New stars rising on the sumo horizon!

While having the privilege to witness the East Japan University sumo championships, it’s tempting to try to guess tomorrow’s stars. Doubtlessly, some of them have a bright future before them.

I’m grabbing the opportunity to set my eyes elsewhere, mainly in the upper makushita ranks. Which sekitori hopefuls are on their way to juryo, if not higher ? Who are our best hopes ? Who can match Shodai’s achievement ?

Let’s try to figure this out.

1. Shiraishi Masahito

Shiraishi is the first name that springs to my mind. Alongside Azumaryu and Fujiazuma, his situation has been highlighted last month, as the whole Tamanoi beya was prevented from competing at the Aki basho, due to Covid concerns. The question was, of course, if being kyujo the whole fifteen days would result in a huge demotion. Luckily for them, it was decided the rikishi would just keep their current rankings.

That means Shiraishi will have another shot to enter the sekitori ranks, currently holding the fourth highest makushita rank (makushita 2 West). He entered sumo being sandamne tsukedashi 100, won 7-0 outright, then went 5-2, 4-3, 6-1, 2-5 (his only make koshi), 6-1 and 6-1!

Shiraishi (right) being brought down by Terunofuji in July 2019

Prior to that forced break, the Tokyo-to born wrestler’s rise seemed inevitable. Aged 24, he’s doubtlessly one guy to follow.

2. Suzuki Yuto

The second wrestler I’d think of would undoubtedly Suzuki. He’s from quite a small heya, Fujishima, where’s he’s actually the second highest ranked sumo wrestler, after Bushozan (who I also could have included in that list, by the way!). He’s a nice baby – 181 cm for 145 kgs at his beginning.

Suzuki enterd mae zumo recently, in January 2019, and was ranked jonokuchi 20 in March. For the record – and the comparison is interesting, Terunofuji started his renaissance the same basho, ranked jonidan 48. Suzuki seemed to follow the Mongolian’s path, not conceding a single make koshi along the way (4-3, 5-2, 6-1, 6-1, 4-3, 4-3, 4-3, 6-1, 5-2)! Terunofuji’s last basho – so far – outside the salaried ranks took place in November 2019, then ranked makushita 10. At that time, Suzuki was sitting in the banzuke ranked sandanme 10.  

Aged only 20, he’ll find himself in the upper makushita ranks, and I’m eager to see him show his fledging skills.

3. Kitanowaka Daisuke

I could replicate much of what I said concerning Suzuki – in a slightly improved way, in fact. As heavy as Suzuki, but eight centimeters lighter at his start, he, too, has not conceded a single make koshi. His meteoric rise started two months later – maezumo in March 2019, jonokuchi 16 in May. He conceded just fifteen  losses overall, and will already compete in the upper makushita ranks in November, after a 4-3 winning record in Aki.

Kitanowaka Daisuke

He belonjgs to Hakkaku beya, alongside Okinoumi and Hokutofuji. Without doubt, he’ll benefit from both sekitori’s experience, in order to break through sumo’s highest ranks.

4. Yoshii Ko

Just a bit further down the banzuke, is sitting Yoshii. He belongs to the Tokitsukaze stable, which has recently been on the spotlights – the Shodai – Yutakayama also belongs to that stable.

By the way, it seems I’m not the first one to dedicate some of my time to him – credit to Chris Sumo for that video :

His measurements reminds me a bit of Takakeisho – 177 cm for 150 kg at his beginning.

His overall record is also spotless – no make koshi. He finished the Aki basho with a 4-3 record, ranked makushita 44. What’s more impressive, he’s only 17 !

His elders may be one step forward, but it’s fair to say he’s undoubtedly one of tomorrow’s talents. Good luck, Yoshii !

5. Murata Ryo

Murata sadly allows me to open a consequent chapters on young hopes being hit by injuries. Indeed, wounds are inherent to sumo, and can stop any rikishi’s career at any time. Thinking of Terunofuji, Ura and others is straightforward, but many brillant young guys are easily forgotten, without having been able to show their skills at the highest level. These sad circumstances prevent me from mentionning the likes of Ryuko (currently makushita 20) and many others, as having more successful futures – but who knows.

Going back to Murata, the path he followed is kinda impressing. Propelled to sumo as sandanme tsukedashi 100, he quickly rose to the very first makushita rank, before sustaining grave injuries. As a consequence, he fell right to jonokuchi – after one failed comeback – a division he never met !

