The official rankings for the November tournament will be released Sunday or Monday, depending on where you are in the world. Fun fact—the banzuke is actually drawn up at a meeting on the Wednesday after the previous basho concludes, but it remains a closely guarded secret for several weeks; only the promotions to Juryo and any Ozeki and Yokozuna promotions are announced right away. In advance of the real thing, here is my guess. Scroll down for a few comments, which build on my banzuke preview post from a few weeks ago.
As mentioned in the preview post, I view K1w/M1e as a coin flip between Takayasu and Hakuoho. Further down, Atamifuji, Onokatsu, and Churanoumi could be rearranged in any order. There are huge gaps at M8e and M9w, which I’ve opted to fill with Ichiyamamoto and Tobizaru, though one could easily swap them. And there are many plausible solutions for the area from M11 to M14. In particular, Kotoshoho and Gonoyama are major wildcards.
This summer, Tatsunami beya opened its virtual doors to foreign fans for the first time. They currently offer two subscription plans and it appears two more subscription options are being designed. The cheapest option is a $5/month plan which offers “behind the scenes” video content. There is not a lot there, currently. The other option is $20/mo and includes the video content as well as a banzuke for each tournament — and supposedly an option to watch keiko sessions.
Since I have not been to Japan for a spell, I have not been able to take full advantage of membership and watch keiko. There is a warning that keiko might not be open and even if it is there is limited seating available, anyway. If I get a chance to attend, I will post about it then.
Tatsunami-beya is located north of the popular tourist sites of Asakusa, so I do imagine this will be a relatively convenient for a lot of sumo fans who make the trip to Tokyo. If there isn’t space available, there is plenty to see and do in the area. It would suck to travel out to, say, Saitama prefecture only to be told “no room for you.”
I say this hike is doable but I walk, a lot. It’s a 1.6km, 24-minute walk to Sensoji from Tatsunami. That’s farther than I remember but I had walked from Ryogoku, over the bridge to Kuramae, then up to Tatsunami and back down to Senso-ji. Just for fun. Anyway, your mileage may vary.
Back on topic, I signed up for the club because I have been wanting to join an official support club for a while and since this one offered the banzuke mailing, I thought other readers and sumo fans would be interested and I could share my experience. It’s the heya of Yokozuna Hoshoryu and Meisei. They have a relatively active social media presence on YouTube.
I got my first banzuke a couple of weeks ago – for this past Aki basho – and it seems like a great opportunity to discuss the banzuke in more detail. I thought this might be Hoshoryu’s first win as Yokozuna but it turned out to go the way of Onosato in rather dramatic fashion. It was certainly a memorable event.
The Ranking Sheet
The kanji characters for banzuke are, 番付. You will sometimes see it called the banzuke-hyo or 番付表, which basically means the ranking list. Nominally, most people are interested in the ranking list of the wrestlers but there is quite a bit more to it. The wrestlers are not the only names listed. I like to think of it as “the credits” for the entire show that the Kyokai puts on for us. The whole production is here.
Before mailing out ranking sheets, the heya will stamp it with the name of the heya. I’ve seen where some of the small heya will also use highlighter to indicate which wrestlers are from that heya. Here, you can see my banzuke marked with the stamp for Tatsunami-beya (立浪部屋).
Professional Sumo is an entertainment industry. The Sumo Association exists to sell tickets and put butts in seats — or at least on nice, throwable cushions. Just as credits roll at the end of a movie as a way of acknowledging all of the people involved in the production, the banzuke exists as a way to give credit where it is due.
This post will not delve into the evolution of the sport or even the banzuke itself. I just want you to be able to know what you have in front of you. While wrestlers form the bulk of the ranking sheet, the other members of the association are listed. Notably, the referees (gyoji), the ringside judges (shinpan), the bout callers (yobidashi), as well as the guys who are usually behind the scenes, like the hair-dressers (tokoyama), and the sewanin, wakamonogashira and the other sumo elders.
A quick note about sources for this article. I am pulling from the Association website and will provide appropriate links for references since fluctuate with time. The Japanese-language side will help you decipher kanji, even for newbies to the Japanese language. But I’ll also have links to the English-language side page for the various profiles and such. It will help if you can at least read hiragana because shikona and elder names are usually listed with the hiragana. Ring names are notoriously difficult, even for native Japanese to keep up with.
