Kyushu 2025: Day Nine

News from the infirmary is that Maegashira 16 Meisei will fight tomorrow. He will take on Nishikifuji in his return. That means we will not have a Juryo visitor on Day Ten.

In Juryo, Hakuyozan is the first opponent to defeat Fujiryoga as he thrust the big man backward over the bales with a powerful shove. Fujiryoga falls to 8-1, tied with Daiseizan. Hatsuyama chases with two losses. Asanoyama’s winning streak ended today against Hitoshi.

The NHK videos are here. Their Day Nine page includes the Hakuyozan-Fujiryoga bout if you scroll down to the bottom. Remember, when you click the link, the videos are hidden. You have to find the little button that says, “続き読む”. Click it and the list of videos will open up. Let me know if you have any issues finding it. If you want to find any videos from past days, all of the links are located here.

Makuuchi Action

Asakoryu (6-3) defeated Tochitaikai (Juryo 4-5). Asakoryu hit Tochitaikai at the tachiai but immediately shifted to his left and slapped Tochitaikai down. Tochitaikai had hit the ground before he knew what happened. Tsukiotoshi.

Sadanoumi (3-6) defeated Mitakeumi (4-5). Sadanoumi was able to get his favored migi-yotsu grip. This allowed him to swing Mitakeumi around, drive to the bales, and usher Mitakeumi out. Yorikiri.

Gonoyama (6-3) defeated Oshoumi (1-8). Oshoumi shifted to his right at the tachiai but still took the full force of Gonoyama’s charge. Oshoumi tried a slapdown but Gonoyama adjusted well and bulldozed Oshoumi out of the ring. Oshidashi.

Tomokaze (3-6) defeated Shonannoumi (2-7). Tomokaze kept shoving Shonannoumi back. Shonannoumi tried a lumbering last-moment pull and walked himself over the bales. Oshidashi.

Tokihayate (7-2) defeated Fujinokawa (6-3). Tokihayate was able to sneak that left-hand inside to join his right-hand inside. The double-inside grip, morozashi, helped him corral Fujikawa, drive him to the edge and force him over. Yorikiri.

Roga (5-4) defeated Nishikifuji (6-3). Roga held Nishikifuji’s advance as he tried to get a belt grip that never came. Nishikifuji charged forward and Roga slipped to his left and slapped Nishikifuji down. Hatakikomi.

Shishi (3-6) defeated Chiyoshoma (5-4). Chiyoshoma grabbed Shishi’s arm and tried to pull Shishi forward. But Shishi gave Chiyoshoma the lumber and drove him over the bales. Yorikiri.

Ichiyamamoto (5-4) defeated Ryuden (4-5). Ichiyamamoto’s first slapdown attempt failed. He moved inside to get a belt grip but them pulled again and slapped Ryuden down. It seemed to me that he used his legit yotsu skills as a feint to sucker Ryuden for the slapdown. Hatakikomi.

Abi (4-5) defeated Kotoshoho (5-4). Abi kept up his tsuppari and eventually blasted Kotoshoho over the bales. Abi’s excellent footwork rendered Kotoshoho’s shifting and pulling strategy completely ineffective. Kotoshoho kept absorbing Abi’s thrusts with his heels along the tawara until Abi shoved him over the bales. Oshidashi.

Churanoumi (5-4) defeated Tobizaru (4-5). Tobizaru tried a pull and slapdown but Churanoumi shifted right along the bales with Tobizaru to shove him over. Oshidashi.

Onokatsu (4-5) defeated Kinbozan (3-6). Onokatsu kept his head down and stayed lower than Kinbozan to get the leverage he needed to win. He chugged forward and forced Kinbozan over the bales. Yorikiri.

Halftime

Atamifuji (6-3) defeated Daieisho (5-4). Atamifuji charged forward and forced Daieisho over the bales. Daieisho tried a last second shift along the bales but it was poorly timed. Oshidashi.

Midorifuji (4-5) defeated Shodai (3-6). Shodai chugged forward and looked like he had Midorifuji at the edge. Midorifuji was able to grab Shodai’s right arm, shift left, and haul Shodai over the bales. A crowd-pleasing amiuchi.

