Sasukepedia Wiki
(Adding categories)
Tag: Visual edit
(39 intermediate revisions by 20 users not shown)
Line 11: Line 11:
 
|weight =55 kg
 
|weight =55 kg
 
|s_nickname =
 
|s_nickname =
|s_comps = [[List of SASUKE competitions|16 Competitions]]
+
|s_comps = [[List of SASUKE competitions|17 Competitions]]
 
|s_first = [[SASUKE 21]]
 
|s_first = [[SASUKE 21]]
|s_last = [[SASUKE 36]]
+
|s_last = [[SASUKE 37]]
 
|s_best = [[SASUKE 24]] and [[SASUKE 27]], '''Kanzenseiha'''
 
|s_best = [[SASUKE 24]] and [[SASUKE 27]], '''Kanzenseiha'''
 
|s_song = "Grand Theme" from Blood+ (22~27)
 
|s_song = "Grand Theme" from Blood+ (22~27)
Line 25: Line 25:
 
|footnotes =
 
|footnotes =
 
}}
 
}}
'''Urushihara Yuuji''' (漆原 裕治) is a shoe salesman who has attempted ''[[SASUKE]]'' sixteen times. In just his fourth attempt, he beat all the obstacles and became the third person and first non-[[SASUKE All-Stars|All-Star]] to achieve [[kanzenseiha]]. He is a member of [[Shin Sedai]] and is also an [[Unlimited Cliffer]]. Urushihara and miyake ayako are the only champion to have cleared all four stages twice, having performed the feat for the second time in [[SASUKE 27]] and Kunoichi 5. He is also the only champion to wear the number #100 the tournament after his victory, as [[Akiyama Kazuhiko]] and [[Morimoto Yūsuke]] were absent the tournament after their respective victories, and [[Nagano Makoto]] wore #96 in the competition after his kanzenseiha.
+
'''Urushihara Yuuji''' (漆原 裕治) is a shoe salesman who has attempted ''[[SASUKE]]'' sixteen times. In just his fourth attempt, he beat all the obstacles and became the third person and first non-[[SASUKE All-Stars|All-Star]] to achieve [[kanzenseiha]]. He is a member of [[Shin Sedai]] and is also an [[Unlimited Cliffer]]. Urushihara is the only champion in SASUKE history to have cleared all four stages twice, having performed the feat for the second time in [[SASUKE 27]].
   
 
==Qualifying==
 
==Qualifying==
Line 39: Line 39:
 
==Kanzenseiha==
 
==Kanzenseiha==
 
[[File:Vlcsnap-295913.jpg|thumb|300px|Urushihara earning kanzenseiha in [[SASUKE 24]]]]
 
[[File:Vlcsnap-295913.jpg|thumb|300px|Urushihara earning kanzenseiha in [[SASUKE 24]]]]
After his failure, he built a replica of the Unstable Bridge to train and returned for ''[[SASUKE 24]]'', still receiving a high [[start position]], #93. He blazed through the First Stage with 24.35 seconds left, the fastest time of the day.
+
After his failure, he built a replica of the Unstable Bridge to train and returned for ''[[SASUKE 24]]'', still receiving a high [[start position]], #93. He blazed through the First Stage with 24.35 seconds left, the fastest time of the day. It should be noted that he forgot to unhook the Tarzan rope
   
 
He then exacted his revenge on the Unstable Bridge but began to run low on time on the redesigned [[Balance Tank]]. He powered through the final obstacles and finished with 6.55 seconds to spare.
 
He then exacted his revenge on the Unstable Bridge but began to run low on time on the redesigned [[Balance Tank]]. He powered through the final obstacles and finished with 6.55 seconds to spare.
Line 50: Line 50:
   
 
==Kanzen Renewal==
 
==Kanzen Renewal==
After his kanzenseiha, he was granted the coveted #100 in ''[[SASUKE 25]]''. He again cleared the first stage with little trouble, but he failed the [[Double Salmon Ladder]] in an odd and unlikely fashion. The left side of the bar missed the rung, but the right side somehow latched onto one of the rungs, leaving Urushihara hanging onto the pole vertically, essentially rendering completion of the obstacle impossible. His foot grazed the water after a while, and his day was over.
+
After his kanzenseiha, he was granted the coveted #100 in ''[[SASUKE 25]]''. He again cleared the First Stage with little trouble, but he failed the [[Double Salmon Ladder]] in an odd and unlikely fashion. The left side of the bar missed the rung, but the right side somehow latched onto one of the rungs, leaving Urushihara hanging onto the pole vertically, essentially rendering completion of the obstacle impossible. His foot grazed the water after a while, and his day was over.
   
 
In ''[[SASUKE 26]]'', he once again wore #100. Throughout his run, he was sloppy. On the [[Rolling Escargot]], he nearly lost his footing and had to stop the obstacle halfway to re-adjust. On the [[Jumping Spider]], he was too short on the walls and dove back to the trampoline, giving himself a rare second chance at the obstacle; he completed it on his second attempt. Now in a time crunch, he was forced to rush through the remainder of the course. On the [[Half-Pipe Attack]], he failed to land properly on the mat, but held onto the rope for another try, a mistake he's made multiple times in the past. Now desperate to complete the obstacle with any decent amount of time left, he landed awkwardly on the mat, lost his balance and hopped backwards into the water.
 
