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  2. Inline skates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inline_skates

    Urban skates Hockey skates. Inline skates are boots with wheels arranged in a single line from front to back, allowing a skater to roll along on these wheels. Inline skates are technically a type of roller skate, but most people associate the term roller skates with quad skates, another type of roller skates with a two-by-two wheel arrangement similar to a car.

  3. Roller skates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roller_skates

    The first roller skate was an inline skate design, effectively an ice skate with a line of wheels replacing the blade. In modern usage, the term typically refers to skates with two pairs of wheels on shared axles like those of skateboards (early versions of which were made using roller skate parts). Skates with this configuration are also known ...

  4. Bauer Hockey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bauer_Hockey

    The origins of the Bauer brand of hockey equipment trace to 14 September 1906, when the Western Shoe Company Limited was formed in Kitchener, Ontario. At an unknown date, Roy Charles Bauer (1895–1989) became president of the company. On 5 May 1934, Bauer formed a new company, the Canada Skate Manufacturing Company Limited, to produce ice skates.

  5. Mission Hockey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission_Hockey

    Mission Hockey is an American brand of inline skates currently owned by Bauer Hockey.In December 1994, three former Bauer employees founded the Dare Development Group and began producing roller hockey equipment under the Mission brand name.

  6. Aggressive inline skating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aggressive_inline_skating

    The Roller Freestyle Skating World Championships has been included in the World Skate Games since 2017, organized by World Skate, the official organization on roller sports recognized by the IOC [22] The Montreal Cup (Montreal, Canada), [ 23 ] the largest skating event in Canada, including an aggressive inline skate competition, organized by ...

  7. Freestyle slalom skating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freestyle_slalom_skating

    Freestyle slalom skating is a highly technical field of roller skating that involves performing tricks around a straight line of equally spaced cones. The most common spacing used in competitions is 80 centimetres (31 in), with larger competitions also featuring lines spaced at 50 centimetres (20 in) and 120 centimetres (47 in).