
Day Seven in Nagoya. Wakanosho is kyujo. Apparently, the concern is for the right knee. Minatogawa-oyakata is getting it checked out and they will address it when they know more about the prognosis. Kinbozan will receive the fusen victory.
In Makushita, Nabatame, Asahifuji, Mita and Kaisho are undefeated at 4-0. Asahifuji went bowling. He sidestepped Ryuho, grabbed his belt and flung him into the expensive seats. There are six more guys at 3-0 who will fight tomorrow with dreams of Makushita yusho: Osanai, Tokunomusashi, Obara, Fudoho, Anosho, and Hananoumi. Nabatame is also close to securing his return to Juryo. He might be set already but another win won’t hurt. There are a few guys who could leapfrog him if they have strong finishes and he flops in Week 2. So, there’s a lot to fight for here.
In Juryo, Enho remained upright while walking forward and therefore beat Kayo. Both men are 3-4. Shirokuma suffered his first defeat, to the Iron Man (4-3). Arashifuji keeps charging head, this time beating Hitoshi to move to 7-0. Meisei finally got his first win against Nishinoryu and Shonannoumi fell to Kazekeno.
Meanwhile, I am extremely excited because I got a delivery of madai, the red fish which is famous in the sumo world for being the fish of celebration. You often see pictures of guys holding one (or two) aloft after winning the top division title or earning promotion to Ozeki or Yokozuna. I’ll be posting about it in a few days. I want to see what I can do with this. So far, so good. My first attempt was amazing and super simple: just a dash of salt and threw it in a pan. Served with rice and a sprinkle of ponzu. Absolutely Delicious.
Makuuchi Action
Asakoryu (3-4) defeated Tomokaze (Juryo 2-5). I wonder if Tomokaze gets called for hairpulls more than average because he put his hand back behind Asakoryu’s head and left it there the whole bout as he tried to pull Asakoryu down. I find that degree of one-dimensional sumo annoying. Asakoryu successfully resisted and pushed Tomokaze out before both men fell. Gunbai Asakoryu, no mono-ii. Oshidashi.
Takerufuji (6-1) defeated Onokatsu (1-6). Takerufuji got his left hand inside Onokatsu’s shoulder. He twisted and drove toward the bales, trying to execute a sukuinage. As they neared the edge, Takerufuji shoved Onokatsu over the bales. Oshidashi.
Nishikifuji (6-1) defeated Shishi (6-1). Oh no! No Shishi yusho! Nishikifuji’s tsuppari disrupted Shishi’s usual attack. Shishi found no way to get inside and began to back away. Nishikifuji pursued well and kept battering Shishi. Shishi turned away and Nishikifuji shove him out from behind. Okuridashi.
Abi defeated Kazuma. Likewise, Abi beat Kazuma silly with tsuppari. Kazuma tried to keep up with Abi and dish out his own tsuppari but Abi-zumo was too intense and Abi thrust Kazuma from the ring. Tsukidashi.
Daiseizan (3-4) defeated Asahakuryu (2-5). Migiyotsu. Daiseizan got his left hand outside, quickly and kept pressing to get his right hand inside. He patiently chugged forward and drove Asahakuryu out. Yorikiri.
Kinbozan (5-2) default win over Wakanosho (5-2).
Asanoyama (5-2) defeated Mitakeumi (0-7). Mitakeumi executed his best “turn-of-tables” attack at the edge as he twisted and nearly toppled Asanoyama. Asanoyama’s left-hand outside grip actually helped him stay upright. He kept pulling on Mitakeumi and eventually heaved Mitakeumi over. I must say, Mitakeumi did not go gentle into that good night, that’s for sure. He gave it his all. Uwatenage.
Fujiryoga defeated Chiyoshoma. Chiyoshoma hit Fujiryoga with a kachi-age and blast him with tsuppari. He then snapped with a slapdown. Chiyoshoma pulled so hard that he threw himself off-balance and both men fell. I thought Fujiryoga came down a beat ahead of Chiyoshoma. Gunbai Chiyoshoma. Mono-ii. The judges wanted a rematch, so we got a rematch. In the rematch, Chiyoshoma slapped the crap out of Fujiryoga while retreating to the edge, trying to avoid Fujiryoga’s tsuppari. A pissed off Fujiryoga cornered Chiyoshoma and pushed him over the bales. Oshidashi.
Wakamotoharu (3-4) defeated Tobizaru (2-5). Wakamotoharu tried to slap Tobizaru down. When that failed, he realized he would have to MOVE FORWARD and attack Tobizaru. So he did. And he won. Imagine that. Oshidashi.
Kotoeiho (6-1) defeated Roga (2-5) You know when Kotoeiho climbs onto the dohyo by the “Oohs and Aahs” from the crowd. I remember when Abi used to get the same appreciative reaction from the crowd. It seems like there’s always one who does it best and then he passes on the torch after he becomes grim and jaded and mummified. At the tachiai, Kotoeiho latched on quickly with his left hand at the front. He got his right hand inside and steered Roga back and over the edge. Powerful sumo from the youngster. I hope the shiko remains strong with this one for a long time. Yorikiri.