In ''[[SASUKE 26]]'', he once again wore #100. Throughout his run, he was sloppy. On the [[Rolling Escargot]], he nearly lost his footing and had to stop the obstacle halfway to re-adjust. On the [[Jumping Spider]], he was too short on the walls and dove back to the trampoline, giving himself a rare second chance at the obstacle; he completed it on his second attempt. Now in a time crunch, he was forced to rush through the remainder of the course. On the [[Half-Pipe Attack]], he failed to land properly on the mat, but held onto the rope for another try, a mistake he's made multiple times in the past. Now desperate to complete the obstacle with any decent amount of time left, he landed awkwardly on the mat, lost his balance and hopped backwards into the water.
   
In [[SASUKE 27]], he wore #99 despite being the current champion. Nevertheless, the starting position change may have been what he needed mentally as he would clear the First Stage in a much more fluid run than the previous tournament. He also conquered his demon on the [[Double Salmon Ladder]], clearing the Second Stage with time to spare (as well as the stigma of failing at #99 in the same stage during SASUKE 23). Despite never attempting any of the obstacles of the Third Stage outside of replicas, he continued his perfect streak of clearing the stage (although there was a small scare of transitioning to the wooden ladder after clearing the ''[[Chain See-Saw]]''), making it 3 for 3. On the Final Stage, Urushihara once again proved his rope climbing training paid off as he acheived Kanzenseiha with 6.71 seconds remaining, becoming not just the fastest to complete the Final Stage, but also the first person to acheive Kanzenseiha twice.
+
In [[SASUKE 27]], he wore #99 despite being the current champion. Nevertheless, the starting position change may have been what he needed mentally as he would clear the First Stage in a much more fluid run than the previous tournament. He also conquered his demon on the [[Double Salmon Ladder]], clearing the Second Stage with time to spare (as well as the stigma of failing at #99 in the same stage during SASUKE 23). Despite never attempting any of the obstacles of the Third Stage outside of replicas, he continued his perfect streak of clearing the stage (although there was a small scare of transitioning to the wooden ladder after clearing the [[Chain See-Saw]]), making it 3 for 3. On the Final Stage, Urushihara once again proved his rope climbing training paid off as he acheived Kanzenseiha with 6.71 seconds remaining, becoming not just the fastest to complete the Final Stage, but also the first person to acheive Kanzenseiha twice.
   
 
==SASUKE RISING==
 
==SASUKE RISING==
Line 63: Line 63:
 
In [[SASUKE 30]], he was digested, but was shown to have cleared the First Stage. In the Second Stage he got his revenge on the [[Backstream]], but still wasted nearly 20 seconds trying to cross it, leaving him too exhausted and with too little time for the [[Wall Lifting]]. He attempted to force himself under the first wall, but got stuck and timed out after getting under.
 
In [[SASUKE 30]], he was digested, but was shown to have cleared the First Stage. In the Second Stage he got his revenge on the [[Backstream]], but still wasted nearly 20 seconds trying to cross it, leaving him too exhausted and with too little time for the [[Wall Lifting]]. He attempted to force himself under the first wall, but got stuck and timed out after getting under.
   
In [[SASUKE 31]], he managed to blaze through the first four obstacles, but he struggled on the [[Tackle Machine|Tackle]], spending 20 seconds trying to push it before timing out on the [[Soritatsu Kabe]] due to exhaustion, like many that day.
+
In [[SASUKE 31]], he managed to blaze through the first four obstacles, but he struggled on the [[Tackle Machine|Tackle]], spending 20 seconds trying to push it before timing out on the [[Soritatsu Kabe]] due to exhaustion, like many that day. After he timed out on the obstacle, he tried to go over the Soritatsu Kabe multiple times, with no hope of completing it due to exhaustion. He would attempt it over and over again until he was stopped by production staff due to the fact that he could get hurt.
   
 
In [[SASUKE 32]], he made it through the first four obstacles with ease, but shocked everybody when he failed at the brand new obstacle, [[Double Pendulum]], where he tried to transit to the red sandbag a few times but failed the transition. It was his first time failing the First Stage twice in a row.
 
In [[SASUKE 32]], he made it through the first four obstacles with ease, but shocked everybody when he failed at the brand new obstacle, [[Double Pendulum]], where he tried to transit to the red sandbag a few times but failed the transition. It was his first time failing the First Stage twice in a row.
Line 69: Line 69:
 
In [[SASUKE 33]], he started off quickly though the [[Quad Steps]] but slipped on the first cylinder of the [[Rolling Hill]] and fell there, marking his third consecutive First Stage failure.
 
In [[SASUKE 33]], he started off quickly though the [[Quad Steps]] but slipped on the first cylinder of the [[Rolling Hill]] and fell there, marking his third consecutive First Stage failure.
   
