Kyushu Day 11 Highlights

The topsy-turvey Kyushu Basho continues into Day 11, and much like before, Wednesday’s action did not disappoint. Our leaderboard stayed mostly intact, with Takakeisho at the top with ten wins and Aoiyama, Daieisho, and Takayasu right behind with nine. The only casualty in the Yusho race was Onosho, who dropped his match and joined Okinoumi and Goiedo in the hunt group. Without further ado, let’s get on to today’s action.

Highlight Bouts:

Yago (7-4) defeats Arawashi (1-10): We begin with another visit from Yago, up from Joryu for the day. He and his Day 11 opponent, Arawashi, could very well swap places in January. After a matta, the two clashed and try as he might, Arawshi could do nothing against the much larger man. Yago takes the match with a yoritaoshi and moves one step closer to the Makuuchi division.

Aoiyama (9-2) defeats Yutakayama (4-7): You gotta hand it to Aoiyama, the man has been on an incredible tear at Kyushu. After dropping his first two bouts, the Bulgarian bull has steamrolled every rikishi he’s faced, and today was no different. Yutakayama, injured as he is, put up a good fight and nearly got Aoiyama out, but the big man fought back with bludgeoning tsuppari until Yutakayama was unstable. A quick slap down followed, and Aoiyama extended his winning streak to nine.

Shohozan (7-4) defeats Onosho (8-3): With his loss to Shohozan today, Onosho has fallen out of the chase group. Onosho started strong, nearly driving Shohozan out, but Big Guns Sho dug in at the edge and used his immense strength to push Onosho back and over the tawara. Shohozan improves to 7-4 and is one win away from his kachi koshi, but he’ll have to go through the eaquily burley Chiyotairu first.

Endo (7-4) defeats Abi (5-6): Following a great first half of Kyushu, Fan favourite Abi continues to fall closer and closer to another make koshi record after three consecutive losses. His Day 11 opponent, Endo, kept low and used his forehead to bear the brunt of Abi’s thrusts. Once he was within his reach, Endo sprang his trap and grabbed Abi around the waist. Once that happened, there was little Abi could do but be guided out of the ring. Endo is just one win away from kachi koshi, while Abi needs to win two for his winning record.

Daieisho (9-2) defeats Kagayaki (3-8): Daieisho maintained his spot in the 9-2 hunt group with a decisively one-sided win over Kagayaki. Daieisho has a habit of letting his sumo slide during the back half of a Basho, but he seems to have bucked this bad habit and could finish with double-digit wins for the first time since last March. Kagayaki is now make koshi and will need to review the fundamentals before January.

Ryuden (4-7) defeats Asanoyama (4-7): This one was a great match between two very promising rikishi. Coming into Act 3 with wins over an Ozeki and a Sekiwake, Ryuden seemed more confident during his Day 11 match against Asanoyama. Asanoyama started strong and nearly got Ryuden over the bales, but the man in black used some excellent footwork and got himself away from the tawara and back into the middle of the ring. Now with a secure double-handed grip, Ryuden drove forward but Asanoyama was ready and used Ryu’s own momentum against him. Asanoyama overcorrected, however, and in turning Ryuden towards the edge of the ring, he lost his own balance and succumbed to the smaller man’s uwatenage. Despite an excellent match, both men are now 4-7 and are one misstep away from demotion. While this has not been their Basho, hopefully, they have been learning from their losses and come into Haru better prepared.

Nishikigi (5-6) defeats Hokutofuji (5-6): Nishikigi continues to surprise this Basho and dominated Hokutofuji right from the start of their bout. Hokutofuji tried to push Nishikigi around, but the blind one wouldn’t budge. Using Hokutofuji’s forward movement against him, Nishikigi busted out a tsukiotoshi and sent Hokutofuji sprawling on the ground. This is Hokutofuji’s third straight loss.

Takakeisho (10-1) defeats Tochiozan (6-5): Takakeisho and Tochiozan have been two of the most surprising rikishi this November. While Tochiozan has since fallen out of the Yusho race, he’s so far proved that he can beat anyone on any given day. However, today was not that day, and Tochiozan joined an ever-growing list of rikishi who have fallen prey to Takakeisho’s wave attack. Right from the tachiai, the Komusubi began slamming into Tochiozan, disrupting his balance and negating his offence. This left him vulnerable to Takakeisho’s well-placed hatakikomi slap down. Takakeisho improved his record to 10-1 and still remains the leader in the Yusho race.

Yoshikaze (6-5) defeats Mitakeumi (5-6): Yoshikaze and Mitakeumi began their bout today with a series of headbutts. Yoshikaze, whose head is no stranger to abuse, weathered the storm and managed to get under Mitakeumi’s arms, forcing them up and out of the way. One quick uwatedashinage later and Mitakeumi found himself face down in the dirt. Prior to Kyushu, there was quite a lot of discussion about Mitakeumi salvaging his Ozeki run. Now with a 5-6 record, the conversation has changed to whether or not he can hold on to his Sekiwake slot. With three Ozeki bouts in his near future, Mitakeumi better get his sumo in gear if he wants to save his rank.

