Post by yamfriend on Mar 29, 2017 17:28:24 GMT -5
Post facts/trivia associated with SASUKE 33 here.
*This tournament was the best known result thus far for #45 and #52.
*With Seiki Takusu's clear as #52, every number in the second half (#51-#100) has now cleared Stage 1 at least once post-Akiyama kanzenseiha (i.e. after SASUKE 4). The highest number yet to not have this distinction is #43, which is ironically one of the few numbers to clear three times in the first 4 tournaments (no number cleared Stage 1 in all 4 of these tournaments).
*Although #77 cleared Stage 1 for the fourth time ever, it is only the second time (besides SASUKE 4) that it failed to reach the Final Stage in the same tournament. #77 advanced to the Final Stage in SASUKE 12 (Shiratori) and 22 (Urushihara).
*#97 and #98 both cleared Stage 1 for a record 19th time, and #100 cleared for the 18th time.
*#97 cleared Stage 2 for a record 18th time. The only time in which #97 failed Stage 2 was Hiromichi Sato in SASUKE 24.
*For the first time ever in SASUKE history, no new numbers cleared a stage in back-to-back tournaments. In other words, every Stage 1 and Stage 2 clear number in SASUKE 32 and 33 had already cleared those respective stages at least once previously. The newest numbers to do so were #31 (Stage 2) and #91 (Final Stage) in SASUKE 31.
*Not only were Shunsuke Nagasaki and Yusuke Morimoto the only former finalists to make it past Stage 1, but the only ones to even make it past the Double Pendulum.
*Shunsuke Nagasaki jumped into a four-way tie among non-All-Star competitors for most Stage 1 clears, with 9 (alongside Naoki Iketani, Lee En-Chih, and Kenji Takahashi). As implied in the previous sentence, the only four people with more Stage 1 clears are/were SASUKE All-Stars: Takeda (18), Yamamoto (16), Nagano (14), and Yamada (10).
*Nagasaki also now has the fifth-most Stage 2 clears, with 7. The only four people with more Stage 2 clear are Takeda (13), Yamamoto (11), Nagano (11), and Takahashi (8).
*SASUKE 33 is the first tournament since SASUKE 20 in which only one competitor attempted the Cliffhanger. Coincidentally, both competitors were Americans.
*This tournament was the best known result thus far for #45 and #52.
*With Seiki Takusu's clear as #52, every number in the second half (#51-#100) has now cleared Stage 1 at least once post-Akiyama kanzenseiha (i.e. after SASUKE 4). The highest number yet to not have this distinction is #43, which is ironically one of the few numbers to clear three times in the first 4 tournaments (no number cleared Stage 1 in all 4 of these tournaments).
*Although #77 cleared Stage 1 for the fourth time ever, it is only the second time (besides SASUKE 4) that it failed to reach the Final Stage in the same tournament. #77 advanced to the Final Stage in SASUKE 12 (Shiratori) and 22 (Urushihara).
*#97 and #98 both cleared Stage 1 for a record 19th time, and #100 cleared for the 18th time.
*#97 cleared Stage 2 for a record 18th time. The only time in which #97 failed Stage 2 was Hiromichi Sato in SASUKE 24.
*For the first time ever in SASUKE history, no new numbers cleared a stage in back-to-back tournaments. In other words, every Stage 1 and Stage 2 clear number in SASUKE 32 and 33 had already cleared those respective stages at least once previously. The newest numbers to do so were #31 (Stage 2) and #91 (Final Stage) in SASUKE 31.
*Not only were Shunsuke Nagasaki and Yusuke Morimoto the only former finalists to make it past Stage 1, but the only ones to even make it past the Double Pendulum.
*Shunsuke Nagasaki jumped into a four-way tie among non-All-Star competitors for most Stage 1 clears, with 9 (alongside Naoki Iketani, Lee En-Chih, and Kenji Takahashi). As implied in the previous sentence, the only four people with more Stage 1 clears are/were SASUKE All-Stars: Takeda (18), Yamamoto (16), Nagano (14), and Yamada (10).
*Nagasaki also now has the fifth-most Stage 2 clears, with 7. The only four people with more Stage 2 clear are Takeda (13), Yamamoto (11), Nagano (11), and Takahashi (8).
*SASUKE 33 is the first tournament since SASUKE 20 in which only one competitor attempted the Cliffhanger. Coincidentally, both competitors were Americans.