Ura (4-5) defeated Wakamotoharu (4-5). Ura took a bruising from Wakamotoharu’s tsuppari but stayed in it. He eventually found an opening to grab at Wakamotoharu’s leg. That forced Wakamotoharu to pull up and move back. Ura chased and forced him over the bales. Yorikiri.

Kirishima (5-4) defeated Hakuoho (3-6). Hakuoho charged forward as Kirishima slid left along the bales. Hakuoho never established “contain” on his right. Kirishima slipped to the side again and slapped Hakuoho down over the bales. Hatakikomi.

Wakatakakage (4-5) defeated Takayasu (5-4). Takayasu fought back admirably after Wakatakakage shifted left and drove Takayasu quickly to the bales. Takayasu resisted and charged back toward center. Takayasu tried to use his left-hand inside to haul Wakatakakage over but his center of gravity was too high and he could not get leverage. WTK continued to press forward and threw Takayasu with that right hand over-arm grip. Uwatenage.

Sanyaku

Oho (4-5) defeated Tamawashi (4-5). Steady tsuppari from both men to start this brawl. Tamawashi charged forward on the attack but Oho hit him in the shoulder and shoved him hard to the left. Tamawashi got turned and that spelled trouble. Tamawashi spun back around but now had to fight back from the bales. Oho used the opportunity to pull and slap Tamawashi down. Hatakikomi.

Aonishiki (8-1) defeated Hiradoumi (2-7). Hiradoumi spent the second half of this bout perched on one leg, somehow avoiding a fall. Aonishiki had a rock-solid left-hand inside grip. He drove face first into Hiradoumi’s trunk and forced him to fall out of the ring. Yoritaoshi.

Kotozakura (4-5) defeated Takanosho (2-7). Takanosho charged forward into a retreating Kotozakura but Kotozakura danced left along the bales and slapped Takanosho down to his right. Hatakikomi.

Hoshoryu (7-2) defeated Yoshinofuji (6-3). Hoshoryu turned Yoshinofuji around by shifting to his right while hitting Yoshinofuji’s left shoulder. Hoshoryu came in from behind and looked to drive Yoshinofuji out. When Yoshinofuji put his legs out to brace against the tawara, Hoshoryu reversed and threw him to the ground. Okurinage.

Onosato (9-0) defeated Oshoma (3-6). Blink and you missed it as Onosato shoved Oshoma back and off the dohyo. Well, ok. I admit, two shoves. One to force him to the bales and one to send him over. Oshidashi.

Wrap-up

Onosato leads, Aonishiki follows with one loss. Our chase group has been whittled down to Hoshoryu and Tokihayate on two losses.

Onosato was as dominant as Oshoma was absolutely clueless. Oshoma demonstrated nothing today. If he had hoped for some tawara dancing or sukuinage, he did not show it. His decision making in this bout seemed limited to finding a spot to land. Aonishiki, on the other hand, picked up his kachi-koshi in yet another great, entertaining bout. At the moment, he’s the only one ensuring this is not a runaway yusho for Onosato.

Our sanyaku bouts tomorrow start with Takanosho against Ura, followed by Takayasu against Kirishima. Then, Aonishiki will fight Tamawashi in a headline bout. Aonishiki leads their head-to-head with two wins and no losses. An upset from the Iron Eagle would be big.

Kotozakura will fight Oho. Oho would love to play spoiler and move closer to kachi-koshi himself. Both men stand on five losses and neither have faced the Yokozuna yet. So, tomorrow’s loser will have to upset a Yokozuna in order to earn kachi-koshi. These guys are both in serious danger.

Onosato then fights Yoshinofuji in their first meeting. Yoshinofuji’s calf was taped up again today and Hoshoryu took advantage of the fact that Yoshinofuji couldn’t use that right leg. Onosato will be looking at tomorrow as an easy win, if Yoshinofuji shows up.

Finally, Hoshoryu will face Oshoma. Hoshoryu has lost twice but has looked really solid for the last several days. This is perfect timing for someone out of the blue to pull something surprising on the edge if Hoshoryu is over eager or not careful.


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24 thoughts on “Kyushu 2025: Day Nine

  1. From the kindergarten seats (seriously, the chair seats in Fukuoka are frickin tiny) I felt the most exciting action was mostly in Makushita. There was a double monoii bout where it looked like a possible second rematch was coming, and an insane tsuppari battle in one of the other Makushita bouts.

    The top division bouts weren’t bad, per se, just not as memorable.

