Natsu 2026: Day Lucky Thirteen

Day 13 in Tokyo. No new top division kyujo to report.

Kazuma defeated Kazekeno and equalized their records at 10 wins, 3 losses. Takerufuji defeated Tamashoho to improve to 9-4, and remain one loss back. Enho beat Meisei to finally pick up his kachi-koshi and join a group of eight men with 8 wins. It was their first meeting since November 2020. Onokatsu, at Juryo 1 East, is another of those kachi-koshi wrestlers and will earn his top division return. Takerufuji is likely to join him.

Shosei from Nakamura-beya claimed the Jonidan yusho, easily shoving out Maniwayama. Hakugetsuro slapped down 28-year veteran wrestler Hienriki to claim the Jonokuchi yusho for Asahiyama-beya, its first yusho under ex-Kotonishiki. And in Sandanme, Asahifuji defeated Mita to pick up his 7th win and officially join the 21 Club, with members like Enho, Hokuseiho and Fujiseiun.

Thus, the sandanme yusho has come down to another playoff between Asahifuji and Kiryuko. I think Kiryuko will be the first competitor to earn a second crack at the Isegahama phenom. Will that previous experience help him for their second senshuraku showdown? And jmotzi asked, “What happened to D’s nuts?” They’re all in Makushita. The Makushita yusho is nuts. But on to the top division.

Your NHK videos are here. And believe me, you’ll want to watch.

Makuuchi Action

Asasuiryu (9-4) defeated Ryuden (5-8). Asasuiryu fired straight ahead at the tachiai, drawing Ryuden to plow ahead with full force. Asasuiryu timed his shift and slapdown perfectly and he pulled Ryuden down to a make-koshi record and possible Juryo demotion. Hikiotoshi.

Oshoumi defeated Tamawashi. You could tell these two were fighting for their top division lives. Fierce tsuppari. Oshoumi pressed forward and got inside, grabbing Tamawashi’s belt with his left-hand inside. He charged forward and forced Tamawashi back over the edge. Yorikiri.

Roga (8-5) defeated Tokihayate. Roga quickly got his left hand uwate, charged forward and overwhelmed Tokihayate. Yorikiri.

Wakanosho (7-6) defeated Nishikifuji (3-10). Wakanosho drove Nishikifuji back to the bales with his tsuppari. Nishikifuji could tell he was done so he turned and looked for a place to land as he stepped of the dohyo. With the barge rapidly filling up, Nishikifuji even seems in danger of getting a ticket if he can’t pick up a win in the final two days. Tsukidashi.

Abi (5-8) defeated Mitakeumi (7-6). Abi pulled and slapped Mitakeumi down. “Pivot? Andy, what is this pivot? I don’t need no stinking pivot.” Hatakikomi.

Shishi (4-9) defeated Asahakuryu (4-9). Shishi got his left hand uwate, pulled up and churned his legs until Asahakuryu was off the dohyo. He then gave him a little extra shove, causing Asahakuryu to fall into the lap of a fan in the front row. Yorikiri.

Fujiryoga (9-4) defeated Churanoumi (8-5). Fujiryoga ended the East-side win streak with powerful blasts, sending Churanoumi flailing off the dohyo. Fujiryoga will earn some breathing space from the bottom of the banzuke when the Nagoya ranking sheet comes out. Oshidashi.

Wakamotoharu (4-9) defeated Kinbozan (5-8). Kinbozan was trying to reach back over Wakamotoharu for his left hand belt grip. He was way too damn high. Wakamotoharu stayed low and drove forward into Kinbozan, forcing him back over the edge. It feels like Wakamotoharu has found his comfort level. Yorikiri.

Hakunofuji (9-4) defeated Gonoyama (8-5). Hakunofuji let Gonoyama press forward because he shuffled to his right and slapped Gonoyama down on the bales. Hatakikomi.

