After I posted my Makuuchi banzuke forecast, Josh asked if I could put together one for Juryo. Sure, I said, not realizing what I was getting myself into. It turns out that the Juryo banzuke is particularly tricky to piece together this time. The reason is that with the (at least) 5 best-performing rikishi being skimmed off to Makuuchi, there are not a lot of good records left in Juryo. Only four additional rikishi managed at least 9 wins, while five went 8-7, and most of these came from way down the rankings. As a result, there will be a lot of good banzuke luck to go around. Here’s my projection, but my confidence in it is not very high:
Green/red: winning/losing records in Juryo. Blue: Makuuchi demotions. Black: Makushita promotions.
Even with 3 top-division wrestlers dropping down to Juryo, and 4 Makushita men coming up, it’s tricky to fill out the remaining 21 ranks without promoting rikishi with losing records, and I wonder if the banzuke commitee might be forced to relax this constraint. To make the banzuke work, I left the 5 rikishi with minimal 7-8 losing records at their current rank, and many of those with 6-9 records only went down a rank. I’ve also made no effort to interleave the Makushita promotions into the ranks, leaving them at the bottom.
Some notable rankings: Shimanoumi and Chiyomaru separated themselves from everyone else, and assuming that the banzuke committee leaves them in Juryo this time, they will be in pole position for promotion with winning records at Haru. Tachiai favorite Enho is projected to receive a generous bump from M8 to M3, and is also in good position to try to earn promotion to the top division. The Makuuchi dropouts—Kotoyuki, Daiamami, and Daishomaru—will be fortunate to be ranked this high, and can keep their visits to Juryo short with strong performances in Osaka.
A few days ago, we were informed of repeated abuse of a rikishi at Naruto beya. Naruto oyakata may be known to many of you as the former Kotooshu.
The details of the story were as follows: A 20 year old sandanme rikishi was harassing a minor ototo-deshi (more recent member of the heya). At first he hit him with the corner of a smartphone, accusing him of not doing his work properly. After that, over the period between September 2018 and January 2019, he chose to “punish” the victim by applying a choking technique borrowed from Judo on 10 separate occasions. He also ordered another adult rikishi (with the assistance of one other, a minor) to perform that same technique on the victim. This resulted in the victim losing consciousness at least once.
The victim eventually reported this to the heya’s hired manager, who in turn reported it to Naruto oyakata. He immediately reported it to the Compliance Committee, and suspended the perpetrator through Hatsu basho. That committee made its report, and today the NSK board held a special meeting and made decisions based on this report.
The perpetrator is without a doubt Sumidagawa – the only Sandanme rikishi from that heya who was kyujo in Hatsu basho. Although the standard set for violence perpetrated by rikishi Makushita or below is merely a one basho suspension, with possibility for warnings etc. in more serious cases, the committee noted the malicious intent and repeated nature of this case, and instead decided to recommend his intai. Naruto oyakata has already presented the intai documents and they have been accepted. The NSK board approved the decision of the compliance committee in this regard.
The (former) Sumidagawa. His Twitter profile boasts his Judo experience.
The oyakata himself was censured for being absent from the heya and not watching over his deshi properly. He will be docked 10 percent of his salary for the next three months. In response, the heya announced that due to its transient state both the oyakata and the manager have, indeed, been absent from the heya frequently, and that now they intend to hire an additional manager and keep two on a permanent basis.
The rikishi who was commanded by Sumidagawa to choke the victim will be given a warning, and the minor accomplice will receive “guidance”. The victim himself, as well as his guardians (he is a minor so he has either parents or other legal guardians), decided not to involve the police in this issue and leave it to the NSK. He also expressed his wish to continue doing sumo at Naruto beya.
Update: A more extended report on Nikkan Sports reveals that Sumidagawa did not settle for just choking the victim and making another to do the same, but also took videos and made fun of the victim’s struggle for breath following the strangling. Also, he started extorting money from him on threat of choking him again.
Also, the “absences” mentioned about seem to refer to the fact that he was not living on premises. He has now handed in a plan to the Compliance Committee, whereupon in April the heya will be moved to a permanent location, which will include the residence of the oyakata and the okami-san. He will continue to hand in periodical progress reports as to the implementation of this plan as well as others for preventing the recurrence of violence in his heya.
For those of you who want to speculate as to who the victim, the adult accomplice and the minor accomplice are, here is a list of the Naruto beya rikishi. Note that in heya with no sekitori, hierarchy is determined by seniority. That is, the order in which they joined the heya. I believe it’s unlikely that Sumidagawa would “command” any of his ani-deshi (members who joined before him) to do anything. Also note that the age of majority in Japan is 20.
