Super Crown, the decisive stage of the Street League Skateboarding (SLS), took place in Ginásio do Ibirapuera
December 7
2025
– 12:21 p.m.
(updated at 12:25 p.m.)
Rayssa Leal became the first and only four-time champion of World Street Skate Leaguethe Street League Skateboarding (SLS), winning the Super Crown this Sunday 7, at the Ginásio do Ibirapuera, in São Paulo.
The Brazilian led the final from start to finish, maintaining her consistency with scores above 8.0 – she reached 8.3 in the first round – while her rivals accumulated errors. She is the biggest winner of her generation, having achieved an unprecedented feat among both men and women.
“I have no words to express my feelings. In Paris, I didn’t reach the final. It was my goal for the year. I’m happy. It’s something supernatural.”
The owner of 26 international victories revealed that she played the final with knee protection. “I fell, hit my head and turned my knee a little. I woke up better and was happy to compete, even if I was a little injured. Nothing to worry about,” she told SporTV.
Feeling comfortable in front of an audience of ten thousand people, the 17-year-old from Maranhão expanded her track record. She is Olympic vice-champion in Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games and bronze in Paris-2024 Games. She was also a world champion at the 2022 and 2024 World Skate Games.
Rayssa led the final from the initial phase, when each athlete performed two laps of 45 seconds. After a lap reaching 8.3, the Brazilian took the lead, beating Australian Chloe Covell by a tenth.
This lead gave the Brazilian peace of mind in the decisive phase, when the athletes attempted five individual maneuvers.
WHAT A RETURN FROM RAYSSA!
From the first round, she obtained the best score and took the lead in the SLS Super Crown! GO, RAYSSAAAA! #EsportSpectacular pic.twitter.com/mcAMlJhZaA
– ge (@geglobo) December 7, 2025
In the final phase, Rayssa was perfect in the first maneuver and retained the lead after Covell missed his first attempts. The Australian began to recover in the third maneuver, when she reached 8.8.
The four Japanese women who finished the final struggled at first, but began to pile on the pressure with error-free maneuvers in the final phase. First to recover was Liz Akama, who scored 8.0 on her second attempt. Yumeka Oda, world champion, received a score of 9.0
The Japanese Coco Yoshizawa, current Olympic champion and who had ranked first in qualifying, fell during her first two laps and was unable to make up the difference.