Halftime

Hiradoumi (6-7) defeated Daieisho (5-8). Hiradoumi overpowered Daieisho and shoved him out. Daieisho had that Ozeki run last year and has fallen off since his kyujo. He picked up his makekoshi and may fall deeper into the rank-and-file. Oshidashi.

Oho (7-6) defeated Ichiyamamoto (5-8). Ichiyamamoto needed to pivot or do something to change his direction. Oho shoved his gear in drive – which is massively appreciated – and forced Ichiyamamoto back and out. Oshidashi.

Yoshinofuji (10-3) defeated Ura (9-4). Yoshinofuji charged into Ura with tsuppari and nodowa. Ura shifted to the side and nearly brought Yoshinofuji down. Yoshinofuji avoided touching down, chased after Ura and shoved him out. Oshidashi.

Oshoma (7-6) defeated Takanosho (5-8). Oshoma got Takanosho dizzy as they both spun and pulled at the edge and easily pushed him out. Oshidashi. Video replay shows Takanosho’s hand dragging along the dohyo earlier in the bout so the kimarite might change. Ah! They changed it. Hatakikomi.

Fujiseiun (6-7) defeated Fujinokawa (6-7). Fujiseiun crushed Fujinokawa out at the edge after a great bout. Fujiseiun did an exceptional job of keeping Fujinokawa contained and not letting him slip away. Once he had him cornered, he pressed forward with all of his strength and forced Fujinokawa backwards. Yoritaoshi.

Sanyaku

Wakatakakage (10-3) defeated Tobizaru (9-4). Wakatakakage put the “Flying” in “Flying monkey” as he picked Tobizaru up and chucked him into the crowd. Not a yeet but still hilarious. Tsuridashi.

Kotoshoho (8-5) defeated Shodai (6-7). Kotoshoho slapped Shodai to the edge. At the edge Shodai shifted right and pulled Kotoshoho forward as if that should have done something spectacular. It did not. Kotoshoho re-engaged and wore Shodai down, steadily moving forward and eventually pushing him over the bales. Oshidashi.

Atamifuji (7-6) defeated Chiyoshoma (5-8). Atamifuji’s pre-tachiai nonsense took the power out of Chiyoshoma’s tachiai. Atamifuji attacked and pushed out Chiyoshoma, barely. Oshidashi.

Kirishima (11-2) defeated Kotoeiho (10-3). OK, This bout was fantastic. Worth the price of admission. Back and forth, sukuinage attempts, kicks and trips before Kotoeiho corners Kirishima and shoved him backwards and over the bales while Kirishima simultaneously twisted and pulled Kotoeiho forward. Gunbai Kotoeiho. Mono-ii. Kotoeiho’s sumo was excellent. He did a great job. But that was the most freaking ridiculous, Matrix-level comeback move I have ever seen. Slo-mo clearly shows Kirishima’s left leg pop out and trip Kotoeiho, and Kirishima’s ability to pull Kotoeiho back so Kotoeiho touched first. Utchari.

As Kirishima’s walking down the hanamichi he hands his massive stack of kensho to his tsukebito and stops by the video monitor, “Hold on a minute, bruh. I gotta see this for myself.”

Wrap-Up

Say what you will about the kyujo and the quality of this basho as a whole but damn we’ve seen some excellent sumo this tournament and that final move by Kirishima is top of my list so far. Frankly, the kimarite feels insufficient because the trip was so vital to this takedown. It wasn’t just a normal, run-of-the-mill utchari, as if there ever was a “normal, run-of-the-mill utchari.” Wow.

If you ask me, this should have been the lead story on the NHK news broadcast which followed the bout. “Ozeki Kirishima Successfully Bends Spacetime.” You just have to feel for Kotoeiho. After the decision, he had the look of a kid who’d just had a seagull swoop down and poop on his ice cream before he’d had a chance to take a lick. The innocence. The anticipation. And the utter loss. Gutshot.

