The Iron Cross Story: Page 1
How
long was Iron Cross around?
From the end of 88 until about 91.
Whose idea was it to get the company together?
Mine and Steves and Owen Nieders idea originally. We all used to skate together at McGills and came up with the idea and plan. It all came together real quickly.
Why leave a successful company like H-Street?
Iwas
glad they gave me a chance when they put me on H-Street but at the time
before ICS started the pros on the team werent being treated fairly,
there was a lot of favoritism going on because the emphasis was turning
more to street.
Schultes had enough, Eddie Elguera was getting fed
up, Planet Earth was starting up through them.
Danny Way who was
always cool as hell was turning pro, we were into that but some of the
others werent
so the major changes didnt leave much hope
for the old vert guys
Why start a new Company? What was the idea behind Iron Cross that
made it different?
At
the time there were pics of skaters being gangsters or bringing other
non-skate related lame lifestyles into the picture, people making silly
faces and acting really lame in ads, (no skate shots in ads) and making
lots of money. The market was similar to todaysyoung kids,
1314, buying most of the decks and what kind of influence is a skater
with a gun in an ad? Lots of the idea behind ICS was very serious
with
all the politics going on internally pre-ICS with the companies
we rode for, and the state of the industry at that time
the way Trans
World was trying to clean up skateboarding and companies that didnt
stand for what we stood for, how could we keep riding for somebody else
and co-signing all their stupid shit? This attitude goes back to the Zorlac
days. Look at all the tattooed skaters today
thats the way
we wanted it. What happened to proving yourself with nothing else but
skate merit?
How did the funding come together?
Met
with Tony Magnusson and Mike Ternasky (the owners of H-Street who Art
skated for at the time) and they said, OK, well produce and
distribute and pay you guys a royalty until you get on your feet.
So they funded a lot of it
our board sales were never so hot and
we didnt have the cash to do something on a large scale, so we needed
them. For advertising and distribution mostly.
Who were the pros on the team?
Art Godoy, Steve Godoy, Owen Nieder and Justin Ashby.
How did the others get on the team, what ams were on there?
People got on the team by us seeing them skate. They all ripped! The ams we had: Jeff McCowan, these two little kids-Brian Dvorak and Koby Newell, Tim Tillman, Jay Hitt, Dave Stanley, Carey OBrien (Australia), there were more they all got treated like pros when they got on the board company, they were automatically hooked up with Airwalk shoes, Cutter Trucks (if they wanted em), Venture trucks, Spitfire wheels wed send ams to contests and give em $ to spend
How many different decks did you make?
In
89 we had 6 models: 4 pro models, a street deck and a mini ramp
deck. Nothing in 88 cuz thatwas H-street for me and Circle-A for
steve. The next year, 90, the 89 models were still sold and
we were waiting for the 90 decks to start production. That was the
soldier for me and the sickle weasel deck for steve. Those never got produced,
nothing more than some rad prototypes. We had lots of other things planned,
helmets with a spike on top, clothes, we were tinkering around with truck
ideas
tours, we had some doors opening in South Africa for tours
in which wed surf cool spots, a video which would be totally un-rated
because the content was gonna be crazy, showing the activities at the
ICS headquarters.