That was too little to scare the Mie-ken born wrestler, though : a little bit more than a year later, he’s back to the upper makushita ranks (Ms 16 during the Aki basho), thanks to 7-0, 7-0 (that helps), 5-2, 6-1, 4-3 and 4-3 records.

He’s 26, but obviously still has a lot to offer.

Of course, my list isn’t exhaustive, and we might well see another breakthrough during the coming months.

I’m also keeping an eye on Kamito Daiki, who recently celebrated his 25th birthday.

Finally, I’d mention…

6. Onosho Fumiya

Wait, Onosho ? THE Onosho ?

Absolutely !

Emulating Shodai’s remarkable rise? Onosho Fumiya

As a complement on my last article about Shodai’s ozeki promotion, I’d like to add a few lines about Onosho. I feel these lines were missing.

Indeed, Shodai and Onosho’s careers have followed quite a similar path – until now. Just like the newly promoted ozeki, Onosho quickly through the ranks from jonokuchi. True, he spent some time in juryo, with one downstep to the non salaried ranks. But it took just three basho from his makuuchi debut, in May 2017, to attain san’yaku! Quite impressively, he performed three double digits records (10-5 thrice), before being propelled to komusubi.

As a matter of fact, Onosho never endured a make koshi over fifteen days, in san’yaku. Here’s the sad part : he seemed to suffer from a serious injury sustained in January 2018, which eventually provoked demotion from makuuchi to juryo. If Onosho bounced back without much trouble, thanks to a 12-3 juryo yusho, he has stayed quite anonymously in the maegashira ranks since, just like Shodai did.

If the Tokitsukaze resident suddenly saw his sumo quality improve dramatically, we can only wish similar fortunes to Onosho.

Hakkeyoi !

Do you speak Shodai ?

There’s obviously been a lot of talks about Shodai’s well deserved promotion to sumo’s second highest rank. Why not taking profit of the occasion to take time rediscovering the shin-ozeki ?

Let’s see whether what one might believe is true or not.

1. Shodai entered the banzuke as a makushita tsukedashi.

False. Shodai has been given the opportunity to enter the banzuke avoiding mae zumo, but wished to finish his university graduation. He became a university yokozuna, but failed to attain the amateur yokozuna rank, after a defeat against Endo. By that time, the opportunity to benefit from the makushita tsukedashi system had vanished.

2. He rose quickly through the lower divisions.

Absolutely. Before reaching a then career best maegashira 2, Shodai hadn’t suffered a single make koshi !

3. He was touted as the next big thing and has a bright future ahead of him.

Shodai has surely brought a lot of hope to his fans, after his makuuchi debut in January 2016. Though, he’ll turn 29 next month. True, it’s not that old. However, both other ozeki are quite younger : Asanoyama is 26, Takakeisho is only 24.

4. Shodai seems to have lost his way at some point.

It’s true, isn’t it ? Shodai reached the rank of sekiwake in January 2017, after just six basho in makuuchi, and without having been a komusubi before. For a san’yaku debut, Shodai fared reasonably well with a tight 7-8 make koshi – having beaten Kotoshogiku and Terunofuji, both then ozeki, in the process.

As cool as you can be: Shodai Naoya

The following basho, ranked komusubi, was disastrous, as Shodai managed to grab just four wins.

From there, Shodai spent seventeen straight tournaments down the maegashira ranks – from May 2017 to January 2020. He collected double digit wins twice (both times 10-5), and had another terrible basho, a 3-12 just one year ago ! From there, his sumo improved drastically : 11-4, 13-2, 8-7, 11-4 and 13-2.

5. He is known to be a giant-killer.

False. Shodai has earned just one kinboshi, during that long seventeen basho spent in a row down the maegashira ranks. He got that gold star against former yokozuna Harumafuji, in July of 2017.

His record against Hakuho isn’t so bad : three wins, including a fusensho and no kinboshi involved, and nine defeats.

Overall, Shodai has however struggled against the yokozuna: 1-7 against Kisenosato – he defeated him just once, before Kisenosato’s yokozuna promotion ; 1-6 against Harumafuji, and 0-13 against Kakuryu !

