Haru 2025: Day Ten

Day Ten in Osaka. The big news is that Yokozuna Hoshoryu is kyujo. He is the first shin-Yokozuna to go kyujo in his debut in 39 years. Back in 1986, Futahaguro went kyujo. Comparisons between the two are irrelevant because Hoshoryu actually has titles to his name. It will be his first losing record since 2021. Ura will pick up the fusen win.

Nonetheless, some of you had called it in the comments, particularly Justme who postulated that despite no bandages, the band-aid was a sign of likely pain medicine injections. Tatsunami Oyakata revealed Hoshoryu had injured his right elbow at Hatsu Basho. He had thought he would be ready for Haru but apparently not. We hope he heals those injuries and comes back strong in May.

Down in Juryo, Kusano continues his charge though he was saved by the shimpan today. Kusano plowed forward but Shimanoumi slapped him down at the edge while stepping out. Gunbai Shimanoumi. The shimpan called a mono-ii and replay showed Shimanoumi stepped out before Kusano came down. Kusano moves to 10-0. With Hitoshi’s loss, Kusano is now three clear of the field.

Hokutofuji is not one of the chase group. Quite the opposite, he has a mere 3 wins and will fight Hatsuyama to stave off make-koshi.

Your NHK videos are here: Juryo, Makuuchi Part I & Part II.

Makuuchi Action

Tokihayate (6-4) defeated Fujiseiun (Juryo 6-4). Tokihayate grabbed Fujiseiun by the shoulders and pulled back, dragging Fujiseiun forward and thrusting him to the ground. Tsukiotoshi.

Aonishiki (7-3) defeated Kotoshoho (4-6). After a brief oshi brawl, Aonishiki grabbed Kotoshoho’s belt with his right hand and immediately yanked him forward to the ground. Uwatedashinage.

Sadanoumi (6-4) defeated Ryuden (4-6). Sadanoumi locked on with a morozashi, double-inside belt grip and heaved Ryuden over the bales. Both men tumbled down the dohyo. Shitatenage.

Shishi (7-3) defeated Mitakeumi (4-6). Mitakeumi drove Shishi toward the bales but Shishi was able to pivot the pair and press Mitakeumi up against the bales. Mitakeumi went inside to resist being pushed out and grabbed onto Shishi’s belt. This allowed Shishi access with his left hand and he immediately dragged Mitakeumi forward and rolled him to the floor. Uwatenage.

Asakoryu (6-4) defeated Takarafuji (3-7). Asakoryu shoved Takarafuji out behind the force of his nodowa. Takarafuji had some success shifting direction but could not follow up with an attack of his own. So Asakoryu re-engaged and shoved him out. Oshidashi.

Meisei (7-3) defeated Shirokuma (3-7). As Shirokuma drove forward, Meisei slipped left and dragged Shirokuma down by his right arm. Kotenage.

Churanoumi (8-2) defeated Hakuoho (6-4). Pull at your peril. After a brawl which bloodied Churanoumi, the two settled into a stalemate at the center of the ring. Churanoumi began charging forward so Hakuoho pulled…but could not slap down Churanoumi. Churanoumi kept Hakuoho centered and drove him off the dohyo. Oshidashi.

Onokatsu (6-4) defeated Atamifuji (5-5). After a lengthy tussle, Onokatsu acquired a double-inside hold and escorted a weary Atamifuji over the bales. Yorikiri.

Shodai (4-6) defeated Midorifuji (6-4). Shodai tried to heave Midorifuji out early but Midorifuji resisted at the bales and had the gall to go on the attack and try that katasukashi of his. After several attempts to grab Midorifuji and throw him out, Shodai had enough of this little guy and crushed him down to the floor in the middle of the dohyo. Makiotoshi.

Tamawashi (7-3) defeated Nishikigi (1-9). Nishikigi pivoted and thrust Tamawashi forward, stumbling to the edge. Just when it looked like Nishikigi might pick up another rare win, Tamawashi spun and forced Nishikigi out. Hatakikomi.

Oshoma (5-5) defeated Hiradoumi (5-5). After a few matta, Oshoma slipped left at the tachiai and slapped the hard-charging Hiradoumi to the floor at the tachiai. A decidedly less entertaining hatakikomi than the previous bout, it elicits a few groans but mostly silence from the assembled crowd.

Halftime

Takerufuji (8-2) defeated Shonannoumi (1-9). Shonannoumi tried to pull Takerufuji over to the side but Takerufuji had read the brief and new what to look for. He kept Shonannoumi centered and droe forward, forcing Shonannoumi back and out. Oshidashi.

Kinbozan (5-5) flattened Endo (5-5). I don’t think I’ve ever seen anyone just completely bowled over like that at the tachiai, without kachi-age KO. Kinbozan’s two-arm thrust to the head lifted the poor kid off his feet and propelled him backward. Tsukiotoshi.

Tobizaru (4-6) defeated Chiyoshoma (3-7). If you watch Chiyoshoma’s tachiai here, this is how a henka-artiste defends against a henka. Nonetheless, Tobizaru went on the attack and forced Chiyoshoma from the ring. Chiyoshoma could not get inside to get at the belt. Oshidashi.