In [[SASUKE 34]], he declared that he would retire if he failed the [[First Stage]] for the fourth straight time, fortunately he cleared the First Stage easily. He became emotional as he cleared the stage for the first time since [[SASUKE 30]]. In the Second Stage he cleared the first few obstacles with ease, however he lost time at the [[Backstream]] when he chose to go around the water jets and as a result he was running low on time and energy as he struggled on the [[Reverse Conveyor]], timing out just as he finished the obstacle.
+
In [[SASUKE 34]], he declared that he would retire if he failed the [[First Stage]] for the fourth straight time, fortunately he cleared the First Stage easily. He became emotional as he cleared the stage for the first time since [[SASUKE 30]]. In the Second Stage, he cleared the first few obstacles with ease, however he lost time at the [[Backstream]] when he chose to go around the water jets and as a result he was running low on time and energy as he struggled on the [[Reverse Conveyor]], timing out just as he finished the obstacle.
   
 
In [[SASUKE 35]], he cleared the first six obstacles with ease, including the new [[Dragon Glider]], but eventually timed out on the [[Soritatsu Kabe]] due to the reduced time limit and exhaustion even after putting adhesive spray on his shoes. After his run, he tried to scale the wall one more time and cleared. If the time limit remained the same or extended, he would've cleared that day.
 
In [[SASUKE 35]], he cleared the first six obstacles with ease, including the new [[Dragon Glider]], but eventually timed out on the [[Soritatsu Kabe]] due to the reduced time limit and exhaustion even after putting adhesive spray on his shoes. After his run, he tried to scale the wall one more time and cleared. If the time limit remained the same or extended, he would've cleared that day.
   
In [[SASUKE 36]] now 40 years old, despite wasting time on the [[Tackle Machine|Tackle]], still cleared the First Stage, and becoming one of the few to clear the first stage in their 40's. In the Second Stage, the jets on the [[Backstream]] almost pushed him, but powered through. He took a little time to rest before the Reverse[[Gyakuso Conveyor| ]]Conveyor, before he got revenge and cleared it but running low on time. And for the first time since [[SASUKE 28]], he cleared the Second Stage. In the Third Stage,he almost fell in the [[Sidewinder]] jumps but managed to get through. He also cleared the [[Ultra Crazy Cliffhanger]], being the oldest to clear it, and also the oldest to attempt the next obstacle, the [[Vertical Limit]], where he made it to the 3rd ledge before his grip gave out.
+
In [[SASUKE 36]], now 40 years old, despite wasting time on the [[Tackle Machine|Tackle]], still cleared the First Stage, and becoming one of the few to clear the First Stage in their 40's. In the Second Stage, the jets on the [[Backstream]] almost pushed him, but powered through. He took a little time to rest before the Reverse[[Gyakuso Conveyor| ]]Conveyor, before he got revenge and cleared it but running low on time. And for the first time since [[SASUKE 28]], he cleared the Second Stage. In the Third Stage, he almost fell in the [[Sidewinder]] but managed to get through. He also cleared the [[Ultra Crazy Cliffhanger]], being the oldest to clear it, and also the oldest to attempt the next obstacle, the [[Vertical Limit]], where he was able to make the successful transition to the third ledge and even had a grip but he didn't leave enough space for both of his hands to move and fell due to not having space to move his hands.
  +
  +
He competed once more in [[SASUKE 37]] wearing #96. He cleared the First Stage once more with 5.80 seconds left. In the Second Stage, he powered through and despite going at a brisk pace, cleared with 13.83 seconds left. In the Third Stage, he completed the first 3 obstacles with ease. On [[Cliffhanger Dimension]], he completed it with a bit of effort. On the Vertical Limit, he was able to make the transition to the third ledge and successfully beat it despite getting sapped of energy. On the [[Pipe Slider]], as he mounted from the resting bars, the left side of the bar was pushed off the track, making the bar falling in a vertical position, dragging Urushihara down with it, in a similar way to his fall in the [[Double Salmon Ladder]] in [[SASUKE 25]]. Had he cleared, he would have been the oldest competitor to have ever reached the Final Stage at age 41, beating Okuyama Yoshiyuki's record of attempting the final at 39 in SASUKE 24.
   
 
{{clear}}
 
{{clear}}
Line 79: Line 81:
 
==Trivia==
 
==Trivia==
 
*Urushihara is one of only five competitors to progress the furthest of any competitor two tournaments in a row, the others being [[Morimoto Yusuke]], [[Drew Drechsel]], [[Lee En-Chih]] and [[Nagano Makoto]].
 
*Urushihara is one of only five competitors to progress the furthest of any competitor two tournaments in a row, the others being [[Morimoto Yusuke]], [[Drew Drechsel]], [[Lee En-Chih]] and [[Nagano Makoto]].
*He and [[Miyake Ayako]] are the only competitors who achieve multiple [[Kanzenseiha|Kanzenseihas]].
+
*Urushihara and [[Miyake Ayako]] are the only competitors who achieve multiple [[Kanzenseiha]]s.
 
*From ''SASUKE 22'' to 27, Urushihara never failed the [[Third Stage]].
 