Goeido (8-3) defeats Kaisei (3-6-2): Kaisei figured it out: Goiedo can’t henka someone who doesn’t move. The big Brazilian stood right up at the Tachiai and forced the Ozeki to come to him. Goeido obliged and the Komosubi managed to turn him until Goeido had his back to the tawara. Kaisei went in for the final blow but Goiedo shifted and managed to get Kaisei off balance and hopping towards the bales. A final push sealed the deal and Goeido picked up his kachi koshi.

Tochinoshin (6-5) defeats Chiyotairyu (5-6): Tochinoshin had his hands full today when he faced Chiyotairyu. The man in the salmon Mawashi kept the Georgian off his belt with some fierce tsuppari blows, but Tochinoshin didn’t relent and eventually forced Chiyotairyu towards the edge. Chiyotairyu kept on fighting but lost his balance and landed knee first on the clay. Tochinoshin wins via tsukihiza.

Takayasu (9-2) defeats Ichinojo (3-8): Now, If this Ichinojo had showed up at the start of Kyushu, I doubt he’d be make koshi. After a thunderous Tachiai, Takayasu pushed Ichinojo to the tawara but the Mongolian didn’t go meekly out of the ring this time. The Boulder stands his ground so Takayasu changes tactics, jumping back and attempting to slap him down. This only causes Ichinojo to move forward with tremendous force, driving Takayasu back. Ichinojo tries his own slap down, but neither men are falling for that move today. The hulking Mongolian goes back to pushing and has Takayasu back-peddling until the two go tumbling to the tatami below (with Ichinojo’s colossal knee taking a large chunk of the dohyo with it). But wait! The gyoji motions towards Takayasu. A monoii is called, and video replay shows that Ichinojo’s big toe went out a fraction of a second before Takayasu’s foot touched down. Takayasu wins this very close match and stays in the hunt for the Yusho, while Ichinojo says goodbye to his Sekiwake rank and perhaps his spot in the Sanyaku as well.

14 thoughts on “Kyushu Day 11 Highlights

  1. So many interesting storylines to follow, including the Yusho race. I’m excited to see a new face (maybe two?) in the Sekiwake slot. We’ve seen some surprising results and good sumo from Nishikigi, Hokutofuji, Ryuden, Tochiozan, and Yoshikaze at the top of the Maegashira ranks. Aoiyama and Daieisho have had great tournaments so far. Looks like we might have Yago and Terutsuyoshi in Makuuchi next basho?

  2. But wait, who’s this slipping under the radar and shimmying up the river like a steam-powered stealth-salmon? It’s our old friend Okinoumi, only two off the lead at the arena where he got a jun-yusho last year.

  3. Gotta object a bit to the recap of Takayasu vs Ichinojo: Takayasu got Ichinojo to the bales and then tried a pull that failed, and that’s when Ichinojo took control.

  4. We haven’t seen the mass slaughter of the upper maegashira that many of us were predicting two weeks ago. Nobody in those ranks has really excelled, but none of them have been embarrassed. With Kaisei going MK today they also have a nice, shiny komusubi prize to fight over in the last four days. Tamawashi is favourite but Hokutofuji, Myogiryu, Tochiozan, Yoshikaze, Shodai and yes, I’ll say it, Nishikigi are in with a shout.

  5. Watching Ichinojo makes me really sad. I just want to know what’s plaguing him. Obviously his weight but I’m wondering if his back is going bad or if he’s having knee issues or something, because the man is built for sumo. He should have no problem holding his ground and dominating yet he’s a boulder that isn’t good at being a boulder…

  6. Ryuden was once more rewarded for his patience. He seems to be really smart about blocking and locking his opponents arms as they fumble around for his mawashi. And also very canny about his head positioning.

    Of course I am gutted that Abi has once again started to tail off after a promising start.

    2 other random thoughts:
    (i) There seemed to be an awful lot of slap-down wins today.
    (ii) This is probably paranoid/silly of me, but looking again at the Tochinoshin vs Chiyotariyu bout – the moment when he suddenly ‘slips’ down to one knee kinda looks . . . fake. He just seems to go down for no reason, not even a slip of the foot. Probably just my eyes/my mind/the camera angle playing tricks on me . . .

    • I hadn’t noticed until someone on the Sumo Forum pointed it out, but Tochinoshin delivers a strong left-handed slap right before Chiyotairyu goes down, so I think this was a knockout.

      • I’m not sure about a slap, but I noticed Tochinoshin pulling his hands back – almost as if he expected Chiyotairyu to charge and decided to offer no resistance. Chiyotairyu for his part, with his feet on the tawara already, had no option but to go forward and probably set his balance expecting Tochinoshin to push against him. I thought it was actually quite a clever move on the Ozeki’s part.

  7. I almost wonder if the Takayasu/Ichinojo match would’ve been repeated if the dohyo wasn’t in need of some emergency repairs. Hopefully, it was easy enough to fix >.<;;;

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