She has just become a teenager, but got her Olympic place as a twelve-year-old.
Sky Brown, who lives in California but with a Japanese mother and British father, will compete for the UK when the skateboard park enters the Olympic program.
She’s one of the Tokyo games most described name, and her young age arouses both curiosity – and criticism.
At the same time, she is not the only child athlete.
– There is a big and dark backside we rarely talk about, Göran Kenttä – responsible for sports psychology at the Swedish Sports Confederation – has told Expressen about children competing on adult terms.
– There are many examples of children who have not had a normal upbringing.
Swedish skateboard star and Olympic hopeful Oskar Rozenberg, who will make his Olympic debut later this week, is developing for DN in general:
– I would probably say that the biggest risk, really always but even more when you are very young, is if you are pushed to do things that you do not really want.
– Maybe that the parents push you to be in the media, get a lot of attention and get great sponsors from a young age. And then when you grow up you look back and feel that you did not have time to be a child, that you were forced.