|
Post by darthvaderlim on Dec 29, 2021 4:43:23 GMT -5
Saikawa Koji set a new best for #9. With his clear, this marks the longest gap between clears for a start position with 37 tournaments and 23 years, back in Sasuke 2. Isa is the first to clear Stage Two wearing #55. Suzuki Yusuke is the first person to fail Stage Three wearing #77. Hioki is the first person to fail Stage Three wearing #59. Shingo's fourth time wearing #92. First tournament since Sasuke 1 to have only Yamada and Shingo competing. Coincidently, Yamada wore #92 in that tournament. First tournament since Sasuke 21 where Yusuke fails Stage One and no one makes it to the Final Stage. First time Ryo fails a Stage Three obstacle before the Cliffhanger. Ajima Hideki is the first person to clear Stage One to be born in the 21st century. This is the second tournament where the last Stage One clear is #91. The first was Sasuke 8. Coincidently, both tournaments were raining and #100 failed the Warped wall. First tournament since Sasuke 31, where the last three competitors timed up on the Warped Wall. Coincidently, all three were finalists, two of them were Grand Champions, and both had competitors at 43 years old. And to get the cat out of the bag, Suzuki Yusuke is the oldest Stage Two clear at 43. Coincidently, he cleared Stage One in 37 with 4.95 seconds left and Stage Two in 39 with 4.96 seconds left. This tournament's ending is a bit similar to 34, where the last man standing was the only one to clear the Cliffhanger, only to fail the Vertical Limit afterwards.
Yamada became the third All-Star to fail the first obstacle. This tournament has the largest amount of Stage Three competitors failing before the Cliffhanger. The previous record was Sasuke 14 with 5. Darvish's worst performance and first time Can Yutaka did better than him. Snowman is the first person to clear Stage One in back to back tournaments wearing #88
|
|
|
Post by subtleagent on Dec 29, 2021 4:50:36 GMT -5
Yamada is actually the fourth. Akiyama in 9, then Takeda and Yamamoto in 31, and now Yamada in this tournament.
|
|
|
Post by dakohosu on Dec 29, 2021 5:15:36 GMT -5
Yoshiyuki Yamamoto is the first Japanese competitor since Kazuma Asa in Sasuke 30 to have the fastest times in both Stages 1 and 2, and is the first competitor to have had the fastest Stage 2 times for three tournaments in a row.
|
|
|
Post by darthvaderlim on Dec 29, 2021 5:22:39 GMT -5
A few more: Similar to Sasuke 30, the first person to clear Stage Two wore #35, became the first to attempt a new obstacle before the Cliffhanger and failing the latter respectively, and both of them made it to the third stage for the first time in their career. Coincidently, both had 9 competitors and Ryo made it to Stage Three in both tournaments. Similar to Sasuke 31, the last four people to clear Stage One were consecutive clears (#94 to #97 in 31, #88 to #91 in 39). Second tournament to have all nine competitors fail the third stage. Third tournament where #91 is last man standing, but the first not to make it to the Final Stage. First tournament since Sasuke 27, where the first person to clear Stage One is in single digit. No tournament ending in 9 has a final Stage attempt.
|
|
|
Post by LusitaniaAngel313 on Dec 29, 2021 5:26:57 GMT -5
Ironically, to add onto the last 4 clears streak, both were ended by a SASUKE all star (Nagano in 31, Shingo in 39).
|
|
|
Post by Mk20SSR on Dec 29, 2021 6:37:42 GMT -5
No tournament ending in 9 has a final Stage attempt. Speaking of that, this is the only numeral that has no Final Stage attempt, looks like we have wait for another ten tournaments (equates to a decade?) With Tada's fail on the Third Stage, it broke the chain on another consecutive Final Stage attempts, now tied to SASUKE 1-4, at four.
|
|
|
Post by SasukeBanzukeNo1 (Moon12) on Dec 29, 2021 7:58:23 GMT -5
-For the second time in a row, Sugeta Rinne completed the first stage with just about one second remaining. -Boruneesan and Acrobat Oni became the first two incognito competitors in SASUKE history. -This was the second time where the amount of first stage clears was the same as the tournament prior--that being 14 clears in SASUKE 38 and 39. The first time this happened was in SASUKE 11 and 12--both having 11 clears. -This tournament is tied with SASUKE 34 in having the second most people to attempt the third stage without anyone making the final--that being 9 people. SASUKE 14 is the highest with 10 people. -Kajihara Hayate is the first "talent" since Darvish Kenji in SASUKE 36 to make it to stage three.
|
|
|
Post by itsadamly on Dec 29, 2021 9:17:50 GMT -5
First tournament since Sasuke 21 where Yusuke fails Stage One and no one makes it to the Final Stage. Actually Yusuke did fail Stage One in Sasuke 37, coincidentally on Warped Wall (second wall on Double Warped Wall in 39's case) and coincidentally being due to rain. Also this means that this is the first time where a Grand Champion fails Stage One right after his own Kanzenseiha (if not counting Akiyama's case due to him being absent in Sasuke 5)
|
|
zoran
Jessie Graff
Posts: 1,031
|
Post by zoran on Dec 29, 2021 9:45:21 GMT -5
First tournament since Sasuke 21 where Yusuke fails Stage One and no one makes it to the Final Stage. Actually Yusuke did fail Stage One in Sasuke 37, coincidentally on Warped Wall (second wall on Double Warped Wall in 39's case) and coincidentally being due to rain. Also this means that this is the first time where a Grand Champion fails Stage One right after his own Kanzenseiha (if not counting Akiyama's case due to him being absent in Sasuke 5) 2 people made it to the final in 37 though.