*From ''SASUKE 22'' to 27, Urushihara never failed the [[Third Stage]].
 
*Urushihara failed the [[Soritatsu Kabe]] in [[SASUKE 31]] for the first time in his career.
 
*Urushihara failed the [[Soritatsu Kabe]] in [[SASUKE 31]] for the first time in his career.
*He, Takahashi Kenji, [[Takeda Toshihiro]], and [[Kanno Hitoshi]] are the only four people who attempted and clear all versions of [[Salmon Ladder]], although Takeda Toshihiro failed in all of them. He is also the only one to clear them all and have all of his attempts on them shown in full.
+
*Urushihara, [[Takahashi Kenji]], [[Takeda Toshihiro]], [[Kanno Hitoshi]], and [[Morimoto Yusuke]] are the only five people who attempted the most [[Salmon Ladder]] variations at 5.
  +
**In addition, Urushihara, Takahashi, Kanno, and Morimoto completed the most Salmon Ladder variations at 5.
*Urushihara failed a variant of the [[Crazy Cliffhanger|Cliffhanger]] in [[SASUKE 28]] for the first time in his career.
 
 
*Urushihara was the first to pass the [[Gliding Ring]].
 
*Urushihara was the first to pass the [[Gliding Ring]].
*From ''[[SASUKE 12]]'', Urushihara became one of the only five people to beat the Third Stage on his first Third Stage attempt (along with [[Shiratori Bunpei]], [[Matachi Ryo]], [[Hashimoto Kouji]] and [[Kawaguchi Tomohiro]]).
+
*From [[SASUKE 12]], Urushihara became one of the only six people to beat the Third Stage on his first Third Stage attempt (along with [[Shiratori Bunpei]], [[Matachi Ryo]], [[Hashimoto Kouji]], [[Kawaguchi Tomohiro]], and [[Rene Kaselowsky]]).
 
*Urushihara Yuuji is one of the only six people to make it to the [[Final Stage]] more than once (along with [[Omori Akira]], [[Yamamoto Shingo]], [[Nagano Makoto]], [[Matachi Ryo]] and [[Morimoto Yusuke]]).
 
*Urushihara Yuuji is one of the only six people to make it to the [[Final Stage]] more than once (along with [[Omori Akira]], [[Yamamoto Shingo]], [[Nagano Makoto]], [[Matachi Ryo]] and [[Morimoto Yusuke]]).
*He and [[Hashimoto Koji]] are the only [[Shin Sedai]] who has never attempted the [[Drum Hopper]].
+
*Urushihara and [[Hashimoto Koji]] are the only [[Shin Sedai]] who has never attempted the [[Drum Hopper]].
*He has left the most time on the clock in the Final Stage of any Grand Champion (6.71 seconds), achieved in [[SASUKE 27]].
+
*Urushihara has left the most time on the clock in the Final Stage of any Grand Champion (6.71 seconds), achieved in [[SASUKE 27]].
*He is the only person to achieve [[Kanzenseiha]] without wearing #100 in a previous tournament (only applies to his first Kanzenseiha in [[SASUKE 24]]).
+
*Urushihara is the only person to achieve [[Kanzenseiha]] without wearing #100 in a previous tournament (only applies to his first Kanzenseiha in [[SASUKE 24]]).
  +
*Urushihara is the only champion to wear the number #100 the tournament after his victory (only applies to his first Kanzenseiha in [[SASUKE 24]]), as [[Akiyama Kazuhiko]] and [[Morimoto Yūsuke]] were absent the tournament after their respective victories, and [[Nagano Makoto]] wore #96 in the competition after his kanzenseiha.
*He and Komiya Rie are the only two to not be the Last One Standing while achieving Kanzenseiha.
 
  +
*Urushihara has worn #100 the fewest times out of any [[Kanzenseiha]] at only twice in tournaments 25 and 26; [[Akiyama Kazuhiko]] has worn it 3 times, [[Morimoto Yūsuke]] 6 times, and [[Nagano Makoto]] 15 times.
*He has the lowest number being the Last Man Standing (#77 in [[SASUKE 22]]).
 
 
*Urushihara and [[Komiya Rie]] are the only two to not be the Last One Standing while achieving Kanzenseiha.
 
*Urushihara has the lowest number being the Last Man Standing (#77 in [[SASUKE 22]]).
 
*Urushihara lost his father at age seven and lived with his mother since then.
 
*Urushihara lost his father at age seven and lived with his mother since then.
 
*It was revealed that his struggles on the [[Backstream]] was due to an incident where he almost drowned in the sea during childhood. He developed a fear to water since then and trained intensively in high school to overcome it, but he still considers himself as a bad swimmer.
 
*It was revealed that his struggles on the [[Backstream]] was due to an incident where he almost drowned in the sea during childhood. He developed a fear to water since then and trained intensively in high school to overcome it, but he still considers himself as a bad swimmer.
* He is the only grand champion to have never failed the [[Metal Spin]].
+
* Urushihara is the only grand champion to have never failed the [[Metal Spin]].
 
