Ryozan Godawa (
banditoverlord) wrote2017-08-06 02:14 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
(no subject)
[With the Duel Festival coming up, Ryozan is doing another interview. He looks. Annoyed, this time.
He's asked right off the bat about two of his top students, Isao Kachidoki and Lan Zheng losing their tag team championships. That looks like it annoys him further.]
Kachdioki and Zheng took their own approach to defending their championships, opting to accept any challenge at any time. This led to a team that they had already defeated challenging them again. I've made it clear to them that they should have observed the Super Junior League's normal protocol for accepting challengers. Their eagerness to prove themselves led to recklessness.
They will be seeking a rematch as soon as possible.
[He's asked if he believes they'll be successful in winning back the titles.]
I believe they will try their hardest, as they have been taught to do.
Only the best students of Ryozanpaku were allowed to come to this city and participate in the Super Junior League. I chose them for a reason. They are aware of that.
[He's asked about Isao's comments after New Sun Rising, Isao and Lan's calling themselves "Double Dragon" instead of going by their school's name and their stylistic choices, like their dragon masks.]
When the two of them won the tag team championships, they found themselves with a burst of confidence. As they were winning their duels at the time, I allowed them this bit of freedom, hoping it would encourage them to greater success. That has not happened. They know that they're not expected to do away with such frivolities and return to the dueling of this school that made them champions in the first place. As I said. They are aware that only the best students of Ryozanpaku, those who embody the school's ideals, will be allowed to participate in the Super Junior League.
[He's asked if he's saying that if Isao and Lan fail to win back the championships, will they be taken out of the Super Junior League and sent back to Maiami City.]
I will say it again. Only the best students from Ryozanpaku are allowed to participate in this league. There are many students back at the main school who would jump at the opportunity Kachidoki and Zheng have been given. They know this as well.
I will not repeat myself on this matter again.
[Somewhat nervously, the interviewer moves on, asking about Jinn Shrieves' comments after New Sun Rising.]
Jinn Shrieves' is a forgotten riding duelist whose only claim to relevance was attaching himself to the former world champion, Isabel Marias, in the WRGP. He was a detriment to his team then and ever since has failed to make any sort of noteworthy appearance in the dueling world, except when he talks about Ryozanpaku. He is another failed duelist among many who thinks to get themselves some interview time and some shade of relevance by decrying something he doesn't understand.
Ryozanpaku's students are premier duelists above all else. That has been proven time and time again. They will continue to adapt to any changes in the dueling landscape. Ryozanpaku is the future of dueling. Jinn Shrieves is just a sad footnote of its past that refuses to stay there.
[One may think that's what Ryozan came to say, because, he's pretty much done with the interview after that.]
He's asked right off the bat about two of his top students, Isao Kachidoki and Lan Zheng losing their tag team championships. That looks like it annoys him further.]
Kachdioki and Zheng took their own approach to defending their championships, opting to accept any challenge at any time. This led to a team that they had already defeated challenging them again. I've made it clear to them that they should have observed the Super Junior League's normal protocol for accepting challengers. Their eagerness to prove themselves led to recklessness.
They will be seeking a rematch as soon as possible.
[He's asked if he believes they'll be successful in winning back the titles.]
I believe they will try their hardest, as they have been taught to do.
Only the best students of Ryozanpaku were allowed to come to this city and participate in the Super Junior League. I chose them for a reason. They are aware of that.
[He's asked about Isao's comments after New Sun Rising, Isao and Lan's calling themselves "Double Dragon" instead of going by their school's name and their stylistic choices, like their dragon masks.]
When the two of them won the tag team championships, they found themselves with a burst of confidence. As they were winning their duels at the time, I allowed them this bit of freedom, hoping it would encourage them to greater success. That has not happened. They know that they're not expected to do away with such frivolities and return to the dueling of this school that made them champions in the first place. As I said. They are aware that only the best students of Ryozanpaku, those who embody the school's ideals, will be allowed to participate in the Super Junior League.
[He's asked if he's saying that if Isao and Lan fail to win back the championships, will they be taken out of the Super Junior League and sent back to Maiami City.]
I will say it again. Only the best students from Ryozanpaku are allowed to participate in this league. There are many students back at the main school who would jump at the opportunity Kachidoki and Zheng have been given. They know this as well.
I will not repeat myself on this matter again.
[Somewhat nervously, the interviewer moves on, asking about Jinn Shrieves' comments after New Sun Rising.]
Jinn Shrieves' is a forgotten riding duelist whose only claim to relevance was attaching himself to the former world champion, Isabel Marias, in the WRGP. He was a detriment to his team then and ever since has failed to make any sort of noteworthy appearance in the dueling world, except when he talks about Ryozanpaku. He is another failed duelist among many who thinks to get themselves some interview time and some shade of relevance by decrying something he doesn't understand.
Ryozanpaku's students are premier duelists above all else. That has been proven time and time again. They will continue to adapt to any changes in the dueling landscape. Ryozanpaku is the future of dueling. Jinn Shrieves is just a sad footnote of its past that refuses to stay there.
[One may think that's what Ryozan came to say, because, he's pretty much done with the interview after that.]