We had an interesting day today at the EDION arena in Osaka. Before I dive into the Makunouchi bouts, I’m sure the fans will be happy to see this:

Aminishiki is in dire straits down at the bottom of Juryo, but he managed to get his first win today vs. Akiseyama – and do that moving forward!
So, fast forward through Juryo (Arawashi doing well this basho, Enho gets his second loss in a row), we begin with Yutakayama vs. Kotoeko. Kotoeko looking good this basho, and may just be able to get that Makunouchi kachi-koshi which has eluded him so far. He attacks Yutakayama with a harizashi, lifts his arm high, and sends him off to the arms of the time shimpan.
Due to Chiyonokuni’s injury, we have a visitor from Juryo every day, and today it was 0-4 Hakuyozan facing Ishihenka, I mean, Ishiura, who was 4-0. Ishiura tried to get under Hakuyozan’s attack, but as he pulls, his knee folds below him and he finds himself rolling. His first loss, Hakuyozan’s first win.
Toyonoshima slammed into Chiyoshoma and intended to railroad him with his bulk, as he is wont. But the nimble Mongolian freed himself, stepped sideways, and left the veteran to ponder the difficulties of age and sumo.
Kagayaki launches himself head-first into newbie Daishoho‘s chest, keeps himself low, keeps his opponent upright, and clears him from the dohyo. Basic and clean.
The Tomokaze–Terutsuyoshi bout ended almost as soon as it started, with a plain, almost dismissive, hatakikomi. I believe something is wrong with Terutsuyoshi’s legs. He keeps ending up with his center of gravity way ahead of his feet. There is an expression used for this state: “ashi ga nagaremashita” – “his feet have flowed away”. His legs don’t work as fast as he needs to support his lunge.
And the Isegahama pixie is not the only one in trouble. Yoshikaze also didn’t show up for today’s bout. He leads head-first into the tachiai, but Ryuden immediately lands a morozashi – two arms under the opponent’s arms – and Yoshikaze just goes limp. Ryuden is haveng a good basho with 4-1.
Meisei tries to take the initiative against Yago. Doesn’t quite land a grip. Short tsuppari ensues, and then the two engage in migi-yotsu. Meisei only has one layer of Yago’s mawashi, and the Oguruma man patiently maneuvers into a better grip and leads Meisei out.
An impressive Shohozan showed up today to face Sadanoumi. Starting his bout with a harizashi, he lands a grip, and then throws Sadanoumi in a beautiful uwatenage. I want more of this Shohozan.
Ikioi tries hard to keep Kotoshogiku‘s pelvis as far away from him as possible. But eventually the former Ozeki decides to use the pressure against him, moves, and shows him out. Ikioi limps back to his spot to give the bow.
Asanoyama has a good tactic against Aoiyama. Since he is a yotsu man and Aoiyama is known for his fierce tsuppari and soft knees, Asanoyama quickly drives in and gets a fistful of mawashi. But Aoiyama shows versatility, uses a kotenage to release himself from the Takasago man, complements that with a nodowa, and hands Asanoyama his second loss.
Abi starts his bout with Takarafuji, as usual, with that morotezuki and follows with tsuppari. Takarafuji is quite ready for that, patiently weathers it, moves slightly to the left and grabs Abi’s mawashi. Abi manages to release himself, tries a half-hearted hikiotoshi, and fails. Instead, the Isegahama man slaps hard, and Abi rolls all the way to the other side of the dohyo. Olé!
The next bout, Chiyotairyu vs. Okinoumi. Chiyotairyu does his locomotive tachiai. Okinoumi backs up and sidesteps. Chiyotairyu dives into the janome, hands first. And Kimura Konosuke calls it Chiyotairyu’s win! No monoii. I guess the shimpan trust Chiyotairyu’s heya-mate, Konosuke, too much. The replay clearly shows this was a mistake. Okinoumi’s feet are firmly on the tawara, so he is very much alive when Chiyotairyu hits the dirt.
Ichinojo starts off with a harite – it’s not a harizashi as there was no attempt to go for the belt – then follows with a kachiage, and finally paws Onosho down with both arms. Scary. Onosho finds himself in a heap as Ichinojo, as usual, worriedly checks if he hasn’t overdone things. I guess Ichinojo left his sleepy secret twin in Tokyo.
Endo gets a grip on Tochiozan‘s belt right off the tachiai, and rolls him like his favorite barrel of beer. Makiotoshi, Endo’s first win this basho.
Mitakeumi and Hokutofuji clash head-to-head. Mitakeumi leads at first, but Hokutofuji manages to stop the pressure, and it’s Mitakeumi who starts pulling back. Maybe it’s the knee, but whatever it is, the Mitakeumi magic is not working against his fellow komusubi, and after a short halt, again he pulls and finds himself below the dohyo.
After three losses, Tamawashi vindicates himself somewhat in this fierce battle with Takakeisho. Takakeisho leads at first and nearly bounces Tamawashi out the front side of the dohyo, but Tamawashi takes it in his stride, and returns with his own windmill. Tamawashi proves that even in oshi, Takakeisho is not invincible. With two losses in the first trimester, Takakeisho’s Ozeki run seems less certain than it looked before the basho started.
Nishikigi has run out of luck this basho. Takayasu slams into him with all his bear-power. Nishikigi tries an arm lock on the Ozeki’s left arm, but to no avail. Nishikigi is 0-5.