* Urushihara is one of the few competitors that cleared the First Stage in their 40's, as he completed the stage in [[SASUKE 37]] at the age of 41. The others are [[Nagano Makoto]] (42 in [[SASUKE 30]]), [[Takeda Toshihiro]] (42 in [[SASUKE 34]]), [[Shiratori Bunpei]] (41 in [[SASUKE 21]]), [[Takahashi Kenji]] (41 in [[SASUKE 34]]), and [[Okuyama Yoshiyuki]] (43 in [[SASUKE 29]]).
* He is the only Grand Champion not to attempt the [[Pipe Slider]].
 
 
*At the age of 41, Urushihara is the oldest person to ever clear a version of the [[Cliffhanger]] (Cliffhanger Dimension). ([[Okuyama Yoshiyuki]] was 39 when he cleared the [[Shin-Cliffhanger]]).
  +
*Urushihara has attempted 5 of the different versions of the cliffhanger, tied with [[Takahashi Kenji]].
  +
**Out of those five versions, Urushihara has completed four of them, The [[Shin-Cliffhanger]] in [[SASUKE 22]] & [[SASUKE 24]], the [[Ultimate Cliffhanger]] in [[SASUKE 27]], the [[Ultra Crazy Cliffhanger]] in [[SASUKE 36]], and the [[Cliffhanger Dimension]] in [[SASUKE 37]].
  +
**The [[Crazy Cliffhanger]] is the only Cliffhanger variant that he failed to complete.
  +
**This also makes Urushihara hold the record for the most [[Cliffhanger]] versions cleared at 4, [[Takeda Toshihiro]] and [[Matachi Ryo]] follows with 3.
  +
 
* He is the only grand champion to never clear the [[Pipe Slider|Pipe Slider.]]
  +
* By advancing to the Third Stage of [[SASUKE 37]] at the age of 41, Urushihara is currently tied with [[Okuyama Yoshiyuki]] as the oldest competitor to attempt the Third Stage, with Okuyama attempted the Third Stage in [[SASUKE 27]] at the age of 41 (still the only over 40s to have reached the Third Stage). Urushihara has also made it the furthest out of any competitor over 40, reaching the Vertical Limit and Pipe Slider in SASUKE 36 and 37 respectively.
 
* Urushihara has a YouTube account and currently has more than 20,000 subscribers. His videos feature his training in SASUKE and vlogs about his personal life. He would also guest fellow SASUKE competitors such as [[Hioki Masashi]], [[Matachi Ryo]], [[Yamamoto Shingo]], [[Takahashi Kenji]], [[Nagasaki Shunsuke]], [[Mori Wataru]] and [[Suzuki Yusuke]].
 
* Urushihara has a YouTube account and currently has more than 20,000 subscribers. His videos feature his training in SASUKE and vlogs about his personal life. He would also guest fellow SASUKE competitors such as [[Hioki Masashi]], [[Matachi Ryo]], [[Yamamoto Shingo]], [[Takahashi Kenji]], [[Nagasaki Shunsuke]], [[Mori Wataru]] and [[Suzuki Yusuke]].
  +
* In 2017, he participated in the show Ultimate Beastmaster for its first season. In episode 4, he was eliminated at Level 3.
* He is one of the few competitors that cleared the First Stage in their 40's. The others are [[Nagano Makoto]] (42 in [[SASUKE 30]]), [[Takeda Toshihiro]] (42 in [[SASUKE 34]]), [[Shiratori Bunpei]] (41 in [[SASUKE 21]]), [[Takahashi Kenji]] (41 in [[SASUKE 34]]), and [[Okuyama Yoshiyuki]] (43 in [[SASUKE 29]]).
 
*At 40, he is the oldest person to ever clear a version of the [[Cliffhanger]]([[Cliffhanger|Ultra Crazy Cliffhanger]]). ([[Okuyama Yoshiyuki]] was 39 when he cleared the [[Cliffhanger|Shin-Cliffhanger]]).
 
*He has 2nd most attempts on version of cliffhanger with 4 only beside kenji takahashi with 5 he has past 3/4 versions he attempted (all in his first attempt) while takahashi has only cleared 1/5 versions he attempted
 
*He, [[Matachi Ryo]] and [[Takeda Toshihiro]] hold the record of clearing the most versions of the Cliffhanger, with 3. Urushihara passes the Shin Cliffhanger, the Ultimate Cliffhanger and the Ultra Crazy Cliffhanger.
 