Format
Keep in mind that Japanese is often read from right-to-left and top-to-bottom. Those of you who are learning the language already know that much of what we use today is written left-to-right. But traditionally Japanese was read right-to-left, like in newspapers. And that’s how it is done for these banzuke.
So, structurally the ranking sheet is split with the right half showing the East wrestlers and the left half showing the West. You will be starting on the right and working your way across. The kanji character for East (東) is higashi and that’s at the top of the right column. Nishi means West (西) and is at the top of the left column. In the center, between the two sides, there is a slim column with other details about the tournament and more in the bottom row, which we will get to later.
But first, let’s look at the East and West. The number of wrestlers fluctuates for any given tournament. The number of wrestlers in the top four divisions, however, are relatively fixed. Those numbers have been adjusted at different periods as recruitment swells or shrinks but will stay at these fixed levels for years without much change. Currently, (2025) the top Makuuchi division is set at 42 wrestlers with Juryo at 28, Makushita at 120 and Sandanme at 160.
The rest are mostly in Jonidan. Jonokuchi is the lowest division and is mainly for wrestlers who are just starting out in the sport. There are some wrestlers who do not appear on the banzuke, including recruits who have not completed maezumo or men recovering from injuries that have fallen out of the list of active wrestlers.
Wrestlers
Wrestlers are listed on this sheet in their official rank order for the tournament. Each wrestler’s full ring name (shikona) is preceded by his shusshin or hometown. The shusshin and shikona are written vertically, and in order from right to left. You will see the top division wrestlers…at the top and in bold. The first row of wrestlers is Makuuchi. If you are a new or casual sumo fan, these might be the only guys you know. They will likely be the only guys you see on TV or on the internet and the various highlights shows. The NHK and NHK World broadcasts only show the men in here, in the top division.
I want to give a brief note about these ring names. The full ring name includes a family name and a “given” name (what we in the West often call a “first name”) but we usually only see and hear wrestlers referred to by that name. I specifically try to avoid using the term “First Name” because in the Japanese convention, family name comes first and it might get confusing. So, for Endo, his full shikona is Endo Shota. I picked Endo specifically because he is one of the rare wrestlers who has always fought under his real name. He was born as Endo Shota and he fights as Endo Shota.
The vast majority of sumo wrestlers take an assumed name, at least for the family name. Some keep their given name, others change that, as well. There is some superstition around names and the number of brush strokes, so it is fairly common for a wrestler to change either part of the shikona. It’s also relatively common for a wrestler to change their shikona when they reach certain milestones, like promotion to Juryo, Ozeki, or Yokozuna.
There are also naming conventions associated with some stables. Wrestlers in Sadogatake stable take a shikona with the Koto- prefix. Current Ozeki Kotozakura’s full shikona is Kotozakura Masakatsu. He started his sumo career fighting as Kotokamitani because his real family name is Kamitani. He just stuck the koto prefix on the front. When he was promoted to Juryo he changed his shikona to Kotonowaka Masakatsu. Upon further promotion to Ozeki, he took the shikona Kotozakura.
Since there’s a family name and a given name, there will be at least two characters for each shikona on the banzuke but often four, five, or six characters. The first and last characters are written in nice rows of uniform width and height across this page. This makes it really easy for me to spot guys with short names and simple characters first. Guys with longer names and more complicated kanji seem to blend into a wall of ink, especially as the writing is more and more condensed.
On a banzuke, as in other things in life, size matters. The biggest names are for the biggest ranks and that starts with the Yokozuna and Ozeki. On this banzuke, we have a rare instance where Hoshoryu holds the Yokozuna-Ozeki title, so the ranks are squeezed together. Shikona start large and steadily get smaller as we move to the left, out of the sanyaku ranks and into the maegashira.
Holup! There are maegashira on the second row! Did they run out of room? No. These are Juryo wrestlers. The term maegashira is used here as a legacy term for wrestlers which have finished maezumo. After Juryo, the divisions and ranks are not differentiated for makushita on down. They’re just indicated with a stylized kanji for “same,” (同), or its simplified variant.