Yusho Arasoi:

  • Two Losses: Kirishima
  • Three Losses: Wakatakakage, Yoshinofuji, the Ghost of Kotoeiho

The Kyokai has yet to publish the bouts for tomorrow. I’m thinking either Tobizaru or Churanoumi for Kirishima, maybe Ura if they want to see who can out-Neo whom. Atamifuji is out of this but the lone sanyaku competitor that he hasn’t faced, so I’m leaning towards that senshuraku showdown.

The Kyokai could go completely the other way, though, and pair the two tomorrow with a yusho contender on Sunday. Your guess is as good as mine. I bet Wakatakakage will face Kotoeiho. (Of course Atamifuji won’t fight Yoshinofuji, Andy.) I’ll try to post an update later today but there are a few other items on my plate today so it might not happen. I will definitely be sitting here tomorrow, though, to see what happens next.

Natsu 2026: Day Eleven

Day 11 in Tokyo. No new kyujo to report. However, due to a record number of kensho banners, Sasaki Ichiro reports that the text size for the sheet listing the bouts used the smallest text ever for one of these sheets. This had to be scaled to 65% for the sponsor list and 80% for the actual bouts.

In Juryo, Kazekeno took on Enho head-to-head. With the push down victory, Kazekeno improved to 10-1 and now has a two-win lead over Kazuma, who lost to Onokatsu. As Leonid mentioned in his Day 9 post, they pitted Asahifuji against tsukedashi Omori; Asahifuji won. Enho will fight Hatsuyama tomorrow as he still seeks that all important kachi-koshi to seal his status as sekitori for Nagoya.

NHK videos are here.

Makuuchi Action

Mitakeumi (6-5) defeated Hatsuyama (3-8). After a failed slapdown attempt, Mitakeumi overpowered Hatsuyama and drove him back over the bales. Oshidashi.

Oshoumi (3-8) defeated Shishi (3-8). Shishi hauled Oshoumi around using his right arm tucked under Oshoumi’s left. Oshoumi resisted at the bales and grabbed Shishi in a bear hug. He held Shishi high and drove him back through the ring and over the edge. Yorikiri.

Tamawashi (2-9) defeated Kinbozan. Both men took turns charging forward behind their tsuppari and nodowa. Tamawashi shifted his weight to the side and thrust Kinbozan down. With the win, Tamawashi is now tied with Kisenosato for 7th on the all-time top division wins list on 714 Makuuchi wins. Tsukiotoshi.

Ura (8-3) defeated Wakanosho (6-5). Ura resisted at the bales and used the leverage to grab Wakanosho in a bear hug. He then rotated and pulled Wakanosho down by his shoulder. Katasukashi.

Hakanofuji (8-3) defeated Fujiryoga (8-3). Hakanofuji grabbed Fujiryoga inder the right shoulder with his left arm. Once he secured an overarm belt grip with his right hand, he rotated and dragged Fujiryoga down. Uwatenage.

Tobizaru (9-2) defeated Asanoyama (7-4). Asanoyama drove forward with his right hand inside. At the bales, Tobizaru spun, slipped his grasp and pulled him down. Hikiotoshi.

Ryuden (4-7) defeated Nishikifuji (3-8). Ryuden used his right hand uwate to turn Nishikifuji around and then chased him out from behind. Nishikifuji locks in his make-koshi while Ryuden staves it off. Okuridashi.

Roga (6-5) defeated Abi (4-7). Roga quickly forced his way forward, immediately getting inside any of Abi’s tsuppari. Roga drove him all the way back over the edge. Yorikiri.

Tokihayate (4-7) defeated Asahakuryu (3-8). In an excellent and exciting grapple, Tokihayate used his right hand inside to pull Asahakuryu around the ring. Once he got his left hand inside, too, he was able to rotate and topple Asahakuryu to the ground. Shitatenage.