   
 
==Results==
 
==Results==
Line 127: Line 136:
 
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |93
 
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |93
 
| style="background-color: #BC8A1F;" align="center" |'''Kanzenseiha'''
 
| style="background-color: #BC8A1F;" align="center" |'''Kanzenseiha'''
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |3.57 seconds left. the first to clear third stage after Nagano Makoto kanzenseiha
+
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |3.57 seconds left.
 
|-
 
|-
 
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |[[SASUKE 25|25]]
 
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |[[SASUKE 25|25]]
Line 142: Line 151:
 
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |99
 
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |99
 
| style="background-color: #BC8A1F;" align="center" |'''Kanzenseiha'''
 
| style="background-color: #BC8A1F;" align="center" |'''Kanzenseiha'''
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |6.71 seconds left.
+
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |6.71 seconds left. Last Man Standing. First to achieve kanzenseiha twice.
 
|-
 
|-
 
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |[[SASUKE 28|28]]
 
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |[[SASUKE 28|28]]
 
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |88
 
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |88
 
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |Failed [[Crazy Cliffhanger]] (Third Stage)
 
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |Failed [[Crazy Cliffhanger]] (Third Stage)
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |First 3rd stage failure.
+
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |First fail on Stage 3
 
|-
 
|-
 
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |[[SASUKE 29|29]]
 
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |[[SASUKE 29|29]]
Line 179: Line 188:
 
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |Time Out.
 
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |Time Out.
 
|-
 
|-
|[[SASUKE 35|35]]
+
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |[[SASUKE 35|35]]
  +
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |95
|95
 
|Failed [[Soritatsu Kabe]] (First Stage)
+
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |Failed [[Soritatsu Kabe]] (First Stage)
  +
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |Time Out.
|Time Out.
 
 
|-
 
|-
|[[SASUKE 36|36]]
+
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |[[SASUKE 36|36]]
  +
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |95
|95
 
|Failed [[Vertical Limit]] (Third Stage)
+
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |Failed [[Vertical Limit]] (Third Stage)
  +
| style="background-color: #530B09;" align="center" |
|
+
|-
  +
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |[[SASUKE 37|37]]
  +
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |96
  +
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |Failed [[Pipe Slider]] (Third Stage)
  +
| style="background-color: #721410;" align="center" |
 
|}
 
|}
   
Line 195: Line 209:
 
[[Category:SASUKE Trials qualifiers]]
 
[[Category:SASUKE Trials qualifiers]]
 
[[Category:Kanzenseiha]]
 
[[Category:Kanzenseiha]]
  +
[[Category:USA vs. The World]]
  +
[[Category:Shin Sedai]]
  +
[[Category:SASUKE Finalists]]

Revision as of 13:02, 8 August 2020

Urushihara Yuuji (漆原 裕治) is a shoe salesman who has attempted SASUKE sixteen times. In just his fourth attempt, he beat all the obstacles and became the third person and first non-All-Star to achieve kanzenseiha. He is a member of Shin Sedai and is also an Unlimited Cliffer. Urushihara is the only champion in SASUKE history to have cleared all four stages twice, having performed the feat for the second time in SASUKE 27.

Qualifying

Urushihara had been trying to get on SASUKE since 2003. He first competed in the Monkey Bars event in Taiku Ookoku, a successor to Kinniku Banzuke. (A finish in the top three would have awarded him a spot in SASUKE 11.) He then competed in the SASUKE 13 Trials, but failed the Jump Hang. He also competed (again unsuccessfully) in the SASUKE 19 and SASUKE 20 trials. Before SASUKE 21, he competed in the SASUKE ATTACK course at the BUG IN MIKI Festival, a course set up with several SASUKE obstacles with the last one being the Shin-Cliffhanger. Urushihara and fellow Unlimited Cliffer Tomino Keita completed the course, while none of the SASUKE All-Stars did. Urushihara had the faster time of the two, and was thus awarded a berth in SASUKE 21.

Early Tournaments

In SASUKE 21, he wore #72. Although his run was fully cut during the TBS broadcast, parts of it were shown on SASUKE Maniac. In his run, he showed great speed. On the Flying Chute, he was able to grab onto the rope, but while trying to reach the net, he lost his grip and he fell into the water.

He returned in SASUKE 22 after going through the SASUKE Trials and earning a spot to compete. He wore #77 and completed the First Stage with the fastest time of the day, 7.51 seconds remaining. In the Second Stage, his training at Muscle Park paid off, as he beat the Salmon Ladder with little trouble. While he had some trouble lifting the last wall of the Wall Lifting obstacle, he still completed the Second Stage with 19.27 seconds left. In the Third Stage, his training especially paid off. He was able to fly through most of the obstacles. When he made it to the Gliding Ring, he attacked the obstacle perfectly and became the first person to clear it, thus becoming the first person to reach the redesigned Final Stage. In the Final Stage, he showed great speed on the Heavenly Ladder, reaching the G-Rope with 28 seconds left. Unfortunately, he struggled there, and came up half a meter short of winning. After this failure, he spent most of his training rope climbing.

Because of his near-kanzenseiha, he was granted #99 in SASUKE 23. While it was clear he was under a lot of pressure, he was able to clear the First Stage despite stumbling on the Half-Pipe Attack and Soritatsu Kabe. In the Second Stage, he was able to clear the first few obstacles. Unfortunately, he went out on a new obstacle, the Unstable Bridge, when he failed to get a solid landing.

