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Posted

 

We haven't posted about Sumo recently because there has been abysmal Sumo coverage on YouTube. The Japanese broadcasting company with the rights to show the tournaments clamped down on anybody publishing videos of their product. Thankfully, NHK has started putting out English language broadcasts of the 15-day tournaments. 

This was the perfect time to sell your product in America. 

There is going to be a changing of the guard. The great Yokozuna Terunofuji retired after a bad start in this tournament. He was a favorite of ours. So, his retirement was a sad event. But he had bad knees. It was time. 

 

 

sumo4.jpg


 

But there was also a new hope: Hoshoryu. He ended up winning this basho with a 12-3 record followed by a win in a three-man playoff. The council that decides Yokozuna promotion will consider whether he will be elevated to that highest rank. He has another recent tournament win in his favor, and he has been amazingly consistent in obtaining winning records in bashos over a long period of time. 

His uncle was a Yokozuna. 

He has a style reminiscent of the greatest Yokozuna of all, Hakuhō. His recent Sumo has been dominant and exciting, and Sumo needs a Yokozuna. 

 

 

sumo3.jpg


 

But the council that decides the promotion must also look at his negatives. First of all, he is Mongolian, and the Japanese have hungered for a Japanese Yokozuna for quite some time. This is not part of the promotion equation, but you have to feel that it will be an undercurrent. 

Secondly, his recent performances have been very, very good but not the domination you want to see from your Yokozuna. He won this basho at 12-3. He was runner-up in the tournament before that with a 13-2 record. This is all very good, but in the tournament before that, he was 8-7 and lost to many basic rikishi. Before that, he was 9-4-2 and before that 10-5. 

Is that Yoko material? 

To put it into some perspective, the now-retired Yokozuna Terunofuji won or finished runner-up in six of the seven bashos right before he was promoted to the highest rank.  

Finally, Hoshoryu also has a total of two basho wins and two runner-ups in 27 upper-division tournaments. Is that Yoko material? Probably not, but he's one of my top two favorite Sumo wrestlers, so I'll be rooting for his promotion. My gut tells me that they will wait for one more tournament to see how he does. 

On another subject, the three-rikishi playoff showcased not only the potential new Yokozuna Hoshoryu, but also Oho and Kinbozan. Oho is Japanese, and he's always had the talent, but he's never fully achieved the results that his talent demands. In this tournament, he did. 

 

 

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Interestingly, in his very first professional tournament back in 2018, Oho had to face another debutant named Hoshoryu. And Oho beat him! 

The other player in the three-person playoff was Kinbozan, a native of Kazakhstan. He came pretty much out of nowhere to reach the top on the leaderboard on the final day. He has the height and the weight (6'5" and nearly 400 pounds), but except for his first tournament in the upper division where he finished 11-4, he had a losing record in six out of nine bashos. 

 

 

sumo2.jpg


 

In fact, he was demoted to a lower division a couple tournaments ago and had to win his way back to the spotlight. The big question for him is this: Will he become the most famous Kazakhstan wrestler in the future, or will that always be Borat? 

 

GLOSSARY:

SUMO -- Japanese wrestling in a raised ring.

YOKOZUNA -- Highest rank in Sumo. 

RIKISHI -- Sumo wrestler. 

NHK -- The Japanese broadcasting company with the rights to upper-division Sumo. 

BASHO -- Sumo tournament. 

 

 

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Posted

Is that Yoko material?

OIP.d2nJtSB3Sp9lxUTNB4C3tAHaJ4?rs=1&pid=

Maybe not... but you have the real deal above. 😏

D3

  • Haha 1

Never argue with an idiot. They will only bring you down to their level and beat you with experience.

Posted (edited)

Comcast has actually been running promos for NHK's coverage in the DC area, and a local sports net has picked up summaries of past tournaments. Great fun. And, always interesting to see the non-Japanese wrestlers; one recent program featured a now-retired wrestler from Georgia (the country).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tochinoshin_Tsuyoshi

Edited by Voice of the Quakers
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Dan McDonald, Penn '93
danmc167@yahoo.com

Posted
5 hours ago, Voice of the Quakers said:

Like white smoke from the Vatican, we have a new yokozuna: Hoshoryu!

https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20250127_22/?utm_source=semafor

I hope that that is what happens. I'm a little leery of this:

"The association will make the upgrade official on Wednesday at a meeting on wrestler rankings for the next tournament and an extraordinary meeting of its board of directors."

The Japanese Sumo Association will make the final call. What benefits Hoshoryu is that there can be multiple Yokozunas at the same time, and there are Japanese wrestlers who will be striving for it very soon. Kotozakura missed out in this basho--if he had won or finished runner up--but he had a losing record! 

Glad to hear you are getting some local Sumo love from those American broadcasters. I saw Tochinoshin fight many times. He was a monster who made it all the way up to Ozeki, second highest rank, before leg problems derailed him. His crowd-pleasing hold was to bear hug an opponent and carry him just outside the ring and drop him.

That is actually something to see when it is actual, real wrestling with somebody fighting against you, and not American pro wrestling. Cheers!

Posted

Have any notable Asian wrestlers transitioned to sumo? and do we think the prevalence of sumo culturally is the reason most Asian countries have a huge disparity between upper and lower weight success. I know nothing about sumo, but this was a very cool read.

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Posted
7 hours ago, Truzzcat said:

Have any notable Asian wrestlers transitioned to sumo? and do we think the prevalence of sumo culturally is the reason most Asian countries have a huge disparity between upper and lower weight success. I know nothing about sumo, but this was a very cool read.

I've never thought about any connection, but I would bet that you are right. In America, football steals many top athletes on the portly side. 

In Japan, they have schoolboy nationwide Sumo tournaments and championships. Being a university grand champion is very prestigious.

They have their own throwing-type folkstyle in Mongolia. 

Yes, I think that there is at least some loss to Sumo. 

Posted
8 hours ago, Truzzcat said:

Have any notable Asian wrestlers transitioned to sumo? and do we think the prevalence of sumo culturally is the reason most Asian countries have a huge disparity between upper and lower weight success. I know nothing about sumo, but this was a very cool read.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiroshi_Wajima

Hiroshi Wajima (The Great Wajima)... he was the sport's 54th and remains the only wrestler with a collegiate background to reach that rank.

Though, I suspect we're talking sumo and not international style (FS/GR.)

Saw him on TV when the tournaments(basho) were on, when I was stationed @ MCAS Futenma in '78/'79.

Stars & Stripes would show the daily results.

He was one of my favorites.

D3

  • Brain 1

Never argue with an idiot. They will only bring you down to their level and beat you with experience.

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