
Day Thirteen in Osaka. For those of you in amateur sumo, or interested in amateur sumo, or just interested in walking around in nothing but a loincloth, I posted a quick video of Tooyama demonstrating for folks how to put on the mawashi. This was another little gem from the Konishiki raw footage.
Bucky, aka Wakanofuji, won the Makushita yusho with a slapdown. This kid is going places. I’ll never understand these Twitter embeds. Sometimes they work, sometimes they don’t. I seem to have gotten this one working. Let me know if you can see the videos without a Twitter account. I’m glad Abema seems to have posted this so you don’t need VPN to watch. (At least I didn’t.) The embed was still wonky, though. Anyway, it looks like it works.
【ピックアップ】
— ABEMA大相撲 (@abema_sumo) March 20, 2026
ABEMA大相撲 三月場所🌸
▼十三日目
嵐富士⚫️-⚪️和歌ノ富士
📺見逃し視聴も無料
©日本相撲協会
This embed was a different story for the Tenshoyama vs Asahifuji bout. Great quality bout in the Jonidan yusho race. Tenshoyama put up a hell of a fight against the man anointed as the next Yokozuna. Asahifuji will need to fight again in a playoff on senshuraku against Kiryuko, who’s recovering from injury and hopes to make it back to Juryo, at least.
In juryo, Dewanoryu defeated Daiseizan to remain in the lead with two losses. Wakanosho beat Kazuma to improve to 10-3 and stay one back of Dewanoryu in the second division yusho race. Tochitaikai fought in Juryo today, possibly an exchange bout with Fujitensei.
Tochitaikai locked in his kachi-koshi and likely sealed Fujitensei’s fate and demotion to Makushita. Meanwhile, Himukamaru, lost his Juryo bout against Nishikigi. Since he is makekoshi, he will not move up. That’s a pivotal opening for Enho. Himukamaru was in the driver’s seat at the top of the division and only needed four wins to move up. In the end, he only managed three.
<千代栄引退のお知らせ>
— 日本相撲協会公式 (@sumokyokai) March 20, 2026
元十両 千代栄(本名 岸 栄太、九重部屋)は引退しました。
千代栄のプロフィールhttps://t.co/T7vaGVloC6#sumo #相撲 #千代栄 pic.twitter.com/xb0cXFK6Hh
At least I finally got this embed working. Former Juryo wrestler, Chiyosakae, announced his retirement. He fought for thirteen tournaments in the second division before injury kyujo dropped him into Sandanme, where he fought for much of last year. Four makekoshi records cast him down to Jonidan. He picked up five wins this tournament but decided to call it a career.
Makuuchi Action
Ryuden (7-6) defeated Fujiryoga (6-7). Katasukashi.
Kinbozan (8-5) defeated Asanoyama (8-5). Kinbozan used his size advantage well and drove Asanoyama back to the edge, then persisted with gaburi hip thrusts to force him over the bales. Kinbozan kachi-koshi. Yorikiri.
Nishikifuji (7-6) defeated Asakoryu (8-5). Copy/Paste, except quicker because larger advantage. Yorikiri.
Chiyoshoma (8-5) defeated Oshoumi (3-10). Chiyoshoma immediately got his left hand inside and right hand outside, forcing Oshoumi back. Oshoumi knocked Chiyoshoma’s right hand away but Chiyoshoma continued to attack. He tried to fight for the right-hand grip and push Oshoumi back, but it wasn’t working without the help from the right-hand belt grip. Chiyoshoma then changed tactics and dragged Oshoumi down by using the left-hand. Chiyoshoma kachi-koshi. Shitatenage.
Tobizaru (5-8) defeated Shishi (6-7). Tobizaru got his right hand inside and drove Shishi to the edge. Shishi tried to use his left-hand uwate to throw Tobizaru but Tobizaru’s footwork and balance were better. Tobizaru pivoted and dragged Shishi away, dropping him with a shitatenage.
Mitakeumi (7-6) defeated Roga (4-9). As soon as Mitakeumi got both hands wrapped around Roga’s trunk for the morozashi, he drove Roga back and over the bales. Yorikiri.
Asahakuryu (9-4) defeated Tokihayate (5-8). Asahakuryu’s hidari-yotsu was too powerful for Tokihayate to defend. Asahakuryu wrapped up Tokihayate, drove him back and forced him over the bales. Yorikiri.
Fujiseiun (9-4) defeated Shodai (7-6). Shodai hooked his left hand under Fujiseiun’s shoulder and forced him to the edge. Fuijseiun counter attacked by shoving Shodai with his right and twisting him down to the ground. Both men fell. Gunbai Fujiseiun. Shodai thought he had it and slow-roll walked rather slowly hoping for a mono-ii. None came. Tsukiotoshi.