Kotoeiho defeated Oshoma. Both men dragged each other to the bales and teetered over the edge. Kotoeiho seemed to push Oshoma forward as he was falling out backwards. Gunbai Kotoeiho. Mono-ii. Video review confirmed Motoki’s call that Oshoma fell out just before Kotoeiho. We saw that Kotoeiho’s foot had not stepped out prior to the throw but rested on the bales. Okurinage.

Halftime

Wakamotoharu (3-8) defeated Chiyoshoma (4-7). Chiyoshoma pulled so Wakamotoharu drove forward through him and shoved him backward, out of the ring. Oshitaoshi.

Ichiyamamoto (5-6) defeated Gonoyama (8-3). Ichiyamamoto caught Gonoyama too far forward, shifted right and slapped Gonoyama down. Hikiotoshi.

Yoshinofuji (8-3) defeated Hiradoumi (4-7). Yoshinofuji really wanted his left hand overarm grip but Hiradoumi continued to deny access. Yoshinofuji had to rely on his right hand inside to haul Hiradoumi over onto his head. Ouch! Shitatenage.

Daieisho (5-6) defeated Takanosho (4-7). Daieisho quickly thrust Takanosho back and over the bales. Oshidashi.

Oho (5-6) defeated Fujinokawa (5-6). Oho offered no quarter today as he hugged Fujinokawa and charged forward, crushing Fujinokawa out at the edge. Yoritaoshi.

Sanyaku

Kotoshoho (7-4) defeated Fujiseiun (5-6). Kotoshoho used angles to beat Fujiseiun. He deflected Fujiseiun’s tachiai to the left and then attacked from the right to knock him down. Oshitaoshi.

Churanoumi (7-4) defeated Atamifuji (5-6). Churanoumi used his left-hand belt grip to pivot and haul Atamifuji to the edge. He then followed up by pressing forward to force Atamifuji to step back and out. Yorikiri.

Kirishima (9-2) defeated Wakatakakage (8-3). Kirishima’s morozashi won this bout. Wakatakakage kept trying to improve his own grip, never quite getting a great hold and never sneaking his arms inside. Kirishima pulled up and steadily pressed forward. Yorikiri.

I love seeing women with inflatable daikon radishes in the stands. I mean, step back for a second and appreciate the absolute WTF-ness of this sport.

Shodai (5-6) defeated Kotozakura (3-8). Was there ever any doubt? The Kyokai required a small army of yobidashi to display all of the kenho banners on this bout. In the end, Daikon-Power dominated as Shodai pulled Kotozakura forward from the bales, snuck around back as the Ozeki stumbled forward, and shoved Kotozakura out from behind. Okuridashi.

Wrap-Up

Our yusho race is still a bit of a cluster.

  • 2-Losses: Kirishima, Kotoeiho, Tobizaru
  • 3-Losses: Wakatakakage, Yoshinofuji, Gonoyama, Hakunofuji, Ura, Fujiryoga

Kotozakura is officially kadoban. Will he drop out of the tournament? I doubt it. There must be a bit of pressure to keep two Ozeki in the basho in order to close things out with some sort of High-Ranker Showdown on senshuraku.

As we turn to look at the schedule remaining, Kirishima will face Kotoshoho tomorrow. That leaves Atamifuji and Kotozakura as his only sanyaku competition remaining. Kotozakura kyujo would bring yet another rank-and-filer into play.

Kotozakura will fight Churanoumi tomorrow. Atamifuji will fight Fujiseiun and Wakatakakage will take on Gonoyama.

Down in the rank-and-file, Yoshinofuji will fight Tobizaru. They want to put the kibosh on the Monkey’s run soon. Hakunofuji will fight Oho. Kotoeiho will battle Asanoyama who fell out of the running today but is still seeking his kachi-koshi. And Ura will fight Fujiryoga.