Wakatakakage (5-5) defeated Gonoyama (3-7). Wakatakakage got inside and seized Gonoyama’s belt with his left hand. Gonoyama’s “flight” reflex kicked in. He tried to get himself free and run away but Wakatakakage shoved him out from behind. Okuridashi.

Sanyaku

Takanosho (3-7) defeated Kirishima (4-6). Just when we are all wondering, “how is Takanosho consistently up here in the joi, or even sanyaku?” he pulls out a great oshi-tsuki display like today. Excellent footwork and steady oshi pressure forced Kirishima out. He just does not seem to have a reliable, “go-to,” secondary attack, no mis-direction or slapdown or yotsu game. Oshidashi.

Wakamotoharu (6-4) defeated Abi (4-6). Now, Abi’s got the tsuppari attack and the nodowa like Takanosho but he also has the hatakikomi attack. But Wakamotoharu was prepared for that today and stayed upright, forcing Abi from the dohyo. Oshidashi.

Daieisho (7-3) defeated Oho (4-6). One heck of a pusher-thruster bout. Oho seemed to have the advantage early but could not get Daieisho out. However, Oho soon tired. This was a stamina win for Daieisho. After a minute of blasting away and chasing Daieisho around the ring, Oho was gassed and fell to the easy thrustdown. Great bout. I look forward to more of this from both guys. Tsukiotoshi.

Ura (4-6) fusen against Hoshoryu (5-5-5).

Takayasu (9-1) defeated Onosato (8-2). Pull at your peril, I say! Onosato forced Takayasu back to the tawara behind his strong tsuppari. But he latched on with his right hand on Takayasu’s belt, pivoted, and pulled Takayasu. But Takayasu stayed up, moved with Onosato’s rotation, and forced the Ozeki from the ring. Both tumbled down in a heap, gunbai Takayasu. No mono-ii. Yorikiri.

Ichiyamamoto (6-4) defeated Kotozakura (5-5). Ichiyamamoto comes out and what does he do? He pulls; and he wins. He stood up Kotozakura at the tachiai with a brief shove, then rotated in the same direction Onosato had in the previous bout, and slapped Kotozakura down to the clay. The key here is that wrap around Kotozakura’s knee. He cannot survive the pivot left. Ichiyamamoto played it well. Hatakikomi.

Wrap-up

Takayasu leads with one loss. The “adult in the room” was put to bed by Papa-yasu. Onosato falls into the chase group with Takerufuji and Churanoumi.

  • 9-1: Takayasu
  • 8-2: Onosato, Takerufuji, Churanoumi.

Takayasu will fight Kirishima tomorrow. Onosato will face Ura. Schedulers pit Takerufuji against Churanoumi. “We’re only going to put up with one of you guys challenging for the yusho.”

Kotozakura still has a struggle on his hands to save himself from demotion. He needs three wins in the final five days or Onosato will be alone at the rank in May.

Yes, pulls work…sometimes. Actually, they work quite a bit. But when they work, they usually work quickly, within a step or two backwards. In cases like today’s Onosato-Takayasu bout, Onosato cut off half of the ring by pivoting so hard. If Takayasu stayed with him, he had no where to go but out. And that’s where he went. I guess my frustration with the pull isn’t the pull itself, it’s the overcommittment. Frequently, it will be akin to tipping your king or going “all-in” with rags.

Onosato’s forward sumo forced Takayasu to the edge. Why give up on it? If you reach in for the belt, rather than pull, use gaburi-yotsu and force Takayasu over the edge. Don’t cede the winning position! In keiko, you spend the entire time learning how to move forward, perfecting how to move forward. Sure, there’s some lateral movement in there but no one’s doing suriashi backwards! You’re not rabbits. You can’t see behind you! You can’t see how much room you have or where those tawara are as it closes in on you! You’re Phoenixes and Eagles and Tigers and Lions and Flying Monkeys. Birds and Beasts of Prey. Attack! GAH!

Alright, that’s my rant. Feel free to argue with me in the comments about how pulling is the greatest tactic, ever and how you will now have posters of Ichiyamamoto on your walls.


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44 thoughts on “Haru 2025: Day Ten

  1. I agree aggression as a better option than reflex pulling .. However, Takayasu was pushed against the bales + crouched below Onosato .. When Takayaso grabbed Onosato’s belt, Onosato immedialtely reached for Takayasu’s belt + pulled .. Onosato may have felt attacking from his postion risked either being subject to a throw or by going more vertical get pushed back + once he yielded the belt, he may not have felt in control (rikishi reflexively pull their hips back to avoid yielding the belt) .. Net, a grey zone .. Onosato has such good leg work .. One wonders if he could have stepped back + knee/hip bend to regain leverage then attack w his great footwork .. I noticed a series of higher rikishi (e.g. Kirishima) are fighting standing up .. a double whammy .. harder to reach for a belt + opened up for their opponent .. fatigue maybe setting in .. Daieisho is a warrior .. Oho hung as long as he could .. Takayasu’s challenge will be focus .. five more matches … no sloppy sumo ..

  2. Tamawashi channeled some of Ura’s anti-physics action today by backwards bouncing his opponent out of the ring.

  3. In Kusano’s bout, the gyoji thought Kusano had inadvertently stepped out (isamiashi) while driving out Shimanoumi. Replay clearly showed he stepped onto the tokudawara but not over, gunbai-sashichigae.

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