Kanzenseiha

Vlcsnap-295913

Urushihara earning kanzenseiha in SASUKE 24

After his failure, he built a replica of the Unstable Bridge to train and returned for SASUKE 24, still receiving a high start position, #93. He blazed through the First Stage with 24.35 seconds left, the fastest time of the day. It should be noted that he forgot to unhook the Tarzan rope

He then exacted his revenge on the Unstable Bridge but began to run low on time on the redesigned Balance Tank. He powered through the final obstacles and finished with 6.55 seconds to spare.

In the Third Stage, he cleared all the obstacles for a second time. Despite the Gliding Ring sliding back at the end of the track, he recovered and became just the fourth person to clear the Third Stage on multiple occasions.

Five cleared the third stage that day, which hadn't happened since SASUKE 3. Third in the running order, the first two fell short of the goal. He blazed through the Heavenly Ladder in record time but began to struggle on the transition to the G-Rope. He finally regained footing at the bottom of the rope with 21 seconds left. Putting his long hours of rope climb training to good use, he powered up the rope. With ten seconds left on the clock, he picked up his pace.

He defeated the Final Stage with 3.57 seconds remaining, and became the third person to achieve kanzenseiha, joining SASUKE All-Stars Akiyama Kazuhiko and Nagano Makoto, who interestingly both failed the First Stage that day. With him being the third to attempt out of the five finalists in the stage, he is the only person to not be the Last Man Standing while achieving Kanzenseiha.

Kanzen Renewal

After his kanzenseiha, he was granted the coveted #100 in SASUKE 25. He again cleared the First Stage with little trouble, but he failed the Double Salmon Ladder in an odd and unlikely fashion. The left side of the bar missed the rung, but the right side somehow latched onto one of the rungs, leaving Urushihara hanging onto the pole vertically, essentially rendering completion of the obstacle impossible. His foot grazed the water after a while, and his day was over.

In SASUKE 26, he once again wore #100. Throughout his run, he was sloppy. On the Rolling Escargot, he nearly lost his footing and had to stop the obstacle halfway to re-adjust. On the Jumping Spider, he was too short on the walls and dove back to the trampoline, giving himself a rare second chance at the obstacle; he completed it on his second attempt. Now in a time crunch, he was forced to rush through the remainder of the course. On the Half-Pipe Attack, he failed to land properly on the mat, but held onto the rope for another try, a mistake he's made multiple times in the past. Now desperate to complete the obstacle with any decent amount of time left, he landed awkwardly on the mat, lost his balance and hopped backwards into the water.

In SASUKE 27, he wore #99 despite being the current champion. Nevertheless, the starting position change may have been what he needed mentally as he would clear the First Stage in a much more fluid run than the previous tournament. He also conquered his demon on the Double Salmon Ladder, clearing the Second Stage with time to spare (as well as the stigma of failing at #99 in the same stage during SASUKE 23). Despite never attempting any of the obstacles of the Third Stage outside of replicas, he continued his perfect streak of clearing the stage (although there was a small scare of transitioning to the wooden ladder after clearing the Chain See-Saw), making it 3 for 3. On the Final Stage, Urushihara once again proved his rope climbing training paid off as he acheived Kanzenseiha with 6.71 seconds remaining, becoming not just the fastest to complete the Final Stage, but also the first person to acheive Kanzenseiha twice.

SASUKE RISING

In SASUKE RISING (SASUKE 28) he wore #88. He was one of only five to clear the First Stage, his speed and strength present as he blazed through the course with 21.37 seconds remaining. In the Second stage he cleared the first four obstacles with ease, but after the Backstream, he seemed to be very tired. He crossed the Passing Wall in a slower pace but still cleared with 13.56 seconds left. In the Third Stage he cleared the Rumbling Dice easily, but struggled massively on the Iron Paddler. Urushihara, despite taking more than a minute on the obstacle, still cleared it, showing a profound amount of strength and determination. He then spent more than 30 seconds resting for the Crazy Cliffhanger, showing how difficult the Iron Paddler can be, even for the toughest competitors. On the Crazy Cliffhanger he struggled while gaining momentum on the third ledge and fell on the transition to the opposite side, having his first ever Third Stage failure.

Ιn SASUKE 29, his First Stage run was digested, but it was shown that he cleared with 10.33 seconds left. In the Second Stage his pace was faster than that of any other competitor, completing the Spider Walk with 45 seconds still remaining. He nearly made it near the end of the Backstream that he had trained specifically for, however was pushed back by the water jets causing him to rise to the surface for air. He was too fatigued to attempt it again, and timed out there, even requiring the aid of a lifeguard to help him out.

In SASUKE 30, he was digested, but was shown to have cleared the First Stage. In the Second Stage he got his revenge on the Backstream, but still wasted nearly 20 seconds trying to cross it, leaving him too exhausted and with too little time for the Wall Lifting. He attempted to force himself under the first wall, but got stuck and timed out after getting under.

In SASUKE 31, he managed to blaze through the first four obstacles, but he struggled on the Tackle, spending 20 seconds trying to push it before timing out on the Soritatsu Kabe due to exhaustion, like many that day. After he timed out on the obstacle, he tried to go over the Soritatsu Kabe multiple times, with no hope of completing it due to exhaustion. He would attempt it over and over again until he was stopped by production staff due to the fact that he could get hurt.

