Mm... ... ... I liked it, to an extent. The art is attractive, I like tomboyish main characters, Saaya's expressions were amusing, the skate shop owner's cat was funny... it has a lot of good elements. They just don't come together that well because it felt like the story was advancing at a breakneck pace. Even though we get shown a central part of Saaya's past, for example, by the end of the manga, I feel like I still don't really know anything about the character. I don't know anything about anyone aside from the main character because she's the only one the reader gets a chance to get close to. Everyone else barely changes from when we first met them.
Maybe it was because the series or the magazine it was published in was constantly under the axe? No clue. It's regrettable, because I could really envision it lasting for several volumes, a fun shounen sports series with the usual tournament style progression, tropes, and whatnot. Perhaps it always had an uphill climb with a traditionally feminine subject clashing with the shounen genre, but it could have worked.
Well, I'm glad I had a chance to read it to the end, at any rate.