Natsu 2026: Nakabi

It is Nakabi in Tokyo which means Shinjo Shusse Hiro. These seven noobies are put on display in their master’s kesho mawashi because they have completed maezumo and will be in Jonokuchi for Nagoya. Kakizoe (Ikazuchi), Uza (Onoe), Ogawa (Tamanoi), Otsuna (Kokonoe), Tetsufuji (Isegahama), Ibata (Sakaigawa), and Haruto (Shikoroyama).

We talked about Chiyoshoma yesterday and Otsuna (far left front) is wearing one of his kesho mawashi. I imagine he might be Chiyoshoma’s recruit. Behind him, I think Haruto is wearing one of Abi’s. If that’s true, it should give you hints as to who is planning to join the ranks of the oyakata and who will likely inherit a stable or branch out on their own. Or I’m reading too much into things and they just grabbed one that was laying around.

In Juryo, Kazekeno shoved Toshinofuji from the dohyo to remain undefeated. With Daiseizan’s defeat at the hands of Kyokukaiyu, Kazekeno has opened a 2-bout lead over Daiseizan and Enho. For his part Enho beat Kayo, as expected. Nay, as we demanded.

Your NHK videos are here.

Makuuchi Action

Sadanoumi (4-4 Juryo) defeated Wakanosho (4-4) That was the fastest and most aggressive move I have seen from Sadanoumi. He might have been irritated at the kachi-age from Wakanosho at the tachiai but he blitzed the shin-nyumaku, grabbed the front of Wakanosho’s mawashi and charged toward the front edge of the dohyo. He worked that right hand inside and finished Wakanosho off and drove him into the crowd. Wakanosho was just along for the ride. Yorikiri.

Fujiryoga (6-2) defeated Kotoeiho (6-2). Fujiryoga pressed into Kotoeiho and Kotoeiho slid back to the tawara, expecting to use the bales as a backstop. Fujiryoga kept driving him back though, and crushed him out. Watashikomi.

Ryuden (3-5) defeated Tamawashi (0-8). Ryuden worked to get both hands inside on Tamawashi’s belt. To me, it looked like Ryuden twisted and pulled Tamawashi forward, so I was expected a shitatenage. Maybe with the sudden shift of weight, Tamawashi fell forward. Instead, they’re saying Tamawashi basically took a knee. Tsukihiza.

Tokihayate (3-5) defeated Oshoumi (1-7). Tokihayate grabbed Oshoumi quickly, pivoted and pressed him over the bales. Yorikiri.

Tobizaru (7-1) defeated Ura (5-3). Tobizaru and Ura shoved each other around the ring. At the decisive moment, Tobizaru pulled and Ura drove forward. Tobizaru fell out of the dohyo as Ura fell down. Gunbai Ura. Mono-ii. The shimpan decided on a Torinaoshi (rematch). In the rematch, Ura pulled and Tobizaru kept his footing as he pressed ahead and shoved him out of the ring. Oshidashi.

Roga (5-3) defeated Kinbozan (4-4). Henka! Kinbozan fell for it. Hatakikomi.

Mitakeumi (4-4) defeated Hakunofuji (5-3). Mitakeumi was all offense today. He charged into Hakunofuji with a nodowa and continued to press forward while grabbing Hakunofuji’s belt. Hakunofuji used the tawara to stop Mitakeumi’s advance. Undeterred, Mitakeumi pivoted and pulled Hakunofuji down by that inside belt grip. Shitatedashinage.

Nishikifuji (2-6) defeated Shishi (2-6). Nishikifuji rammed his head into Shishi and bulldozed ahead. Shishi tried to avoid that head butt and turned away. Nishikifuji kept charging ahead and shoved Shishi out from behind. Okuridashi.

Asanoyama (5-3) defeated Oshoma (5-3). Asanoyama waltzed around the ring with Oshoma for a while before pivoting and using his left-hand over-arm belt grip to throw Oshoma into the middle of the ring. Uwatenage.

