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SPACE PIRATE - PANDA
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SPACE PIRATE - PANDA
@09Panda11
I'm a space pirate! 🏴☠️
secret base Katılım Eylül 2015
277 Takip Edilen22 Takipçiler

@_mikkitty It was one of the better teleseryes that I enjoyed watching 🤭
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@AprilShowerszzz By the time I won the coin toss, the dueling gods gifted me with a hand full of hand traps.
What if this game has a mulligan system for hand cards before the start of the turn?
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@kiddbanditpro A lot of movies and tv series over the years
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@radiantzard Nope.
How about this philosophical thought:
Not using legendary and mythical Pokemons on party.
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SPACE PIRATE - PANDA retweetledi

Shinya Hashimoto left this world at 40 years old and the devastation felt by wrestling fans across the globe has never truly healed.
Last year, his great rival Naoya Ogawa sat down with Masatoshi Takatsuka - Hashimoto's father figure and judo mentor - for a conversation that painted a vivid portrait of the man behind the legend.
The mischief, it seems, started early and never really stopped. Takatsuka had heard plenty of legendary stories about Hashimoto's antics inside the NJPW locker room - pranks on juniors like Satoshi Kojima and Hiroyoshi Tenzan were par for the course. Then there was the Mexico trip with Keiji Muto and Masahiro Chono, where the three of them ran up Antonio Inoki's credit card to such excess that they returned home to serious trouble.
When the UWF came calling - then dominated by Akira Maeda and Nobuhiko Takada - Hashimoto turned to Takatsuka for guidance. The advice was blunt and to the point. "Maeda and Takada are famous stars. Nobody knows your name yet. What are you going to do if you leave New Japan? If you leave only a year or two after joining, before making a name for yourself, you'll just end up quitting and coming right back." Hashimoto listened. He stayed. The rest is history.
The influence Takatsuka held over him never diminished. Hashimoto sought his counsel throughout his career - including the morning after one of the most dramatic nights of his life. The day after losing to Ogawa at the Tokyo Dome in April 2000, having wagered his retirement on the outcome, Hashimoto met with his mentor. Takatsuka found him sleeping soundly, snoring loudly. When he woke him and told him he had put on a great match, Hashimoto took him to Chinatown. "He seemed to feel a sense of relief about losing," Takatsuka revealed.
For all the fire and fury Hashimoto brought to the ring, Takatsuka was unequivocal about the man's character away from it. Despite Antonio Inoki engineering his professional humiliation - grooming Ogawa as the instrument of his downfall - Hashimoto never once spoke ill of him. "From the moment he joined New Japan until he left and eventually passed away, he never said a bad word. In Shinya's heart, Inoki was a god." He never spoke ill of any wrestler he faced, Takatsuka added. Ogawa, who made a career out of trash-talking in his prime, acknowledged it. "That was one of his best qualities."
Hashimoto passed away from a brainstem haemorrhage - the same condition that had taken his mother. Takatsuka recalled the shock of it. One moment he had returned to Toki City, and then he was gone.
"If he were alive, he'd be 60 this year [speaking in 2025]. But he wouldn't have changed. Whether 60 or 80, he would have lived exactly as he pleased, following his heart. That was the best thing about Shinya."
#橋本真也
#njpw
#新日本プロレス

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@theSTaTiCBENDER @vintagepuro Should have been called Randy Orton style instead 🤣
Tbh this is the first time I saw this photo.
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@motimoti_11_26 I wish I can fight you on Master Duel. 😆
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