Referees and Judges
Smack in the middle of the banzuke, between the wrestler lists, is a column with more details about the tournament. At the top of this column are the characters, “蒙御免” (ごめんこうむる) or “received permission,” followed by the date. Historically, sumo was done to raise money. It was banned by the Tokugawa but those wrestlers who relied on the income pressed for permission to hold tournaments. So, the term carries over onto today’s ranking sheet — smack in the middle at the top.
Remember, we’re reading from right to left, so we’ve got the year first, then the dates of shonichi and senshuraku. Next is the location and then the announcement of the event: “a sumo tournament will be held (大相撲挙行仕候)”.
Moving down the column are the referees or Gyoji (行司), listed by rank. Remember, you will see these characters backwards on the banzuke because they’re read from right-to-left. There are six rows of referee names with the highest ranked “tate-gyoji” on top in larger characters. Then we get the shimpan, (審判) with two rows of judges’ names. Shimpan are sumo elders with the rank of i’in. So, on the banzuke they’re listed here as shimpan i’in (審判委員). There are twenty judges in total working ringside in groups of five. When you’re watching the bouts, two of the shimpan sit just off the dohyo behind the gyoji with one on each remaining side of the dohyo.
As a little tidbit, the shimpan opposite the gyoji is the head of that group and will be in charge of explaining any mono-ii, or judges conferences. The shimpan behind the gyoji and on his right side is the time-keeper. He’s charged with keeping things moving along. You’ll see him checking his watch, make hand gestures to keep others aware of how much time has elapsed between bouts or in those rare occasions that a bout is going long and the wrestlers might need a water break.
Other Association Members
Underneath the list of shimpan they have the name of the sumo association and its address in Tokyo. On either side, the bottom row contains the lowest ranked wrestlers on the right, the rest of the names of Sumo Association elders, the ring-callers (呼出し), and hair-stylists (床山). Each of these groups also indicate rank. You’ll probably not be able to easily read the names of the yobidashi and tokoyama but you will be able to tell which ones are the highest ranking because the characters will be slightly larger.
Sumo elders are former wrestlers who own or lease a share of stock (kabu) in the Association. I am not going to dive too deeply into the Association membership here but among the sumo elders, there are a number of specific ranks. The Board Members (理事) are on the right side, starting with the Board Chairman, currently Hakkaku Nobuyoshi. Then there are a few vice Board Members (副理事) and other Executive Association members (役員待遇) in “bold.” As we continue to move left, there are Association Members (委員), Chiefs (主任), Elders (年寄), and retired advisors (参与). The shimpan are not re-listed in this section. In rank order, they fall in with the i’in, as I mentioned above.
On the left side of the right column there is a list for a small group of seiwanin and wakaimonogashira. These men are former wrestlers who are not elders since they do not own a kabu. Like elders, yobidashi, and tokoyama they are associated with a heya and continue to work within the organization but not as owners.
Squeezed into the bottom left there is a phrase that references the maezumo wrestlers not listed on the banzuke (此外中前相撲東西ニ御座候) and a blessing that hopes the tournament is successful for thousands of years to come (千穐万歳大々叶).
Extra notes
There are a few other interesting items to note on this particular banzuke:
For one, Hoshoryu is listed as Yokozuna-Ozeki. He holds both ranks on this banzuke. While it’s not necessary for a Yokozuna to be active, every tournament requires two Ozeki – one on the East and one on the West. Hoshoryu is a Yokozuna but in order to meet this technicality, he is also listed as Ozeki. Kotozakura is Ozeki on the East.
Ishizaki’s name change is called out, as we see in this image. When he was promoted to Juryo he announced a new Shikona. In keeping with the Takasago naming convention using an Asa-prefix, he is now Asasuiryu. His previous shikona, Ishizaki, is noted above his new shikona.
Tiny writing next to the names of the Top-Ranked referees indicate which number the line of gyoji they are. The current Kimura Shonosuke is the 39th Kimura Shonosuke, for example.
Wrap-up
I hope you found this to be a helpful guide to the sumo ranking sheet. If you have one of these banzuke, or are looking for one, you should know where to look for the various background details, like date and location. There are a lot of tangential topics which I will cover in more depth in the future.