Asahakuryu (3-5) defeated Chiyoshoma (4-4). Asahakuryu outlasted Chiyoshoma in this lengthy grapple. Both men had left-hand inside grips and tussled for advantage. Asahakuryu forced Chiyoshoma back and over the edge. Yorikiri.

Halftime

Abi (4-4) defeated Fujiseiun (5-3). Abi Henka! Abi leapt to the left, reached over Fujiseiun’s back for a grasp of his belt and pulled him forward. Uwatenage.

Hiradoumi (4-4) defeated Churanoumi (5-3). Hiradoumi blitzed Churanoumi and drove him to the edge. Churanoumi tried to find a way to counter at the bales but Hiradoumi put his head down and blasted his way forward, shoving Churanoumi out. Oshidashi.

Yoshinofuji (5-3) defeated Fujinokawa (4-4). Yoshinofuji did a great job of keeping Fujinokawa in front of him, though he earned a bloody nose for his efforts. As Fujinokawa flailed around, Yoshinofuji used his excellent balance and footwork to stay centered and steadily work Fujinokawa to the edge. Fujinokawa tried to trip him and change directions. Yoshinofuji eventually shoved him over the bales. Oshidashi.

Ichiyamamoto (3-5) defeated Takanosho (3-5). Ichiyamamoto grasped the big onigiri in both hands, like a minister holding up a wafer for communion, and then — exactly like a minister during communion — Ichiyamamoto shifted right and dumped Takanosho on the floor. Hikiotoshi.

Sanyaku

Wakatakakage (7-1) defeated Oho (3-5). Wakatakakage pulled Oho forward toward the edge, cycled along the tawara in order to regain an advantageous position while forcing Oho to the edge. While he couldn’t execute an uwatenage, he followed up by pressing forward into Oho and driving Oho over the bales. Yorikiri.

Atamifuji (4-4) defeated Shodai (2-6). Shodai’s ACME-brand gear shift was stuck in reverse. Atamifuji jumped all over him, grabbed the front of his belt with his left hand and shoved him over the bales. Oshidashi.

Kotoshoho (5-3) defeated Wakamotoharu (2-6). Wakamoto-henka jumped to the left. Kotoshoho adjusted and charged ahead, shoving Wakamotoharu from the dohyo. Oshidashi.

Daieisho (3-5) defeated Kotozakura (2-6). Kotozakura didn’t have any offense today. Daieisho Dai-ei-Showed him to the exit with his tsuppari (as depleted as it has been the past few basho). Kotozakura is on a Path to Kadobanship. Oshidashi.

Gonoyama (6-2) defeated Kirishima (7-1). After Kirishima’s throw attempt failed, Kirishima seemed to just run out of ideas and strength. Gonoyama pressed forward and ushered the Ozeki over the bales. Oshidashi.

Wrap-up

Gonoyama denied Kirishima his kachi-koshi. Kirishima falls back into a share of the lead with Wakatakakage and Tobizaru, way down in the rank-and-file. On 6-2 we have Gonoyama, Kotoeiho, and Fujiryoga.

  • 1-Loss: Kirishima, Wakatakakage, Tobizaru
  • 2-Losses: Gonoyama, Kotoeiho, Fujiryoga

Kirishima will fight Wakamotoharu tomorrow. Wakamotoharu has looked completely lost this tournament but I’d expect him to be able to find focus against an Ozeki, especially one battling his brother for the title. Gonoyama will get a crack at Kotozakura, aka the lost Ozeki wandering around in the wilderness. Atamifuji will fight Daieisho and Kotoshoho will fight Wakatakakage. Tobizaru will fight Kotoeiho as the Kyokai begins to put an end to these rank-and-file yusho runs. Fujiryoga will fight Mitakeumi.

Natsu 2026: Day Seven

Asakoryu is kyujo beginning today. Hakunofuji will receive the default win. With a 3-4 record, if he does not return this tournament he’s likely to just miss the barge to Juryo and end up in the bottom rungs of the division.

