Haru Day 14 Highlights

Goeido - Kakuryu

As much as I hate to do this, I am putting a buffer up for people who cry about “spoilers” in a live sport they watch on delay. Some great sumo, especially from Mitakeumi and Ryuden today. Sadly for Mitakeumi, he’s dropping from his Sekiwake slot. It remains to be seen if he drops from san’yaku completely, but he really put forth excellent sumo in today’s match.

But the headline is Yokozuna Kakuryu’s 4th yusho. He earned it in spite of injuries and pain. He mounted the dohyo every day and battled with skill, guile and strength. He has been excellent in all of his matches, and thus far only dropping one match. As his only loss was to the prior yusho winner, there is no shame in that at all. With any luck, his detractors will be silent for a year or so. With Kisenosato possibly un-repairable, and Hakuho amazing but unreliable, Yokozuna Kakuryu may be the only rope-holder to oversee our dawning transitional era.

Highlight Matches

Kyokushuho defeats Nishikigi – Juryo visitor Kyokushuho is still one win shy of his kachi-koshi, but he was in good form over the struggling Nishiki, who is himself headed back to the Junior League for May.

Ikioi defeats Ishiura – Ikioi mounts the dohyo with a giant bandage over his right eye, looking like Franken-Ikioi. Does the crowd care? Hell no! It’s the home-town dashing and handsome rikishi, even if parts of him are taped together. Ishiura, to his credit, tried to give him a straight up fight, but Ikioi moved forward strongly, and kept Ishiura in front of him. [Ikioi is now an amazing 11-3 and will hopefully take home a special prize. –PinkMawashi]

Daiamami defeats Kotoyuki – Kotoyuki charged forward strongly, and actually looked like he would deliver his second win of the basho. He had Daiamami pinned against the tawara, but then somehow just ran out of gas as Daiamami charged forward and won. I am unsure what kind of misery Kotoyuki suffers, but he seems to be fairly hopeless at this point.

Yutakayama defeats Asanoyama – Yutakayama certainly looks dialed in now, hitting his 10th win with one day to go. He completely dominated Asanoyama in today’s match.

Chiyoshoma defeats Aoiyama – The formula for winning over Aoiyama is to keep moving and get him to chase you. Chiyoshoma had this one down cold, and eventually the man-mountian had Chiyoshoma grab his arm and pull a throw. Chiyoshoma picks up his kachi-koshi, which was well earned today.

Daieisho defeats Chiyonokuni – Some impressive defense from Chiyonokuni, as Daiesho delivered some powerful nodowa at the edge. Chiyonokuni ends the match with a make-koshi, and Daiesho with his kachi-koshi.

Kaisei defeats Daishomaru – It can be fun to watch big-man sumo like this. Daishomaru gets bold at the tachiai and charges face first into the giant meat balloon that is Kaisei, and lands with a wet smack. With his face still embedded in Kaisei’s expansive upper torso, the giant Brazillian goes for an westward stroll, taking the now trapped and helpless Daishomaru along for the win. We can expect a big move up the banzuke for Kaisei in May.

Abi defeats Kotoshogiku – Abi’s henka is perfectly timed, and defeats Kotoshogiku’s only possible attack. But wait! (you say) – Bruce, you complain about Ishiura’s henkas! Yes, it gets old fast when a rikishi uses that as their go-to weapon. But in this case, it’s the correct way to blunt Kotoshogiku’s obligatory offensive opening. Well executed and correctly deployed. Abi goes to 9 wins.

Ryuden defeats Arawashi – Good gravy what a match this one is! The men lock up into a battle for grip at the tachiai, with Arawashi pinning Ryuden’s arms time and again. But Arawashi has control and works with what he has, backing Ryuden up to the bales strongly enough that Ryuden’s heels are dangerously close to being out. But Ryuden recovers! Arawashi advances strongly again, a second time Ryuden is a centimeter from being out, but rallies to the center of the dohyo. Stalemated, Arawashi is out of energy, and Ryuden backs him up and out. Excellent sumo from them both. Miraculously, Ryuden can still achieve his kachi-koshi.

Takarafuji defeats Kagayaki – Straightforward match at first, Takarafuji gets the gumbai, but then the shimpan want to talk it over, fairly late in the post-bout ritual. The judges decide on a torinaoshi, which Takarafuji wins by letting Kagayaki fall to the dohyo.

Endo defeats Hokutofuji – Endo now with 9 wins after this bout with a struggling Hokutofuji. The match featured Endo and Hokutofuji trading attempts to slap or thrust each other down, with Endo’s superior ring sense helping him time his third attempt to be at the edge, where Hokutofuji had no room to recover. Endo is headed to San’yaku for May, and the valiant Hokutofuji is make-koshi and desperately needing to re-group.

Tamawashi defeats Shohozan – As expected, it was energetic! Both men were landing a lot of powerful blows on each others neck and head, grabbing each other’s arms and generally carrying on in an aggressive sumo fashion. Shohozan seemed to have the advantage, setting the pace and moving forward while Tamawashi kept giving ground. The win came at the tawara when Tamawashi twisted to his right, guiding Shohozan down and out.

Ichinojo defeats Shodai – The super genki Shodai was not able to show up today, but he did a reasonable job against the man that NHK commentator Hiro Morita calls “The Mongolian Behemoth”. Fans started to worry that Ichinojo had re-injured his back due to his soft performance the day prior, but he was large and in charge today, getting Shodai airborne for the win.

Yoshikaze defeats Chiyotairyu – I am very pleased to see Yoshikaze fighting well again. I had some serious worries during week 1. Chiyotairyu opened strong, pushing Yoshikaze back, but then they go chest to chest, and Yoshikaze starts to control the match. He did a great job of keeping the massive Chiyotairyu high and unable to generate forward pressure.