Takayasu (6-1) defeated Shodai (3-4). Shodai waited at the edge for Takayasu to attack before trying to shift right and pull Takayasu forward. That failed and Takayasu shoved him out. No tsuppari from Shodai. No fighting for a belt grip. Just one dimensional, “I’m going to stand on the tawara and try to pull you forward when you attack me.” I swear, there was a time when he actually would MOVE FORWARD, and it was great. By the way, every time you see “move forward” in all caps, that’s because my I have my cousin’s voice in my head. In this sport, it really is the key and I shall adopt it as my mantra. Oshidashi.
Halftime
Fujiseiun (4-3) defeated Ura (1-6). Fujiseiun pressed Ura to the edge. Ura attempted a pull and slapdown but Fujiseiun kept Ura in front and rode him down to the ground. “OK, Ura, I’ll go down. But you go first.” Yoritaoshi.
Oshoma (2-5) defeated Daieisho (5-2). Daieisho tried to slap Oshoma down but failed and ended up at the edge. Oshoma shoved him out. Oshidashi.
Ichiyamamoto (4-3) defeated Churanoumi (1-6). Ichiyamamoto hit Churanoumi with a flurry of tsuppari and drove him back to the edge. Churanoumi resisted at the bales but his leg buckled awkwardly as he went down. Ichiyamamoto showed concern but Churanoumi hopped right up. “Oh, I’m fine, dude. Just flexible.” Oshitaoshi.
Sanyaku
Gonoyama (3-4) defeated Oho (1-6). We started Migi-yotsu. Gonoyama pulled Oho forward and attempted a shitatenage. Oho resisted but yielded a double-inside belt grip. Gonoyama kept Oho high and pressed forward, steering Oho back over the edge. Excellent sumo from Gonoyama. That looked so much better than his usual top-heavy attack. More of that, please. Yorikiri.
Takanosho (3-4) defeated Yoshinofuji (3-4). Takanosho turns up the heat when his opponent is not ranked Ozeki or Yokozuna. He hit out with tsuppari then slapped Yoshinofuji down as Yoshinofuji launched forward. Like Churanoumi, Yoshinofuji seemed to go down really awkwardly but got back up quickly. I am determined to acquire that degree of flexibility before I’m fifty. My bones are starting to creak and I don’t like it. Abisetaoshi.
Aonishiki (6-1) defeated Fujinokawa (3-4). Super-flying henka from Fujinokawa. Fujinokawa grasped for the back of Aonishiki’s belt. But Aonishiki reacted well, pivoted into Fujinokawa and chucked him off the dohyo. Geez, Aonishiki still needs four more wins. Yorikiri.
Atamifuji (5-2) defeated Kotozakura (3-4). Kotozakura just didn’t look like he even wanted to win. He rather half-heartedly shifted left and tried to twist Atamifuji; it looked like Shodai on anti-steroids. Atamifuji just shoved him out. Kotozakura’s most difficult opponent might be himself and until he wins whatever internal battle it is that he’s got going on, he’s not going to win on the dohyo. Yorikiri.
Kirishima (6-1) defeated Kotoshoho (3-4). Kirishima got his left hand deep on Kotoshoho’s belt and held him in a way that kept Kotoshoho’s right arm flailing skyward. Suddenly, Kirishima pivoted and put his left leg in front of Kotoshoho’s right. He heaved Kotoshoho forward over his leg. What a throw! Uwatenage.
Onosato (4-3) defeated Hakunofuji (5-2). Nothing fancy. Densha-michi. Onosato lifted Hakunofuji’s right arm at the elbow and got his left arm inside. Throttle to notch 8! See what you can do when you, MOVE FORWARD!! Yorikiri.
Hoshoryu (5-2) defeated Hiradoumi (1-6). Hiradoumi charged ahead but Hoshoryu got that right arm inside, planted that left leg and twisted, throwing Hiradoumi to the dirt. Sukuinage.
Wrap-Up
We won’t really have a yusho race until tomorrow, which is good because there’s a crap ton of guys at 6-1 and even more at 5-2. Seven guys are 6-1 and eight at 5-2.
Two dominant wins from the Yokozuna-tachi. Great to see. Geez, we’re already at nakabi? Time flies like a purple zabuton. Hoshoryu will fight Daieisho tomorrow and Onosato will fight Oho. Both are dangerous. It never gets easy when you’re Yokozuna. Kayo or Tomokaze or Tamashoho are never on your schedule.
Kirishima will fight Atamifuji, Kotozakura will fight Hiradoumi and Kotoshoho gets Hakunofuji. Aonishiki will fight Takanosho and Yoshinofuji will take on Fujinokawa. All are great matchups. I’m super conflicted with Takanosho. I’d love to see him win but that would mean Aonishiki would have lost.
Asanoyama and Takayasu won our former Ozeki battles today. Unfortunately, that does not mean the schedulers set them to face each other. That would have been awesome but Takayasu will fight Ura and Asanoyama will face Onokatsu in one of five first-time match-ups on the board for tomorrow. Shodai vs Fujiryoga, Mitakeumi against Takerufuji, Nishikifuji versus Kazuma and Kotoeiho versus Ichiyamamoto are the others. That Kotoeiho versus Ichiyamamoto bout will be another where I’ll be happy to see whichever guy wins and sad for the loser.
Hasta mañana!