Speaking of injured folks, Nikkan Sports reports that Aonishiki is not going to return to the tournament. I had mentioned this on social media but I can expand upon it here. They report that Aonishiki’s ankle injury is still not healed so he will not compete in this tournament. That means he will drop back to Sekiwake. (**Update: SEKIWAKE, not Juryo, Andy.**)

They make a point that it’s tied for the second shortest run at Ozeki for a shin-Ozeki…but they neglect mentioning the shortest was Takakeisho with only two basho. Aonishiki had not hit a ceiling in his career until Ozeki. The likelihood is high that he will be able to get the 10 wins required in Nagoya to immediately reclaim the rank of Ozeki in September. Even if he doesn’t, Kirishima shows a longer path back is possible.

What Nikkan Sports also pointed out was that Aonishiki will plan to participate in June events, such as the retirement ceremonies for Hokutofuji and Takarafuji (no relation) and the big Paris shindig. Since those events will happen before the Nagoya banzuke comes out, he will participate as Ozeki Aonishiki.

Now, let’s turn back to the tournament at hand. Enho dropped another bout, this one to Hitoshi. As the last guy on the bottom rung of Juryo, he will need 8 wins to be safe. Any more wins are obviously gravy and help him earn some breathing space. He’ll fight Kayo tomorrow and I expect a “W” here.

Kazekeno still leads the yusho race. He will fight Toshinofuji tomorrow. Daiseizan trails at 6-1 and will fight Kyokukaiyu. With a win and kachi-koshi, he’ll likely earn promotion to the top division. Speaking of kachi-koshi, Makushita Tsukedashi wrestler Omori took down Gonosho for his all-important fourth win. And in Sandanme Asahifuji threw Hinataryu and stays on the path to join the 21-win club.

Let’s get to the action.

Your NHK videos are here.

Makuuchi Action

Roga (4-3) defeated Fujiryoga (5-2). Roga quickly got his left hand up front of Fujiryoga’s belt and rushed him out. Oshidashi.

Ryuden (2-5) defeated Mitakeumi (3-4). Ryuden made Mitakeumi look like he’s the one who needs a trip on the barge. Yorikiri.

Kotoeiho (6-1) defeated Wakanosho (4-3). Somewhere in this brawl, Kotoeiho grabbed Wakanosho’s arm and pulled him forward to a knee. Hikiotoshi.

Tobizaru (6-1) defeated Shishi (2-5). As punishment for the slow-ass kachiage, Tobizaru quickly got a right hand over-arm grip, pivoted, and pulled Shishi down. Uwatedashinage.

Kinbozan (4-3) defeated Oshoumi (1-6). JME coverage started here because there was some gymnastics competition. Don’t they know sumo is more important? Anyway, Kinbozan used his tsupppari to thrust Oshoumi out. Tsukidashi.

Ura (5-2) defeated Tamawashi (0-7). Ura charged Tamawashi and drove him out. Oshidashi.

Tokihayate (2-5) defeated Asanoyama (4-3). Asanoyama charged forward, forcing Tokihayate to the bales but yielding a morozashi, double-inside grip. At the bales, Tokihayate found the leverage he needed to counter Asanoyama. With that double-inside grip he was able to charge ahead and force Asanoyama across the dohyo to the other side. When Asanoyama tried to brace himself at the bales, Tokihayate continued to press forward, forcing Asanoyama to fall backward out of the ring. Yoritaoshi.

Hakunofuji default win over Asakoryu.

Chiyoshoma (4-3) defeated Nishikifuji (1-6). Chiyoshoma pulled and quickly slapped Nishikifuji down. Hatakikomi.