He fared sensibly better against the numerous ozeki he has faced – many of them, though, were far from their best physical condition. Indeed, if he struggled against Goeido (5-13), and trails against Takayasu (4-6), he has a positive balance against Tochinoshin (4-2, one fusen win), Terunofuji (5-4, two fusen win !), and holds 1-2 records against both Kotoshogiku and Asanoyama. All numbers exclude results obtained when his opponents had lost their ozeki rank.

And finally, Shodai is incredibly undefeated against ozeki Takakeisho (3-0) !

6. He’s known for his incredibly slow tachi-ai’s

Of course he is ! It looks like he’s getting blown away at every start, but he eventually absorbs his opponent’s collision, and just produces his sumo. Much to my delight, he’s a yotsu wrestler, by the way.

7. He’ll be the next yokozuna.

Good question. Time will tell…

Quiz ! How much can you remember about the Aki Basho 2020 ?

As usual, this year’s Aki basho has been truly wacky. It was really fun watching it, though. Let’s have more fun with our favorite wrestlers: how much can we remember about the just finished tournament?

1. “Wacky Aki” is called so for good reasons. How many rikishi could compete, but not the whole fifteen days?

Note: rikishi who have been kyujo the whole time (0-0-15) do not count!

a. Four

b. Six

c. Eight

d. Ten

2. How many of these rikishi have returned to compete, after sitting out at least one day ?

a. Three

b. Four

c. Five

d. Six

3. And how many wins have these rikishi snatched combined, after returning from injury ?

a. Two

b. Four

c. Six

d. Eight

4. Two rikishi have finished with a 11-4 record: the surprise newcomer Tobizaru, and…

a. Wakatakakage

b. Onosho

c. Asanoyama

d. Takanosho

A remarkable newcomer! Tobizaru Masaya

5. This one’s tricky: taking into account rikishi who fought the fifteen days only, who holds the worst record ?

a. Shohozan

b. Terutsuyoshi

c. Okinoumi

d. Endo

6. How many wins have earned the makuuchi newcomers combined?

a. Seventeen

b. Nineteen

c. Twenty one

d. Twenty three

7. Which one of these rikishi has got his kashi koshi ?

a. Kagayaki

b. Sadanoumi

c. Aoiyama

d. Tokushoryu

8. And which one could not avoid being make koshi ?

a. Ichinojo

b. Meisei

c. Kotoeko

d. Kaisei

9. Which rikishi has won the most consecutive bouts ?

a. Asanoyama

b. Tobizaru

c. Wakatakakage

d. Shodai

10. Once again, not counting rikishi who went kyujo at some point: who has had the poorest streak?

a. Myogiryu

b. Tokushoryu

c. Terutsuyoshi

d. Shohozan

11. How many yusho winners were fighting as maegashira ?

a. Four

b. Five

c. Six

d. Seven

12. That’s more than the number of yusho winners who were sitting in san’yaku.

a. True

b. False

13. Takakeisho came close, but the ozeki ended up one win away from matching Shodai’s record. During which tournament did an ozeki win the Cup for the last time?

a. September 2015

b. January 2016

c. September 2016

d. January 2017

Ozeki Takakeisho finished with a 12-3 record: good, but not enough to lift the Cup

14. Shodai’s first yusho earned him a deserved ozeki promotion. Since January 2018 (included), how many basho have seen a first time yusho winner ?

a. Five

b. Six

c. Seven

d. Eight

15. And finally, one question about juryo. Which one of this statements is true?

a. Akiseyama and Akua have ended up runner up

b. Chiyonokuni won the yusho with a three win margin

c. One makuuchi yusho winner was competing

d. Three rikishi have not competed due to the Covid crisis

Eyeing an impressive makuuchi return: Chiyonokuni Toshiki

The answers:

1. “Wacky Aki” is called so for good reasons. How many rikishi could compete, but not the whole fifteen days?

Note: rikishi who have been kyujo the whole time (0-0-15) do not count!

c. Eight. Endo, Terunofuji, Yutakayama, Kiribayama, Chiyotairyu, Kotoshogiku, Ishiura, Kyokutaisei.

Were excluded from that list: Hakuho, Kakuryu and Abi. Almost a third of the competitors went kyujo at some point. Seriously.

2. How many of these rikishi have returned to compete, after sitting out at least one day ?

a. Three. Ishiura, Kotoshogiku and Kiribayama. With various fortunes.

Will we ever see him again on a dohyo? Kotoshogiku Kazuhiro

3. And how many have these rikishi snatched combined, after returning from injury ?

d. Eight. Ishiura won four out of eight. Poor Kotoshogiku won just one out of eight. Kiribayama won of his three bouts!