The Aki basho provided a lot of great storylines, culminating with a long-awaited showdown between two Yokozuna on the final day. With the results in the books, let’s take our preliminary early look at how they’re likely to reshuffle the rankings for the Kyushu basho.
Yokozuna and Ozeki
No changes here. After finishing with identical 13-2 records, the two Yokozuna will retain their spots, with Onosato on the East side and Hoshoryu on the West, though a different result in the playoff would have caused them to swap places if the precedent from the last such playoff in 2009, won by Asashoryu against Hakuho, is still valid. And Kotozakura (9-5-1) remains our sole Ozeki for now, as both Sekiwake disappointingly posted losing records and will have to restart their quests from scratch.
Sekiwake
Both Wakatakakage and Kirishima went 6-9, which, Takayasu’s exceptional treatment after May notwithstanding, should see both back in the rank-and-file in November. So we need two new Sekiwake. K1w Aonishiki posted his 4th straight 11-4 record, which would have been good enough to force an extra Sekiwake slot if one hadn’t come open, and he will easily take the East Sekiwake rank. His 22 wins over 2 basho while ranked M1e and Komusubi have opened the conversation about his Ozeki chances after November; I won’t add to the speculation here other than to note that 11 wins will be needed at a minimum, and that it may take a very impressive result (yusho?) for the JSA not to say “well done, kid, now do it again in January.” The West Sekiwake slot should go to Oho, who went 10-5 at M2w and last held the third-highest rank in March; this will mark the second time he goes straight from maegashira to Sekiwake, bypassing Komusubi, a rank he’s never held.
Komusubi
This is where things start to get tricky. There are three plausible candidates for two spots, and little chance that a third slot will be created. The first candidate is M7e Takanosho, whose 12-3 record gives him a really strong case. The other two are M2e Hakuoho (8-7) and an incumbent, K1e Takayasu (7-8). Both mathematically deserve to be ranked M1e, and exact precedents are few, not recent, and conflicting. It’s not impossible that both could be ranked Komusubi at the expense of Takanosho, but this seems highly unlikely, so we can pencil in Takanosho at K1e and then flip a coin to see whether they opt to give Hakuoho his long-awaited sanyaku debut or demote Takayasu only half a rank, allowing him to stay at Komusubi for the 4th consecutive basho despite two losing records in three tournaments.
Makuuchi Demotions and Promotions
Two top-division wrestlers are guaranteed to be demoted to Juryo—M16w Nishikigi (2-13) and absent M12e Takerufuji. Their spots will go to J3w Nishikifuji (11-4), returning for the first time since his March injury, and J1w Oshoumi (9-6), making his Makuuchi debut. There’s one more incumbent with a (barely) demotable record: newcomer M17w Hitoshi (7-8). The Juryo wrestler with the third-strongest promotion case is our old friend J2w Chiyoshoma (9-6), who dropped to division two after his 1-14 performance in July. I think that his case is good enough that they’ll make the exchange, but this is far from certain. There are two more Juryo men who posted records that are numerically promotable: J5w Fujiseiun (10-5) and the division rookie and yusho winner J11w Asahakuryu (13-2). Unfortunately for them, it looks like there’s no room at the inn: the incumbent next-closest to demotion is J13e Meisei (5-10), whose rank and record place him right at M18e, so he should be safe by the skin of his teeth.
Banzuke Conundrums
There are some tricky decisions in addition to deciding who gets K1w. Several high-ranked maegashira, including Gonoyama, Kotoshoho, Abi, Ichiyamamoto and Atamifuji, posted double-digit losing records, making it tricky to decide how far to drop them. There’s also an unusually high number of wrestlers with 7-8 records (10, one short of the record), and we have to decide who stays in place and who drops, and by how much. There’s also a “hole” in the middle of the maegashira ranks that will require rather extreme over-promotions and under-demotions to fill. If you want to try your hand at this, see if you can figure out whom to place at M8e and M9w. In general, with the two Yokozuna and a handful of other high-performing wrestlers racking up a lot of wins, the rest of the rikishi have to soak up the losses, so this is going to be a “lucky” banzuke, with almost everyone ranked above where their rank-record combination would suggest.