|
|
|
Post by subtleagent on Dec 29, 2021 19:51:23 GMT -5
Koji Saikawa has had the 10th best result in every tournament he has competed in so far. He is also the one of two competitors to have the same placing in three separate tournaments and never be the best performer. The only other competitors to have the same placement in 3 consecutive tournaments are Nagano (11 ~ 13), Morimoto (34 ~ 36), and Kong (23 ~ 25) and in the former two's cases they performed the best, while Kong was in 3rd place in the tournaments mentioned.
Kanno is the first competitor to fail the Dragon Glider four times and the only one to do so consecutively (he was absent in 36).
This tournament is the new worst average for the All-Stars.
As of this tournament every grand champion has now failed the Warped Wall at least three times. (Akiyama: 10, 14, 15, 24, and 25, Nagano: 7, 8, 28, 29, and 31, Urushihara: 31, 35, and 39, Morimoto: 22, 37, and 39)
|
|
|
Post by sasukebeast on Dec 29, 2021 20:15:45 GMT -5
This is the first tournament since Sasuke 29, that a competitor wearing a number in the 90's was completely cut from the main broadcast. That competitor was #95, Fujimitsu Kenji. Morimoto now holds the record for the most amount of times to consecutively wear the number 100, with seven (33-39).
|
|
|
Post by darthvaderlim on Dec 30, 2021 2:04:21 GMT -5
Similar to Sasuke 32, only three people attempted the Cliffhanger and two of them failed the first transition and the only one to clear it failed the Vertical Limit. First time Yuuji fails Stage One, but Ryo clears it. He and Ryo both failed Stage One together in 21,26,31,32,33, and 35. First tournament since Sasuke 32, where no Grand Champion cleared Stage One. First time Yuuji and Yusuke failed the same obstacle together in the same tournament. First tournament where the time limit ends with a 9. With Yusuke competing in this tournament, this makes Akiyama the only Grand Champion not to attend the tournament after his Kanzen. Shingo has yet to attempt the Tackle/Warped Wall for the ninth time in a row. Hioki and Jun Sato shares the same amount of Stage One clears with 10 and Stage Two clears with 7. They also have the same amount of Cliffhanger fails with 6
|
|
|
Post by Mk20SSR on Dec 30, 2021 2:52:45 GMT -5
Based on the tournament right after a kanzenseiha, this tournament has the highest amount of First Stage clears, at 14, beating 11 clears in SASUKE 25. (Due to the fact that the course barely changed compared to previous tournament)
This is the fourth tournament in a row where the number of First Stage clears is in double digits and the third tournament in a row where the number of Second Stage clears is in single digits.
Besides, as we have three competitor who completed the First Stage for their very first time, we should have 201 competitors completed First Stage?
|
|
|
Post by dakohosu on Dec 30, 2021 4:50:37 GMT -5
Depends on what you consider a 'celebrity' obvs, but from what I remember, Hayate Kajihara has gone the farthest for any Japanese celebrity since Naoki Iketani in Sasuke 10 (both failing the first Cliffhanger transition).
|
|
|
Post by m4tt3r0x on Dec 30, 2021 7:05:07 GMT -5
Not sure if mentioned but first ever tournament an All Star did not reach a trampoline obstacle that was present.
|
|
|
Post by dakohosu on Dec 30, 2021 7:36:35 GMT -5
Not sure if mentioned but first ever tournament an All Star did not reach a trampoline obstacle that was present. What about Sasuke 36? Takeda technically didn’t attempt the Dragon Glider given that he bowed out beforehand, and Shingo failed the Wing Slider.
|
|
|
Post by m4tt3r0x on Dec 30, 2021 10:04:15 GMT -5
Not sure if mentioned but first ever tournament an All Star did not reach a trampoline obstacle that was present. What about Sasuke 36? Takeda technically didn’t attempt the Dragon Glider given that he bowed out beforehand, and Shingo failed the Wing Slider. Eh, he didn't fail the Fishbone. I count it as reaching the Dragon Glider and that's what Sasukepedia says.
|
|
|
Post by dakohosu on Dec 30, 2021 11:21:10 GMT -5
^Fair.
Also, this is the first tournament since Sasuke 14 where two competitors with the same surname reached Stage 3 (Keitaro and Yoshiyuki) and the fourth overall. First was Sasuke 3 with Tatsuya and Shingo Yamamoto, Sasuke 6 where Shane and Kane Kosugi reached Stage 3, and Masaaki and Shinji Kobayashi for Sasuke 14.
|
|
|
Post by subtleagent on Dec 30, 2021 12:08:05 GMT -5
As of this tournament, Shingo has officially competed in SASUKE for longer than he has lived since his debut.
|
|
|
Post by dakohosu on Dec 30, 2021 12:19:02 GMT -5
^On a serious note, he and Tada are the only competitors to have competed for more than half of their life, both facts becoming true only after Sasuke 39. Tada's 29 and started competing at age 14, while Shingo started at 23 and is now 47. Morimoto will also earn this distinction once he competes in Sasuke 40.
|
|