Fujiseiun (5-2) defeated Asahakuryu (2-5). Asahakuryu put his head down and charged forward. Fujiseiun absorbed the attack and shifted to his right while reaching inside and grabbing Asahakuryu’s belt with both hands. When Asahakuryu’s back was to the tawara, Fujiseiun reversed gears and bulldozed ahead, shoving Asahakuryu out. Oshidashi.

Halftime

Churanoumi (5-2) defeated Abi (3-4). Abi launched into his usual attack but Churanoumi was ready for it. Churanoumi avoided the slapdown and took advantage of Abi’s change in direction to shove Abi out. Oshidashi.

Oshoma (5-2) defeated Shodai (2-5). Shodai got Oshoma to back up a few steps but he had come in too high, as usual. So Oshoma drove forward and sent Shodai back from whence he came. Oshoma then strolled back to collect his kensho like, “Don’t come at me with that weak ish, Okay man? Making me get dressed and get my hair done and come all the way down here for what? That?Oshidashi.

Yoshinofuji (4-3) defeated Gonoyama (5-2). Gonoyama wanted to dislodge Yoshinofuji’s head from his neck but when it didn’t pop off, he backed straight up for a slapdown…only to be standing well outside the ring before Yoshinofuji came down. Oshidashi.

Fujinokawa (4-3) defeated Takanosho (3-4). Fujinokawa with a socially distant henka. Hands up like, “I’m not touching that.” Poor Takanosho. Hikiotoshi.

Sanyaku

Wakatakakage (6-1) defeated Ichiyamamoto (2-5). Wakatakakage blitzed Ichiyamamoto. Ichi half-tried a pull but it was too little, too late. Oshidashi.

Kotoshoho (4-3) defeated Hiradoumi (3-4). So, Hiradoumi grabbed Kotoshoho’s arm and pulled him forward. Kotoshoho then did this dramatic, “Be gone!” motion with his arms and Hiradoumi fell backwards. Oshitaoshi.

Atamifuji (3-4) defeated Wakamotoharu (2-5). The Atamidozer came out of nowhere and rolled right through the dohyo. Wakamotoharu had no chance. Oshidashi.

Kirishima (7-0) defeated Daieisho (2-5). Daieisho with another terribly executed pull. Kirishima easily drove him out. Oshidashi.

Oho (3-4) defeated Kotozakura (2-5). La piece de resistance. Oho pressed forward. After all, why would he be intimidated in the slightest by this Stay-Puffed Sakura character? Oho forced Kotozakura back. The pair got two feet from the edge and Kotozakura thought he would try to spring an uwatenage. No. Then a sukuinage. No. Then, he stepped out and with his right foot square on the outermost tawara, a yard outside the ring, he grabbed Oho’s head and pulled him forward. The beautiful bit was the way he tried to sneak his feet back onto the inside set of tawara to act like, “What? I was inside the whole time!” I cannot wait for him to collect his umpteenth kadoban. He’s earning it. Oshidashi.

Wrap-Up

Enjoy the video piece about Chiyoshoma. It’s a great montage found at the bottom of the page which shows him as a young recruit under the tutelage of the great Chiyonofuji, and now under the Ozeki Chiyotaikai. He put in a lot of work learning Japanese as he climbed the ranks.

He was promoted to Juryo and Chiyonofuji travelled to Mongolia to visit with Chiyoshoma’s folks a few months before he died (10 years ago this July). Chiyoshoma also shares the last texts he received from The Wolf in the weeks before. We see more footage of him training more recently with his current shisho, Chiyotaikai, we meet his family, watch him collect his kinboshi from Hoshoryu…it’s really a nice video. Please check it out.

Getting back to the tournament at hand, Kirishima will fight Gonoyama on nakabi. He’ll have a chance to pick up his kachi-koshi. Now that I’ve had some time to process the day, I’ve cooled off and am not quite so steaming mad at Kotozakura. He’ll fight Daieisho tomorrow. Kotoshoho will take on Wakamotoharu. Atamifuji will take on Shodai. Wakatakakage will face Oho.