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Post by hoseasasuke on Apr 22, 2017 2:18:10 GMT -5
Most interesting All-Star facts 1.Shiratori Bunpei is the only All-Star who has never attempted the Rolling Escargot 2.Nagano Makoto and Yamada Katsumi are the only All-Stars to have never failed the Body Prop 3.Nagano Makoto is the only All-Star to attempt the Gliding Ring 4.Despite being the All-Stars with the least appearances,with 12 and 19 respectively,Akiyama and Shiratori are the only All-Stars to have never failed a version of the Cliffhanger 5.Akiyama is the only All-Star to have never failed the Jumping Spider
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Post by LusitaniaAngel313 on Apr 22, 2017 2:27:15 GMT -5
To add on to the all star facts since the start of SASUKE RISING Shingo Yamamoto is the only all star to PASS the Salmon ladder whenever in the 2nd stage. Course this also means he's the only all star to attempt the backstream (and fail twice. ) Also if you don't count USA vs Japan/SASUKE 13 trials, Shingo's also never failed the Warped Wall in competition.
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Post by hashtagswag on Apr 22, 2017 4:41:00 GMT -5
Omg I remember seeing that and thinking that's such a shingo move lol .I mean losing the shoe before the wall lol .he would definitely have cleared had he not tho
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Post by Miko on Apr 22, 2017 16:17:30 GMT -5
I wanted to start this thread as a way to collect all of Sasuke's most interesting facts and behind the scenes trivia in one place, so that future users can find this kind of stuff easier. Who knows, maybe current members will learn something new too! The idea is that people post the most interesting facts they know about Sasuke and I will add the best ones to this post (with credit given to each individual for providing them of course). If you don't like this idea then feel free to not make a contribution here. I want to give this thread a specific focus of providing facts that an average viewer would not know from just watching the TV show, ie being the scenes stuff. I ask that you refrain from posting super irrelevant number facts that always seemed to plague the previous fact threads around here. How on earth people still don't remember these rules? It's really getting out of hand with these facts. AFAIK, Americans did piss off some people during S32 (or was it S31? Can't recall) by posting spoilers and such things in social media. TBS didn't like this and cut Americans once again from competing, except Drew.
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Post by RiderLeangle on Apr 22, 2017 16:42:43 GMT -5
^Sasuke 32, Mike Steele, Drew's girlfriend April, Kacy was being annoying and interrupting interviews as well but yet she still got an invite to Kunoichi 9 but declined due to scheduling.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Apr 22, 2017 23:04:47 GMT -5
Yamada is the only all-star never to attempt the Nejireta Kabe/Crooked Wall.
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Post by thegreatluigi on Apr 23, 2017 0:08:48 GMT -5
Yamada is the only all-star never to attempt the Nejireta Kabe/Crooked Wall. And on top of that, every other All-Star attempted it in all three of the tournaments it was in.
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Post by Steven π on May 2, 2017 9:16:35 GMT -5
kinda spoilers for 33, but {Spoiler} i've heard that the reason why ragivaru failed so early on is because he was in europe on the day of the shooting, and arrived on set something like half an hour before his run Spoilers for 33 are NOT ALLOWED to be OUTSIDE OF 33 Threads
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Post by ChiBiJKT48 on Jun 10, 2020 3:51:39 GMT -5
Kinda late to the discussion, but here's interesting fact you may not known. In SASUKE 12's Opening, it was stated that there's a big typhoon striking Japan that result in the tournament to be delayed, right? Well, in fact, the typhoon cause the tournament to be rescheduled from its original date. The tournament suppose to take place in August 2003, but a typhoon named Typhoon Etau strike Japan around that time *refer to this: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhoon_Etau_(2003) for more information* The tournament ended up taking place on 23 September 2003. That was a very quick editing, considering the tournament aired on 1 October 2003, which probably the reason of fast-forwarded Second Stage *only Yamada Koji, Yamada Katsumi, and Nagano Makoto's runs being shown in full, the other eight runs are being digested*
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Post by Messup434 on Jun 10, 2020 14:11:16 GMT -5
Kinda late to the discussion, but here's interesting fact you may not known. In SASUKE 12's Opening, it was stated that there's a big typhoon striking Japan that result in the tournament to be delayed, right? Well, in fact, the typhoon cause the tournament to be rescheduled from its original date. The tournament suppose to take place in August 2003, but a typhoon named Typhoon Etau strike Japan around that time *refer to this: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhoon_Etau_(2003) for more information* The tournament ended up taking place on 23 September 2003. That was a very quick editing, considering the tournament aired on 1 October 2003, which probably the reason of fast-forwarded Second Stage *only Yamada Koji, Yamada Katsumi, and Nagano Makoto's runs being shown in full, the other eight runs are being digested* Doesn't "while you were awaying" the second stage take more effort? When they fast-forward, they have to skip through runs and do some editing, compared to just showing all of the runs raw and in-full.
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Post by ChiBiJKT48 on Jun 11, 2020 1:05:05 GMT -5
Kinda late to the discussion, but here's interesting fact you may not known. In SASUKE 12's Opening, it was stated that there's a big typhoon striking Japan that result in the tournament to be delayed, right? Well, in fact, the typhoon cause the tournament to be rescheduled from its original date. The tournament suppose to take place in August 2003, but a typhoon named Typhoon Etau strike Japan around that time *refer to this: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhoon_Etau_(2003) for more information* The tournament ended up taking place on 23 September 2003. That was a very quick editing, considering the tournament aired on 1 October 2003, which probably the reason of fast-forwarded Second Stage *only Yamada Koji, Yamada Katsumi, and Nagano Makoto's runs being shown in full, the other eight runs are being digested* Doesn't "while you were awaying" the second stage take more effort? When they fast-forward, they have to skip through runs and do some editing, compared to just showing all of the runs raw and in-full. All the eight runs are finished with less than six seconds left on the clock *save for Takeda Toshihiro which had about 11 seconds left*, so it will made the airing time very long *before SASUKE 24 which is part of TBS' New Year 2010's Special, SASUKE airing time was never longer than three hours, including the advertisements* And of course, there is multiple camera on set, so they could just use the camera that was close to Wall Lifting, and use what that camera shot instead of the Main Camera's shot of the competitor's entire run. The digest didn't only happen in Second Stage. In Third Stage, they skipped all Rumbling Dice's attempts, save for Yamada Koji, Asaoka Hiroyuki, and Nagano Makoto. Even for Sato Manabu, Kobayashi Masaaki, and Jordan Jovtchev, they directly fast-forward to the obstacle they failed. If they show all ten runs in full, imagine how long the tournament's airing time will be, since everyone, save for Kobayashi Masaaki, make it at least to Cliffhanger Kai.
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Post by ChiBiJKT48 on Jun 13, 2020 7:32:24 GMT -5
Also, another interesting fact about SASUKE 12. Not only that this is the first ever tournament to had First Stage finished at night, this is also the first tournament to be taped over two days *although not two separate days like what happened from SASUKE 30 onwards*, due to number of competitors attempting Second Stage and Third Stage *and don't forget that there is two additional attempts from Yamada Katsumi which he also used all 70 seconds*, and how far each competitor go in Third Stage. When Nagano went 0.11 seconds late on Final Stage, it was already 24 September, around 1 AM.
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