Shikona/Name
Hatsu dohyo (join date)
Birth date
Oshozan
2016.03
May 2000
Honma
2017.03
May 2001
Torakio
2017.05
December 1996
Sumidagawa
2017.07
November 1998
Anzai
2018.03
August 2002
Kawamura
2018.05
September 2001
Mukaida
2018.05
November 1998
Oju
2018.05
February 1996
(The heya also has another minor member – yobidashi Kenta)
It’s time for your faithful prognosticator to once again stick his neck out and try to guess the new top-division rankings ahead of the official banzuke announcement on February 25th. This is one of the trickier banzuke prediction exercises, daunting even the gurus who play Guess the Banzuke. For my reasoning, keep reading. To see my prediction, scroll to the end.
The difficulties are largely confined to the top two thirds of the maegashira rankings, as detailed below. We’ll start with the easier named ranks. The only changes among the Yokozuna/Ozeki are (1) that Hakuho and Kakuryu will move up one spot following Kisenosato’s retirement and (2) that with an even number of Yokozuna on the banzuke, Tochinoshin will finally move over the East side.
Both Sekiwake will keep their rank, but I’m going to predict that the banzuke committee will follow the precedent they set following the Nagoya basho and move the yusho winner Tamawashi to the East side, with Takakeisho displaced to West Sekiwake despite his 11-4 record. Mitakeumi will move over to the East Komusubi slot vacated by Myogiryu, and his West Komusubi slot will be occupied by Hokutofuji, the only rikishi among the top ten maegashira to get his kachi-koshi (KK) at Hatsu.
Now, time to sort the rank-and-file. As I described in an earlier post, the easy part of drawing up a banzuke is figuring out where each rikishi “should” be ranked based on their rank and performance in the previous basho, ignoring the placement of other rikishi and various banzuke constraints. The hard part is resolving all the conflicts that arise when too few or too many rikishi should occupy the same rank.
The main feature of the Haru banzuke that makes it difficult to predict is that a baker’s dozen of wrestlers should all be ranked in the seven slots between M3e and M6e, with little to separate them. Some must receive generous promotions or lenient demotions in order to fill the M1/M2 ranks that nobody “earned” based on their performance, while others have to fall down a rank or two below what they “deserve.” This in turn creates a cascading effect of pushing down those who might otherwise occupy the M7-M10 slots. This is what is meant by “banzuke luck”: given the constraint of exactly two rikishi occupying each rank (sort of like the Pauli exclusion principle in quantum mechanics), some end up at much higher ranks than their rank and record would usually indicate, while others end up lower.
Kaisei (M8e, 10-5) should be the clear big beneficiary of generous promotion, as he is the only plausible candidate for the top East Maegashira 1 rank. After that, a number of solutions are possible for the next seven slots. Because make-koshi (MK) rikishi can’t receive promotions, the only candidates for M1w are the KK maegashira from well down the banzuke, unless Myogiryu (K1e, 5-10) receives the most lenient demotion in history for a Komusubi with that record. I’ve gone with Endo (M9w, 10-5) at this rank, and Daieisho (M7w, 9-6) at M2e, but the two could easily be flipped, or one of them could be pushed down by the MK joi members I have ranked just below them. Given the recent lenient treatment of MK Komusubi, I’ve placed Myogiryu next at M2w. As a result, Nishikigi (M2e, 7-8) drops exactly the one expected rank to M3e, followed by Tochiozan (M1e, 6-9), Shodai (M3e, 7-8), and Ichinojo (M1w, 6-9). You can make a case either way for the sides to be occupied by Shodai and Ichinojo at M4.
After this tricky area, the M6 duo of Chiyotairyu and Onosho, both 8-7, slot in easily at M5. This pushes Okinoumi and Abi to M6, lower than they otherwise would be, with the displacement propagating down to Aoiyama, Kotoshogiku, Takarafuji, Sadanoumi, Ikioi, Shohozan, Ryuden, and Yago. Only Asanoyama (M8w, 8-7) is at his expected rank of M7w in this middle portion of the banzuke.
After the crowding above, there’s plenty of room in the lower ranks. Meisei (M12w, 8-7) moves up to M11w, and Yoshikaze falls to M12e, a soft landing for someone who went 3-12 at M5w. He is followed by Chiyonokuni (M15e, 8-7) and Kagayaki (M12e, 6-9). The last three rikishi I have staying in the top division—Kotoeko (M15w, 7-8), Yutakayama (M14e, 6-9), and Chiyoshoma (M14w, 6-9)—occupy the bottom 3 rungs (which extend down to 17e after Kisenosato’s retirement reduced the sanyaku ranks to nine). The five Juryo men I have coming up to Makuuchi slot into the gap between Kagayaki and Kotoeko, in the following order: Tomokaze, Terutsuyoshi, Daishoho, Ishiura, and Toyonoshima (Tomokaze is the only one to separate himself from the rest with his 10-5 record at J4e; the others are ranked in their order on the Hatsu Juryo banzuke). And with that, we are done. We’ll find out how close this forecast is to the real thing in a couple of weeks.
Hey, sumo fans! I’m back with another video. This time, I open five packs of the 2018 “Rikishi Series” sumo cards. To get your own packs of sumo cards, or anything else sumo related, head on over to bigSUMOfan.com. Hope you enjoyed the video, more sumo content is on the way! Thanks for watching!