    Oh and Onosato kinda stumbled during his dohyo-iri. That got a laugh from the crowd.

    • His dohyo-iri is not as passionate as Hakuho’s. Hakuho took that seriously. With some of these guys, it feels like they’re going through the motions.

      • Hoshoryu took his seriously immediately after Onosato’s.

        As good as Onosato has been in the victory department, it feels like he phones in a lot of the stuff more than one would “expect” of the rank.

        As an aside, I noticed yesterday that NHK now puts the highlight show up on demand as soon as it is first broadcast instead of waiting until almost the next day. Was able to catch up on the action that happened while I was traveling when I woke up yesterday morning.

  2. Hoshoryu is still pissed off about the henka it seems. He takes no nonsense.
    Where is that Shodai of september. You should have imagined, he would take it to his home town.
    But no.

  3. Aonishiki: not extravagant, not showy, just determined fundamentals. A pleasure to watch.

    Tamawashi: I don’t like him…but have a grudging respect. He fought well today and is always dangerous.

    Hoshoryu: looking good now, no question about it. Throwing his opponents around every which way imaginable.

    Kotozakura: two days in a row with lucky wins. Prospects? I’d say not so good!

    • This time for once I‘m glad that Kotozakura‘s prospects seem bad, because a kadoban ozeki maybe would help Aonishiki’s ozeki chances!

  4. So far Aonishiki has had issues with the big guys.
    I hope he has trained with this in mind.
    We will see tomorrow vs Tamawashi.

  5. In the last few tournaments, Hakuoho lost many times in exactly the same way against various opponents as he did against Kirishima yesterday. How come Isegahama oyakata are not teaching him how to avoid this situation?

    • Perhaps it’s a case of the Isegahama stable being too large given the absorption of the shuttered Miyagano stable, and he’s not getting the quality instruction time that he needs? Like with anything when groups get larg(er) there is more complexity and can be harder to manage. I really feel bad for this entire situation and the stress and strain that was placed on the innocents…. Clearly Hakuoho is an incredibly strong, talented and skilled rikishi, and he’s still quite young, so hoping for better results for him in future.

  6. Ichiyamamoto continues to level up! I am quite impressed that he’s broadened his “style of Sumo” over the last year or so, beyond his usual tsuppari moves. When I first saw him going for the belt, I thought I was seeing things, haha. Glad he’s keeping his opponents guessing! Hoping he gets his KK this time!

  7. Weirdly, Onosato’s matches keep reminding me of Kazunofuji v Dewanojo. Aside from Ura it seems like people have tried to launch into Onosato like they’re doing butsukari practice and invariably being shoved out. Or maybe less inflammatory, it seems like people have been putting themselves in a position where Onosato’s brand of sumo is strongest. Playing his game by his rules.

    I’m looking forward to what Aonishiki will do. I hope he’s been working on a plan since he was sort of run over last tournament.

  8. Thanks for the additional video link! I recently got quite lost on the site while searching for earlier basho days…

    Nice stuff from Abi two days in a row. Seems he got a vitamine shot from somewhere.

  9. Summer 2025
    Atamifuji: Can’t seem to figure this out boss. I just want to be a mawashi 力士.
    Terunofuji: $%#@! Are you nuts? YOU WEIGH 400 POUNDS. Don’t go for the belt, go out and crush people!

    November Basho
    Atamifuji: Hey, this works!
    Terunofuji: rolls eyes

  10. It looks like Shishi’s latest tactic is to copy Aonishiki .. i.e. keep his head below the chin of his opponent .. which is tricky given his sizie ..
    I was surprised by KZK’s nimble moves on the bales v Oho .. those legs are not that hurt .
    When is the last time Takanosho put two good basho’s back to back ? ..
    Hoshoryu should set his basho alarm clock to two days early .. he has a habit of starting slow .. but is up to speed now .. Yoshinofuji had more moves and feints thrown at him in a few seconds than he thought possible .. his head was swimming after getting dumped on his keester..
    Maybe Aonishiki could dive at Onosato’s knees + lock them together so he can’t get that great foot work engaged ..
    Is there a henka virus in the air? .. it seems to be the season

  11. Ura’s right hand came awfully close to the dirt when he ducked down for that leg pick. I watched it frame by frame from four angles and I can confirm… he did not touch down.

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