Kaisei and Tochinoshin lock into a “gappuri” stance – firm yotsu. Tochinoshin’s first attempt doesn’t work. There is a short impasse, and then Kaisei makes a mistake and tries to gaburi him, or at least, that’s how it looked. As a result, his center of gravity ends up just where the Ozeki wants it, and he actually lifts the heavy Brazilian – though he quickly abandons the idea. He then adds a couple of pelvis thrusts of his own, to bring his thick opponent across the tawara. 3-2, and his chances of clearing kadoban look slightly brighter.
Goeido treats Shodai like a ragdoll, and the Tokitsukaze man finds himself out of the dohyo almost straight out of the tachiai. What version of Goeido is this? Has his kernel been replaced?
Kakuryu butts heads with Daieisho (not a smart move in the long run, Yokozuna), then immediately pulls. Hatakikomi, and Kakuryu is visibly annoyed with himself. Trouble always begins when Kakuryu pulls. But the win is a win.
I’m not sure what’s going on with Hakuho. The bout itself looked fine. No dominance, but the Yokozuna leading with a kachiage, Myogiryu fending him off, and the Yokozuna coming in again and slapping his opponent to the ground. But like yesterday, he couldn’t quite stop his own movement after finishing his work. Yesterday he ended up in the crowd, and took quite a while to get up from there, and today he ended up doing the splits on top of myogiryu. Control of legs? Dizziness? We won’t know unless he goes kyujo and needs to publish yet another public proof of injury
So that’s the end of Act 1, and we have four men in the leader group – Hakuho, Goeido, Ichinojo and Kotoshogiku. Let’s see what the second trimester brings!
I think that while you can’t win a basho i the first five days you can certainly lose it. You can probably draw a line through everyone at 3-2 or worse. You can also rule out anyone at M5 of below, because that does not happen. And disregard Takayasu because he never wins. So that leaves us with Hakuho, Kakuryu, Goeido and Ichinojo. And the final determiner is that they should be showing something like their best form so we are down to Goeido vs Ichinojo for the big cup.
Kotoshogiku for the Yusho!!
Can Goeido or Ichinojo keep it going for 15 days though? That’s what they both struggle with
You have to go back all the way to Hatsu 2019 to find a rikishi who started 3-2 and won the yusho 😀
If Kotoshogiku is back, Welcome to Bulldozerland.
‘until’ he goes kyujo?
does your crystal ball also indicate who takes the yusho ‘after’ he goes kyujo?
Takakeisho’s oshi specialist opponents have figured out that one-two-tsuppari will lose to wave-action but wave-action vs. wave-action can stop Takakeisho’s forward momentum. Both Hokutofuji yesterday and Tamawashi today went that route.
Ichinojo channelling Hakuho at the tachi-ai a bit with that slap-and-smash…
I think Hakuho must know that he can’t effectively stop his own forward momentum so he’s holding back to avoid being vulnerable to pull- and slap-downs. Only Hakuho could possibly rely on “just have better balance, agility, and sumo sense in the clash” and have it be a winning game plan.
After watching Ichinojo’s Day 5 bout, we finally know what it looks like when he’s tossing ponies around.
Actually, day 4 was a pony-tossing demo. Day 5 kind of demonstrated what would happen to the pony should he attempt to mount it.
Great write up, Herouth – thanks for covering day 5. Your recaps are always a treat for me to read.
+1
Hakuho’s odd facial expression as he landed on Myogiryu and split makes me wonder if he has re-injured himself. I hope not!
Nice to see Ichinojo and Kotoshohgiku in the game. I keep hoping for the tournament that answers the question, What if Ichinojo fought like he wants to win a tournament?
Have you noticed that Hakuho smashed his elbow into Myogiryu’s nose shortly after they re-engaged? This was mentioned by Murray Johnson in the English version of the NHK broadcast, and didn’t register with me until after I completed the recap. I strongly suspect Hakuho’s expression was related to that, as he realized he did a boo-boo on camera.
In what sense is the elbow strike a boo-boo? I know Hakuho was asked not to do it at the tachi-ai but I didn’t think it was out-of-bounds entirely. It seems uncommon but I recall that in a match toward the end of his career Harumafuji was toe-to-toe with an opponent (can’t remember who) and delivered two consecutive elbow smashes that passed without too much notice.
To the face? That is considered dangerous play.
Yes, the Harumafuji smashes I’m thinking of were to the face. Found it — Nagoya 2017 day 1 against Yoshikaze at komusubi. Spectacular win by Yoshikaze by the way. (Link in next comment to avoid moderation.)
The fight was so kinetic that I don’t think I would have noticed the elbow strikes were it not for this comment: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EsxRew2cFpU&lc=UghFuWrbLubSrXgCoAEC
Wow, great bout! Yoshi almost lifted and slammed Harumafuji, as the latter (as Ama) once famously did to Goeido. And those elbow strikes seem totally uncool.
Okuritsuriotoshi: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EPO39qtj1Vk
One of my favorites of yesteryear. Murray Johnson’s commentary about the illegal crotch strap grab always brings a smile to my face.
“The right hand is a bit of a worry…” LOL
keep in mind their history
remember when champ knocked out ‘giryu altogether with that elbow?
I’ve seen that in highlight reels, yes.