and be a visual representation for humans like me. For the first time in my entire life, I’m proud of the person I’ve worked to become,” they wrote on Instagram. “I chose my happiness over medaling. Out of everything I’ve done, I wanted to walk out of this knowing I UNAPOLOGETICALLY was myself and was genuinely smiling. The feeling in my heart says I did that.”

But this weekend’s event showed that professional sport still has a way to go when it comes to fair treatment of trans and non-binary athletes. Somehow, despite Smith being openly out on social media, their Team U.S.A. bio using they/them pronouns and it literally being written on their board during the competition, several international broadcasters—including NBC’s Todd Harris and Paul Zitzer—repeatedly misgendered Smith throughout the event. 

https://twitter.com/Maddie_Fett/status/1419468553598554116?s=20
https://twitter.com/femboyjamiee/status/1419464883922419713?s=20

https://twitter.com/Notumathurmanxo/status/1419466078560915456?s=20
https://twitter.com/MoxxyMuffin/status/1419467374680543232?s=20

Here’s hoping Smith inspires a new generation of non-binary skaters to get into the sport, and the existing generation of broadcasters to do literally the bare minimum. 

Because trans and non-binary athletes aren’t going anywhere.

Senior editor Mel Woods is an English-speaking Vancouver-based writer and audio producer and a former associate editor with HuffPost Canada. A proud prairie queer and ranch dressing expert, their work has also appeared in Vice, Slate, the Tyee, the CBC, the Globe and Mail and the Walrus.

Read More About:
Culture, Power, Identity, News, Sports, Non-binary

Keep Reading

Who’s afraid of trans visibility?

OPINION: On International Transgender Day of Visibility, we must call out Canada’s right for weaponizing the triumph of our visibility

‘Your faith is yours.’ Community leaders discuss being queer and Muslim

Canada’s queer Muslim community embraces multiple identities while confronting prejudice from many sides
Hot pink background; a person with short dark hair in a white t-shirt holding a placard, shown from behind; large numbers spelling out 2023, cut off at the bottom

How the moral panic around ‘parental rights’ in Canada defined 2023

ANALYSIS: The fight to protect trans and gender-diverse kids is far from over 
A teacher in a blazer holding a paper, a school, the trans flag colours, a map of Saskatchewan and a gavel in a collage against a purple background

The legal case for teachers defying anti-trans laws 

OPINION: A petition calling on teachers to violate Saskatchewan’s anti-trans Parents’ Bill of Rights could help the cause of striking it down