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A year after skateboarding legend Jeff Grosso’s death, pro skaters and friends remember Grosso through art and skateboarding.
Grosso was an Arcadia native who rose to fame as a professional skateboarder in the late 1980s and later became a beloved ambassador for the sport through his YouTube show, his mentorship of younger pro skaters and his public reflections on battles with drug addiction. He died at the age of 51 at Hoag Hospital in Newport Beach. His death on March 31, 2020, was caused by “acute polydrug intoxication” from the combined effects of fentanyl and phenobarbital, according to an autopsy report.
“His legacy will always be his passion for skateboarding,” said Christian Hosoi, a longtime friend of Grosso who has since become a pastor.
Fellow skater Lizzie Armanto said she will always remember Grosso for “sticking up for what he thinks is right and what’s important in skateboarding. He was always like advocating for quality control.”
“Jeff Grosso’s Loveletters to Skateboarding” YouTube shows continue to be shared, educating a younger generation about the skateboarding community that first put the sport on the map.
Jim Gray, a fellow skateboarder who once had a high-profile spat with Grosso, said they mended their relationship and grew to appreciate each other’s commitment to skateboarding.
“He was a fan of skateboarding, way more detailed than I’ve ever been,” Gray said. “About tricks, about people, about who came, where they came from.”
Skateboarding icon Tony Hawk told The Times earlier this year that Grosso reached another level of influence when he shared his struggles with sobriety on his YouTube show.
“He was definitely an inspiration for a new generation, in terms of how to respect your culture,” Hawk said. “The fact that he got clean, he was in recovery, people saw that as hope, especially people struggling with the same issues. But I liked that he wasn’t preaching only that. He weaved that into his narrative, but it wasn’t all he represented.”
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.