HenryMedley8

Joined 11 days ago
1 byte removed ,  09:02, 24 June 2008
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In 2002, Shade was the first [[NTSC]]-only player to go below 26:00 in total Agent time and had champion potential written all over him. This would fade slightly, as he was removed from the rankings again in March 2002, amid controversy and lack of proof on some of his incredible World Records, including [[Air Force One]] A 0:54 and [[Maian SOS]] PA 2:09.  
 
In 2002, Shade was the first [[NTSC]]-only player to go below 26:00 in total Agent time and had champion potential written all over him. This would fade slightly, as he was removed from the rankings again in March 2002, amid controversy and lack of proof on some of his incredible World Records, including [[Air Force One]] A 0:54 and [[Maian SOS]] PA 2:09.  
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Shade would again be re-added, eventually with all of his times, which bumped him into 2nd place, right behind then-champ [[Karl Jobst]]. This would be his peak, with 6 300 point stages, and 28 World Records at the peak of his career. He even managed to pass Karl (though, unofficially) for about a week, until he was removed again because of continuous proof issues.  
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Shade would again be re-added, eventually with all of his times, which bumped him into 2nd place, right behind then-champ [[Karl Jobst]]. This would be his peak, with 6 300 point stages, and 28 World Records at the peak of his career. He even managed to pass Karl (though unofficially) for about a week, until he was removed again because of continuous proof issues.  
    
When the new Elite Proof Policy was put in place, Shade was added with all of his proven times, which only ranks him 72nd in points, but 19th on the Proven Rankings. He continues to play, albeit sporadically.
 
When the new Elite Proof Policy was put in place, Shade was added with all of his proven times, which only ranks him 72nd in points, but 19th on the Proven Rankings. He continues to play, albeit sporadically.