Down in Juryo Onokatsu defeated Endo and Wakatakakage beat Shiden, setting up a great Wakatakakage/Onokatsu bout tomorrow. Some hijinks in the Chiyosakae bout with Bushozan awarded the win when Chiyosakae’s foot was clearly still on the dohyo. Bushozan bowed and was about to leave the dohyo when he was recalled by the gyoji to do his sonkyo squat and acknowledge his victory. (Andy contemplates bringing up Tobizaru and corpses with their feet on tawara but bites his tongue. The thing is he types with his fingers, not his tongue.)
NHK videos here. Makuuchi Part I & Part II. Juryo Part I & Part II.
Highlights
Ichiyamamoto (7-6) defeated Tsurugisho (4-9) Ichiyamamoto’s brand of sumo dictated this bout. Tsurugisho attempted a pivot and pulldown at the edge but it did not work. Tsukidashi.
Roga (6-7) defeated Hokutofuji (6-7) Henka! Roga slipped to the side and Hokutofuji steamed by. Okuridashi.
Sadanoumi (8-5) defeated Tokihayate (5-8). Sadanoumi was just too solid. Tokihayate tried to change direction but Sadanoumi moved with him and kept moving forward. But what did Sadanoumi do to his left foot? It was bandaged and bleeding, pre-bout. Sadanoumi kachi-koshi, Tokihayate make-koshi. Yorikiri.
Kinbozan (8-5) defeated Takarafuji (8-5). Kinbozan’s thrusting attack, aided by a forearm to the jaw, shoved Takarafuji back. Takarafuji retreated along the tawara but Kinbozan remained low in pursuit and thrust Takarafuji out. Kinbozan kachi-koshi. Tsukidashi.
Ryuden (8-5) defeated Shodai (5-8) Shodai tried his best to counter Ryuden’s belt grip with an aggressive (I could hardly believe it, myself) move forward. Ryuden used his right-hand outside and his left hand up front to rotate Shodai back through the ring and over the edge. Ryuden kachi-koshi; Shodai make-koshi. Yorikiri.
Churanoumi (8-5) defeated Kotoshoho (8-5). Churanoumi locked onto Kotoshoho’s belt and quickly brought the action to the edge. Kotoshoho ripped Churanoumi’s hand away but Churanoumi pressed forward, undeterred, and drove Kotoshoho out. Oshidashi.
Takanosho (6-7) defeated Tomokaze (2-11). Takanosho put his head down and drove forward, forcing Tomokaze off the dohyo. Oshidashi.
Tamawashi (6-7) defeated Oho (4-9). Oho put his head down and slammed back into Tamawashi. It backed Tamawashi up and I start thinking, “OMG, Oho is going to press forward?!?!” No. Of course not. Oho immediately pulls and taps Tamawashi on the back of the neck, expecting that to somehow thrust the old dog to the floor. Instead, Tamawashi propelled Oho from the dohyo. Oshidashi.
Tobizaru (5-8) defeated Nishikifuji (4-9). Tobizaru absorbed Nishikifuji’s tachiai, corralled him with a bear hug and drove him out. Nishikifuji did not put up much offense but I am not sure how hampered he was from yesterday’s finger injury. According to Murray, it was a dislocation. Ouch. Oshidashi.
Halftime
Nishikigi (4-9) defeated Gonoyama (5-8). Nishikigi used his size advantage well to press Gonoyama ahead. Gonoyama resisted at the edge but Nishikigi just spun around and drove him out the other side. Gonoyama makekoshi. Yorikiri.
Hiradoumi (7-6) defeated Takayasu (6-2-5). Hiradoumi slipped away at the edge and Takayasu dropped off the edge of the dohyo. Tsukiotoshi.
Daieisho (9-4) defeated Mitakeumi (8-5). Daieisho blasted Mitakeumi from the dohyo, as expected by everyone in the building, including Mitakeumi. Oshidashi.
Atamifuji (6-7) defeated Onosho (5-8). Onosho drove forward and Atamifuji rotated around the dohyo. Onosho pursued but allowed his body to get ahead of his feet. Atamifuji slapped him down. Onosho makekoshi. Hatakikomi.
Sanyaku
Onosato (10-3) destroyed Ura (6-7). Ura tried to slip a bit to the left but Onosato adjusted and ejected Ura from the fighting surface. Oshidashi.
Abi (9-4) defeated Meisei (8-5). Fantastic bout. Standard Abi-zumo to open, shifted into a great little brawl with hands and elbows flying. Meisei pressed forward and Abi tried a slapdown. Then, Abi wrapped up Meisei at the edge and twisted him down. Beautiful throw. That was awesome. Tsukiotoshi.
Wakamotoharu (4-6-3) defeated Oshoma (9-4). Wakamotoharu was patient with Oshoma and he could afford to be. At the tachiai, Wakamotoharu lodged his left arm under Oshoma’s armpit, effectively pulling Oshoma’s right arm at bay. He twisted and yanked Oshoma’s left arm away and drove forward, pushing Oshoma over the edge. Oshidashi.
Kotozakura (10-3) defeated Shonannoumi (9-4). Kotozakura moved laterally at the tachiai (often called a “henka” around these parts). This gave him access to Shonannoumi’s belt, which he touched briefly as Shonannoumi steamrolled by. Uwatedashinage.
Hoshoryu (9-4) defeated Midorifuji (5-8). Hoshoryu twisted Midorifuji down to his makekoshi. Kotenage.
Wrap-up
We do not have the Day 14 matchups at press time so I will follow up later today with an update on tomorrow’s bouts. Importantly, Shonannoumi and Oshoma both lost leaving Kotozakura and Onosato atop the leaderboard. Hoshoryu, Abi, and Daieisho remain with Shonannoumi and Oshoma.
Kotozakura and Onosato have already fought and the Kotozakura/Hoshoryu bout is likely the final matchup on Senshuraku. Neither Onosato nor Kotozakura have faced Abi, so I’m guessing Kotozakura vs Abi tomorrow and Onosato vs Abi on senshuraku. I wonder if they will throw or Shonannoumi at Onosato tomorrow to knock the rank-and-filers back.
With the successes of the lower maegashira and the absences from the top ranks, there are definitely some weak bouts here in the final days. Hoshoryu’s bout with Midorifuji today is a great example of a bout which would not have happened without all of the kyujo.