Juryo Demotions and Promotions
Here, we have a lot more certainty. The promotions from Makushita to Juryo have been announced, with Kitanowaka and Wakanosho returning to the paid ranks and Nagamura (now Himukamaru) and Goshima (now Fujiryōga) making their salaried debuts. You can read more about their journeys in my Makushita posts. Takakento just missed out and will try again, probably from the very top rank, to earn a return exactly two years after a knee injury dropped him from Juryo to Sandanme.
The corresponding demotions are not announced, but we can be certain about three of them and reasonably confident in the fourth. J10w Miyanokaze (3-12) will return to Makushita after three basho in Juryo. Absent Endo will also drop, and it’s not clear whether he will attempt a comeback from what sounds like surgeries on both knees. And of course we already know that Takarafuji has chosen retirement over demotion. The most likely 4th demotion is J13e Kyokukaiyu (6-9), whose first sekitori basho was not a success. Assuming they do the math right, J14e Shiden (7-8) should be just barely safe, but you never know with this banzuke committee.
The full banzuke will be announced on October 27, two weeks before the start of the Kyushu basho, and I’ll try to post my full banzuke guess closer to that time. Meanwhile, let me know what you think in the comments.
After the Nagoya basho, I reviewed the performance of the wrestlers who debuted at Ms60 under the Makushita tsukedashi system after it was changed at the end of 2023. Let’s take a brief look at how our protagonists fared at Aki.
Winning records
After the blazing start to his career, M6w Kusano hit a bit of a wall in upper Makuuchi but won his final bout to finish 8-7, posting his 10th winning record in 10 basho. He will be rewarded with yet another career-high rank, at which he should face a full slate of sanyaku opponents. J4w Mita got off to a fast 7-0 start and looked like he could improve on his 11-4 July yusho and easily earn promotion, but he went 2-6 the rest of the way and finished 9-6, which will bump him up but won’t be enough to make Makuuchi. Ms5w Goshima (just renamed Fujiryoga) took full advantage of his rank just inside the promotion zone, going 6-1 to earn sekitori promotion after only four basho; his only loss was in a hard-fought belt bout with former maegashira Kitanowaka. Ms22e Hanaoka, who debuted in May, went 4-3 to post his third-straight kachi-koshi. The most recent debutant, Ms40w Ryusho, finished with his second-straight 5-2 record. And Sd26e Kazuma, who got injured in his first basho in July 2024, continued his comeback by adding the Sandanme yusho to the Jonokuchi yusho he claimed in May; his record during his return is now 20-1, and he should be ranked right around Ms15 in November. Finally, as a bonus, there’s Ms34w Ikarigata, Fujinokawa’s brother. He debuted as a Sandanme tsukedashi in January, went 6-1 in each of his two fourth-division basho, had a 3-4 setback in March in his first Makushita appearance, but has since recovered with consecutive 5-2 scores which should see him rise to around Ms20.
Losing Records
J12w Asasuiryu (the brother of Asakoryu; both started their careers under their family name Ishizaki) went 7-8 in his sekitori debut. He did do just enough to earn a second chance in Juryo; in fact, he’s likely to stay at the same rank. Ms6w Fukuzaki, who debuted alongside heya-mate Goshima and had kept pace with him until this basho, hit the single-digit Makushita wall hard, finishing with a 2-5 record that’ll send him ten or so ranks lower to regroup. And Ms9e Matsui, the first in this group to debut back in March 2024, posted his second make-koshi in his second basho in the single digits, going 3-4. He’s still only 20, and on the small side at 118 kg, so he has time to develop.
Absences
Ms14e Gyotoku looked like a beast in his first two basho, with a combined 11-3 record. He lost a hard-fought bout to Kotokenryu on Day 2, and then failed to appear for his scheduled Day 4 bout. I just rewatched his Day 2 loss, and there was no sign of injury. The only information I could find on Sumo Forum was that he had apparently been sick before the tournament, and may still not have been feeling well enough to continue. Hopefully we’ll see him back and fully fit in November; he was ranked high enough that even a winless record won’t drop him out of the division. Finally, Sd30w Kakueizan (originally Urayama) never fought in July, apparently sustaining a knee injury in training right before the tournament. He did not appear in September, and I haven’t seen any news about the timeline for his return.