Kotoeiho (8-5) defeated Ura (5-8). Kotoeiho grabbed Ura’s left arm, pivoted, and threw him to the ground. Kotenage.
Tamawashi (4-9) defeated Hakunofuji (3-6-4). Tamawashi used his tsuppari to Hakunofuji’s face to bulldoze him back to the tawara and crush him down over the edge. Is Hakunofuji M? Oshitaoshi.
Halftime
Churanoumi (4-9) defeated Oshoma (4-9). Oshoma tried the slapdown but Churanoumi knocked Oshoma’s arms away and shoved him back with a torrent of tsuppari. Oshidashi.
Ichiyamamoto (7-6) defeated Fujinokawa (6-7). Ichiyamamoto blasted Fujinokawa back. Fujinokawa tried the old change-of-direction trick, shifting to his left. Ichiyamamoto pursued well and shoved him over the edge. Oshidashi.
Yoshinofuji (6-7) defeated Hiradoumi (6-7). Yoshinofuji’s tsuppari drove Hiradoumi back to the edge but Hiradoumi grabbed Yoshinofuji and bulldozed him through the dohyo. At the edge, Yoshinofuji twisted Hiradoumi down for the sweet twist-down counter-throw. Sukuinage.
Wakatakakage (8-5) defeated Abi (3-5-5). Abi’s tsuppari was a non-factor, instead he focused on pivot, retreat, slapdown. However, he seemed to trip after one pivot, and fell to the dohyo. Wakatakakage cradled his elbow after the bout. Broken men on kyujo watch. At least Wakatakakage has his kachi-koshi. Will he take the weekend off? If his brother isn’t, I imagine it’s not likely. Oshitaoshi.
Sanyaku
Atamifuji (8-5) defeated Gonoyama (9-4). Gonoyama thought he had Atamifuji beat. He shoved and shoved but Atamifuji would not go over the bales. Was Atamifuji intentionally sandbagging to wear Gonoyama out? Atamifuji countered quickly by shoving Gonoyama in the face. Once he got Gonoyama’s momentum going backwards, Atamifuji was running downhill. Oshidashi.
Daieisho (6-7) defeated Wakamotoharu (2-11). Daieisho kept his attack in first gear. Powerful tsuppari forced Wakamotoharu back and over the edge. Tsukidashi.
Takanosho (9-4) defeated Takayasu (6-7). Takayasu chugged forward but Takanosho demonstrated some agility and shifted to his left, then thrust Takayasu down. Tsukiotoshi.
Kirishima (12-1) defeated Oho (6-7). You could hear a pin drop in the arena as Shiro announced this bout. And I’ll give it to Oho. At no point did he give up. He made Kirishima earn this win. In fact, Oho nearly caught Kirishima sleeping at the start with a quick slapdown. Kirishima recovered, though, and went on the attack. He tried tsuppari but won it with yotsu at the end. Kirishima wrapped up an exhausted Oho and drove him over the edge. Yoritaoshi.
Aonishiki (6-7) defeated Kotozakura (8-5). Kotozakura lulled Aonishiki into his trap. Aonishiki plowed forward to the edge and once there, Kotozakura shifted to the side, grabbed Aonishiki’s belt with his left hand and pulled him forward. Somehow, Aonishiki stayed in. He pivoted and turned his back to Kotozakura. Kotozakura gave chase. Aonishiki got himself righted and re-engaged, driving Kotozakura gently over the bales. Sure got the pulse rate up here. Yorikiri.
Hoshoryu (10-3) defeated Kotoshoho (10-3). Hoshoryu pivoted to his left and slapped Kotoshoho down. Hatakikomi.
Wrap-up
Kirishima has separation from the field now. A two-bout lead heading into the final weekend is a great thing. He can seal the deal with a win tomorrow. As of the time of this post, the Kyokai has not announced tomorrow’s lineup. I probably won’t be able to get a quick post out before action begins but I would not be surprised if they set Kirishima against Aonishiki.
Talk about brutal. Aonishiki must win out to avoid kadoban. If they set it up so Kirishima’s fighting for the yusho at the same time, ouch. Since they’ve already had the Ozeki fight, looks like they can pair Kotozakura versus Kirishima on senshuraku. I think they wanted room to have Kotoshoho fight Kirishima but maybe that’s a senshuraku bout if Kirishima loses tomorrow? Well, we’ll see. Anyway, it’s Kirishima’s yusho to lose and it looks like we’ll have three Ozeki when we return to Tokyo in May. Cool.