4. Two rikishi have finished with a 11-4 record: the surprise newcomer Tobizaru, and…

a. Wakatakakage. The three others finished with a 10-5 record. The youngest Onami brother will be on the joi next tournament, meaning he’ll normally face yokozuna and ozeki opponents.

5. This one’s tricky: taking into account rikishi who fought the fifteen days only, who holds the worst record ?

c. Okinoumi. Yes, Okinoumi, Jason’s favorite rikishi. More awkwardly, the komusubi, with a forgettable 4-11 record. Shohozan and Terutsuyoshi went 5-10, while Endo went 3-9-3 and thus could not be counted.

6. How many wins have earned the makuuchi newcomers combined?

b. Nineteen. Tobizaru’s 11, and Hoshoryu’s 8. No make koshi between these two. Not bad.

A convincing makuuchi debut: Hoshoryu Tomokatsu

7. Which one of these rikishi has got his kashi koshi ?

a. Kagayaki, with an eigth win on senshuraku. The three others finished 7-8.

8. And which one could not avoid being make koshi ?

d. Kaisei, with a last day loss. Ichinojo and Kotoeko went 8-7, Meisei 9-6.

9. Which rikishi has won the most consecutive bouts ?

a. Asanoyama. The ozeki went 0-3, then 10-3, then 10-5. So that’s a ten win streak. Shodai and Wakatakakage have enjoyed a strong run as well, with eight win in a row. Tobizaru has won five in a row.

10. Once again, not counting rikishi who went kyujo at some point: who has had the poorest streak?

d. Shohozan. The poor veteran lost the first eight bouts. Myogiryu, Tokushoryu and Terutsuyoshi have lost six in a row. They did not end up that bad, though, with 6, 7 and 5 wins respectively.

11. How many yusho winners were fighting as maegashira ?

b. Five : Terunofuji, Tamawashi, Tochinoshin, Tokushoryu and Kotoshogiku.

12. That’s more than the number of yusho winners who were sitting in san’yaku.

b. False. San’yaku contained five grand champions as well: Hakuho, Kakuryu, Asanoyama, Takakeisho and Mitakeumi.

13. Takakeisho came close, but the ozeki ended up one win away from matching Shodai’s report. During which tournament did an ozeki win the Cup for the last time?

d. January 2017. It was Kisenosato’s long awaited first yusho win. Goeido won it in September 2016, Kotoshogiku in January 2016, and Kakuryu, already a yokozuna, in September 2015.

14. Shodai’s first yusho earned him a deserved ozeki promotion. Since January 2018 (included), how many basho have seen a first time yusho winner ?

c. Seven. Tochinoshin, Mitakeumi, Takakeisho, Tamawashi, Asanoyama, Tokushoryu and Shodai. Makuuchi chaos.

15. And finally, one question about juryo. Which one of this statements is true?

b. Chiyonokuni won the yusho with a three win margin. He finished with a remarkable 14-1 record. Akiseyama and Midorifuji were runner up, with a 11-4 record. Akua finished the tournament with 10 wins. No makuuchi yusho winner was competing.

Finally, only two juryo rikishi from Tamanoi beya were hospitalized: Azumaryu and Fujiazuma. Kizakiumi, on the other hand, wasn’t competing because of a persistant neck injury that, sadly, prompted him to retire.

All Tamanoi Beya Rikishi to Keep their Ranks

Remember the story of Tamanoi beya? It suffered a coronavirus outbreak shortly before the Aki basho, with many rikishi and staff testing positive, and all 28 rikishi in the heya were made to go kyujo for the entire September tournament as a precaution. This raised the question of what would happen to their positions on the banzuke: would the absences be treated as losses, as they normally are, meaning large drops in rank, or would special dispensation be given? At the time, the NSK said this issue would be considered after the basho.

Well, we have our answer. As could be inferred from the announcement of the Juryo promotions, everyone will keep their place, including the two sekitori, J7 Azumaryu and J14 Fujiazuma, and one resident of the Makushita promotion zone (Ms1-Ms5), Ms2 Shiraishi. I know there was a difference of opinion about how this should be handled, but personally I believe this was the right thing to do under the exceptional circumstances.

Here’s the story on NHK; it’s in Japanese, but you can get the gist with Google Translate.