Tochinoshin defeats Chiyomaru – Chiyomaru left the dohyo today not only without a hope of kachi-koshi, but also without Tochinoshin’s meaty left leg, which he had planned as a victory snack. Tochinoshin still has an outside hope of continuing his Ozeki bid by winning his match against Ichinojo tomorrow.

Takayasu defeats Mitakeumi – Possibly Mitakeumi’s best match of the basho [Possibly the best match of the basho, period –PM], and sadly it gave him his demotion from the Sekiwake slot he has enjoyed for many tournaments. If this is not a wake-up call to Takayasu, I am not sure what is. Mitakeumi had him contained, restrained and for a time, in pain. All the Ozeki could do was react to the next contortion Mitakeumi placed him into and struggle to escape. Even when Takayasu managed to escape Mitakeumi, the Sekiwake re-secured control and kept the punishment coming. But Mitakeumi got too eager, ended up off balance and thrust down. The difference between Sekiwake Mitakeumi and Maegashira Mitakeumi is the ability to finish Pooh-Bear off when you have him at your mercy. [Mitakeumi’s match against Goeido tomorrow may determine whether he falls to Komusubi or Maegashira, so we’ll all be watching that one closely. –PM]

Kakuryu defeats Goeido – You have to wonder if Kakuryu is THE master of reactive sumo. Goeido must know that somewhere in his poorly formatted flash drive. Why do you advance strongly into the guy you KNOW is going to make you pay if your weight is not centered over the arches of your feet? Herouth tells us from inside EDION that she may have been the only soul cheering for the Yokozuna in the Ozeki’s home-town. But Kakuryu shows us that he is every bit a Yokozuna, and takes his fourth yusho.

18 thoughts on “Haru Day 14 Highlights

  1. Ichinojo should have lost that bout by hansoku; he had his fingertips curled into Shodai’s hair. I like the big guy but there’s no way he should have won that one.

    • Fair point; Ichniojo may have been a bit lucky here. It could be argued that the fingers were curled precisely to avoid digging inro Shodai’s hair and that any finger/hair contact was so brief as to be irrelevant given the power of the belt throw but yeah… lucky one for Ichi.

  2. Is it possible that if Tochinoshin wins tomorrow (making his 3-basho total 33 wins) and so does Kaisei, with Mitakeumi losing, that Tochinoshin would get promoted to Ozeki?

    as follows:
    Mitakeumi 6-9 (Down To Maegashira)
    Chiyotairyu 3-12/4-11 (Down To Maegashira)
    Ichinojo 9-6/10-5 (Up To Sekiwake)
    Kaisei 12-3(Up To Komusubi)
    Endo 9-6/10-5 (Up To Sekiwake/Komusubi)
    Tochinoshin 10-5 (Up To Ozeki?)

    • No. You need 33 wins over three bashos at a level where you’re facing san’yaku opponents. In Kyushu 2017, Tochinoshin was Maegashira 6, and he didn’t face anyone above the rank of M4. His Ozeki hopes hinge on his next basho.

      • Kisenosato, Goeido and Chiyotaikai were all promoted with 32 wins. Just saying.

        If Tochinoshin gets past Ichinojo tomorrow I would expect that he would be given a 10 or 11 win target in May for ozeki promotion.

        • So if a low maegashira got, let’s say, a 13-2 with a playoff loss, and got 10 wins in his next two tournaments, that’s 33 wins, and he still wouldn’t get the nod?

          • Basho stats fairy to the rescue!

            Here are all of the Ozeki promotions for which we have data for the three preceding honbasho, and here are all of the cases where someone got 30 or more wins over three basho and ended up at Sekiwake rather than Ozeki.

            A few of those Ozeki runs started from upper Maegashira, but as far as I can tell, the last time someone did it without facing a full slate of san’yaku in all three tournaments was Tochihikari Masayuki in 1962.

            Also, even in fairly modern times, totals of as low as 31 seem to be accepted as good enough for an Ozeki run, so I was wrong with my “33” earlier.

            • Quality of rivals is the key point, though. The basho before the Yusho will not count, in my opinion, as he has only met maegashira in that basho.

              • So it won’t count EVEN if they have a 3rd rikishi deserving a Sanyaku spot?

              • I don’t really have a way to verify this right now, but I believe the state of the san-yaku is not a consideration. Ozeki is a special rank, semi-permanent. They won’t give the privilege to a sub-standard rikishi.

              • They have the authority to create a third komusubi slot if they feel there is overwhelming evidence of being worthy of Sanyaku.

              • The Miyabiyama case from that query is fascinating. That turns out to be his 3rd Ozeki run! He was crowned Ozeki on his first run! Then had a 30 win run at Sekiwake two + years after demotion?!?! Then a third run (the one in the query) with 34 (!!!) wins? All at sanyaku rank (K-S-S)?? One of those wins was a fusen victory, though. Wow!

  3. what an exciting round – so much good and thrilling sumo on offer – and you all know what the highlight match for me was… yes, you no doubt heard the foot stomping whilst i was doing the Yoshikaze dance……..

      • The DDR “Grand Sumo Expansion” cartridge was never sold in the United States, and was only available e from a tiny shop in Adelaide for about a week before they were all recalled and sank to the bottom of the Marianas Trench. So the world will never know….

  4. Wonder if anyone out there in internet sumoland could edit together a package of Kotoyuki’s greatest tumbles? Lots of material to work with – i can barely write a comment on a forum so I’m out.

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