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This 16-year-old skateboard medalist went from holey shoes to ... holy shoe deal!

Rayssa Leal of Brazil competes in the women's skateboarding street final at the Place de la Concorde. She won a bronze medal. The 16-year-old Olympian remembers that when she was a kid, a pair of sneakers without holes were an implausible dream.
Rodolfo Buhrer
/
Eurasia Sport Images/Getty Images
Rayssa Leal of Brazil competes in the women's skateboarding street final at the Place de la Concorde. She won a bronze medal. The 16-year-old Olympian remembers that when she was a kid, a pair of sneakers without holes were an implausible dream.

If you look at the Instagram feed of Olympic skateboarding medalist Rayssa Leal, you might be surprised to see a pair of old shoes with holes in them. They're a part of her story — and a symbol of how skateboarding has transformed her life.

Rayssa Leal became an internet sensation almost 9 years ago when a video of the then 7-year-old skateboarding in a bright blue, sparkly princess dress with fairy wings went viral. It earned her the nickname “fadinha do skate” — “little skateboarding fairy.” Soon she was being called “fadinha” — “little fairy” — in Portuguese.

The viral clip even reached the great American skateboarder Tony Hawk, who shared it with his Instagram followers with the caption “I don't know anything about this but I love it: a fairytale heelflip in Brazil by #RayssaLeal.” Here, Leal wears her iconic outfit in a photograph captured by Brazilian photographer, Suzy Negreiros.

A childhood photo from Olympian Rayssa Leal's Instagram feed.
Suzy Negreiros | @fotografiasdasuzy/screengrab by NPR
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A childhood photo from Olympian Rayssa Leal's Instagram feed.

New shoes were a dream

Life wasn’t always a fairytale for the young skateboarder.

She got her first skateboard when she was 5 — a gift from her parents in 2013. She fell in love with skateboarding and dedicated her free time to practicing. But as she wrote in an Instagram post this March:

“When I was little I always imagined having good sneakers for skateboarding that were comfortable, but unfortunately my parents couldn’t afford to buy me the best sneakers. I would walk with shoes that had a hole in the sole that sometimes would even make a hole in my socks, it was what I had, and I was already very happy with that because just being able to skateboard was already enough for me,” she wrote about the sneakers, pictured in her post.

 Rayssa Leal's holey childhood skateboarding sneakers.
@rayssalealsk8 / screengrab by NPR /
Rayssa Leal's holey childhood skateboarding sneakers.

Despite the challenges, the “little fairy” persevered and by age 11 became the youngest street skater to win the women’s Street League Skateboarding World Tour final.

During the inaugural street skateboarding event in the Tokyo Olympic Games of 2021, Leal became Brazil’s youngest Olympian and medalist at age 13, winning silver in the women’s street skateboarding event. The next year, she won her first X-Games gold in the street style category and defended her title the following year, winning another gold.

“[Rayssa] is one of the best skaters, she’s one of the best street skaters out there. Period. I don’t care about the fact that she’s female or that she’s young, she’s just one of the best,” said Tony Hawk in an interview at the 2024 Laureus World Sports Awards in Madrid. Leal refers to him as “tio” — “uncle” in Portuguese. “Her trajectory is unstoppable,” he added.

Bronze medalist Rayssa Leal attends the victory ceremony for the women's skateboarding street match at the Paris Olympics. Asked if she could tell reporters about a school subject like quadratic equations, she answered, "We are on vacation right? Classes aren't back yet so remembering it will be a little difficult."<br>
Zhu Zheng/Xinhua via Getty Images / Xinhua News Agency
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Xinhua News Agency
Bronze medalist Rayssa Leal attends the victory ceremony for the women's skateboarding street match at the Paris Olympics. Asked if she could tell reporters about a school subject like quadratic equations, she answered, "We are on vacation right? Classes aren't back yet so remembering it will be a little difficult."

Records, records, records

After winning a bronze medal at this year’s Paris Olympics, Leal became the youngest athlete in history to win a medal in two separate Olympic Games.

After her Paris event, she said she was crying "tears ... of joy" and added, "Just being here makes me happy. It’s something so big.”

And her feet were well-shod. She sported shoes from her collaboration with Nike, the “Rayssa Nike SB Dunk Low Pro” – a collaboration so successful it sold out within 20 minutes of its release earlier this year. It’s a full-circle moment for the athlete who once skated in beat-up shoes with holes.

Copyright 2024 NPR

Maria Isabel Barros Guinle

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SOMOS CONNECTICUT es una iniciativa de Connecticut Public, la emisora local de NPR y PBS del estado, que busca elevar nuestras historias latinas y expandir programación que alza y informa nuestras comunidades latinas locales. Visita CTPublic.org/latino para más reportajes y recursos. Para noticias, suscríbase a nuestro boletín informativo en ctpublic.org/newsletters.

The independent journalism and non-commercial programming you rely on every day is in danger.

If you’re reading this, you believe in trusted journalism and in learning without paywalls. You value access to educational content kids love and enriching cultural programming.

Now all of that is at risk.

Federal funding for public media is under threat and if it goes, the impact to our communities will be devastating.

Together, we can defend it. It’s time to protect what matters.

Your voice has protected public media before. Now, it’s needed again. Learn how you can protect the news and programming you depend on.

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