In SASUKE 32, he made it through the first four obstacles with ease, but shocked everybody when he failed at the brand new obstacle, Double Pendulum, where he tried to transit to the red sandbag a few times but failed the transition. It was his first time failing the First Stage twice in a row.

In SASUKE 33, he started off quickly though the Quad Steps but slipped on the first cylinder of the Rolling Hill and fell there, marking his third consecutive First Stage failure.

In SASUKE 34, he declared that he would retire if he failed the First Stage for the fourth straight time, fortunately he cleared the First Stage easily. He became emotional as he cleared the stage for the first time since SASUKE 30. In the Second Stage, he cleared the first few obstacles with ease, however he lost time at the Backstream when he chose to go around the water jets and as a result he was running low on time and energy as he struggled on the Reverse Conveyor, timing out just as he finished the obstacle.

In SASUKE 35, he cleared the first six obstacles with ease, including the new Dragon Glider, but eventually timed out on the Soritatsu Kabe due to the reduced time limit and exhaustion even after putting adhesive spray on his shoes. After his run, he tried to scale the wall one more time and cleared. If the time limit remained the same or extended, he would've cleared that day.

In SASUKE 36, now 40 years old, despite wasting time on the Tackle, still cleared the First Stage, and becoming one of the few to clear the First Stage in their 40's. In the Second Stage, the jets on the Backstream almost pushed him, but powered through. He took a little time to rest before the Reverse Conveyor, before he got revenge and cleared it but running low on time. And for the first time since SASUKE 28, he cleared the Second Stage. In the Third Stage, he almost fell in the Sidewinder but managed to get through. He also cleared the Ultra Crazy Cliffhanger, being the oldest to clear it, and also the oldest to attempt the next obstacle, the Vertical Limit, where he was able to make the successful transition to the third ledge and even had a grip but he didn't leave enough space for both of his hands to move and fell due to not having space to move his hands.

He competed once more in SASUKE 37 wearing #96. He cleared the First Stage once more with 5.80 seconds left. In the Second Stage, he powered through and despite going at a brisk pace, cleared with 13.83 seconds left. In the Third Stage, he completed the first 3 obstacles with ease. On Cliffhanger Dimension, he completed it with a bit of effort. On the Vertical Limit, he was able to make the transition to the third ledge and successfully beat it despite getting sapped of energy. On the Pipe Slider, as he mounted from the resting bars, the left side of the bar was pushed off the track, making the bar falling in a vertical position, dragging Urushihara down with it, in a similar way to his fall in the Double Salmon Ladder in SASUKE 25. Had he cleared, he would have been the oldest competitor to have ever reached the Final Stage at age 41, beating Okuyama Yoshiyuki's record of attempting the final at 39 in SASUKE 24.

Trivia

  • He is the only grand champion to never clear the Pipe Slider.
  • By advancing to the Third Stage of SASUKE 37 at the age of 41, Urushihara is currently tied with Okuyama Yoshiyuki as the oldest competitor to attempt the Third Stage, with Okuyama attempted the Third Stage in SASUKE 27 at the age of 41 (still the only over 40s to have reached the Third Stage). Urushihara has also made it the furthest out of any competitor over 40, reaching the Vertical Limit and Pipe Slider in SASUKE 36 and 37 respectively.
  • Urushihara has a YouTube account and currently has more than 20,000 subscribers. His videos feature his training in SASUKE and vlogs about his personal life. He would also guest fellow SASUKE competitors such as Hioki Masashi, Matachi Ryo, Yamamoto Shingo, Takahashi Kenji, Nagasaki Shunsuke, Mori Wataru and Suzuki Yusuke.
  • In 2017, he participated in the show Ultimate Beastmaster for its first season. In episode 4, he was eliminated at Level 3.

Results

SASUKE # Result Notes
21 72 Failed Flying Chute (First Stage) All Cut. Broadcast on SASUKE Maniac.
22 77 Failed G-Rope (Final Stage) Time Out. 22.1 meters up. Last man standing.
23 99 Failed Unstable Bridge (Second Stage)
24 93 Kanzenseiha 3.57 seconds left.
25 100 Failed Double Salmon Ladder (Second Stage) Course Out. His foot skimmed the water.
26 100 Failed Half-Pipe Attack (First Stage)
27 99 Kanzenseiha 6.71 seconds left. Last Man Standing. First to achieve kanzenseiha twice.
28 88 Failed Crazy Cliffhanger (Third Stage) First fail on Stage 3
29 99 Failed Backstream (Second Stage) Time Out.
30 2993 Failed Wall Lifting (Second Stage) Time Out.
31 99 Failed Soritatsu Kabe (First Stage) Time Out.
32 89 Failed Double Pendulum (First Stage)
33 89 Failed Rolling Hill (First Stage)
34 99 Failed Reverse Conveyor (Second Stage) Time Out.
35 95 Failed Soritatsu Kabe (First Stage) Time Out.
36 95 Failed Vertical Limit (Third Stage)
37 96 Failed Pipe Slider (Third Stage)

External Links