Vancouver BC Sumo Fan
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My Sumo Adventures in Japan!
Vancouver BC Sumo Fan replied to Vancouver BC Sumo Fan's topic in Featured Rikishi & Heya
I'll find some time to do some pic uploading later this week! The text had been sitting for a couple weeks and I wanted to tell the story. -
Upon arriving at our hotel, my first sumo purchase ever was waiting for me; a yukata given to one of Chiyonofuji's supporters by Chiyonofuji himself back in the 80s. He is my all-time favourite rikishi. I have watched his bouts hundreds of times, and seen all the documentaries multiple times. I had plans for this yukata and you'll hear about them later. My contact at Tatsunami, let's call him Tee, had arranged for me to visit on August 8. I had asked for August 6, my birthday, but they weren't sure they'd be training that day. However, Tee contacted me on August 4 and asked if I'd want to switch to August 6 because the rikishi had decided to get back to training earlier. I was going to Tatsunami ON MY BIRTHDAY. Yes. My partner Vivian and I arrived at Tatsunami beya at about 7:15am. I mildly freaked out and jumped up and down a little. We waited outside and talked to one of the tour guides who was a bit taken aback by a foreigner who actually knew more about sumo than him. He was still calling Fujinokawa his old shikona, Wakaikari, and I corrected him on that. We stood outside until about 7:40am, hearing the "slap slap slap" of the boys getting training going. Seia, the new assistant at Tatsunami, came outside and tried to talk to Vivian and I in Japanese. My guy Tee said to mention that Okami-san knew we were there as official members of the International Fan Club and he ushered us in and pointed to a set of sliding doors that were closed. He must have said "Open on up" as he gestured an "Open the doors" sign with his hands...and I did...and there were all the guys except for Hoshoryu, Hokuyozan, and Mei Sei training away by themselves. Literally just Vivian and I alone watching the guys train. For 15 minutes. Magic. Then one of the assistants came in and asked us to move over to the front far corner from the door and we did so. Kazuto came over and handed us 2 pillows to sit on. "For you", he said. "Arrigato, Kazuto-san." Wow, right? He gave them to us specifically because he knew that paying supporters were coming and they'd be in first before the tourists. The. Guys. Knew. US. All the tourists filtered in behind us and not one of them were given pillows. We were honoured guests. Mei Sei entered the room and you could feel his presence as a sekitori as he was given much respect and glances and he had comments for the rikishi as Oyakata was not there (he and Hosh were off on the summer tour as of that morning, as per a later comment from Okami-san). We then watched them practice for about 2 hours. There was a point where Yukiamami came over to do push ups right in front of us against the stage, like 2 feet from us, and I turned to Vivian and said "Yukiamami!!" in a whisper, but he heard me and smiled a little and nodded, which is a lot coming from the stoic Yukiamami. At the end we were the first people allowed to take photos with the rikishi and all the other tourists were shooed away so we could get the best shots. As the tourists got their pics done after us, some kid ignored Akua giving him a "You're a cool guy" comment and trying to give him a fist bump. I came to see the whole circus aspect of how most tourists treat sumo wrestlers. I did not enjoy that. I then had my first face-to-face meeting with Tee. After months of back and forth talking about the club...this was very, very welcome. Great guy. I gave him a box of maple cookies he said he'd share with his kids. I hope they liked them. All the tourists were then asked to leave. We, however, were not tourists and we got to stay for an hour and hang with the guys. Akua was the chattiest and Yarden was there to act as interpreter as he spoke both English and Japanese very well. Akua gave Vivian a fist bump. Ya. Awesome. He also really liked my tattoos and we chatted it over. He asked us where we were from, what we'd been doing in Japan so far, and asked us if we'd been to Senso-ji yet, which was nearby. We had not and he urged us to go. More on that later... During this talk with the guys we turned around and exclaimed "OKAMI-SAN!" in unison as we saw her at the back of the room. She burst out in a huge smile seeing two foreigners who were obviously fans who knew not only the rikishi but also who she was. Okami-san was very thankful for the gifts that we brought of maple syrup and a drawing of the wrestlers, and was very impressed I gave a gift to Tee. So was so thankful she had the guys film a reaction video to the rikishi seeing the drawing my partner did--expect to see this in a future episode on their YouTube channel! Yep, Vivian and I are for real for real part of the Tatsunami culture now! In thanks for our gifts, we were given an official Tatsunami supporter t-shirt and a pencil case with their logo, which includes the famous Tokyo Skytree, visible from the moment you walk out the front door of Tatsunami beya. Right about now is when Syunrai came into the room and Vivian had Yarden translate a chat back and forth that started with her saying "You're my favourite wrestler here" to him. Syunrai asked why, she said "Because you're the cutest." He pointed at his dimples and said "Because of this?!?" We all laughed and he said he was embarrassed. I mean, like, he IS the cutest. Okaryu and Kazuto also came in, eating huge chilli dogs. I found it funny. We said hello to Okaryu, Kazuto, Kitadaichi, and Taranami by name and they nodded or said hello back. This was right about when Vivian mentioned that it was indeed my birthday. Yarden then motioned to Syunrai to come over and Okami-san and Tee started filming. Yarden and Syunrai then sang happy birthday to me. I was ...so far besides myself I was numb. Best. Birthday. EVER. Ya, I have a video of it! It was also the birthday of hairdresser Tokokei and Okami-san flagged him down for a photo of the two of us flexing our muscles. He then gave me a fist bump and a handshake. He was a real ham, great guy. Okami-san thanked us again and again, and commented how happy she was that we were there. We felt the "party winding down" vibe and started making our way to the door. We were putting our shoes on when we saw the room where they always eat as Taranami (more from him later...) came out. I pointed and went "That's where the dining room is!" and Taranami saw my excitement and grinned. I chatted with Tee for a bit outside and Okamai-san came out for one last thank you and a chat, too. I will treasure all of this forever. Giving and receiving love from those at Tatsunami has been one of the greatest honours of my life. We then hopped in a cab and drove directly to the Ryogoku Kokugikan. I bought a STACK of stuff; Two entire boxes of sumo cards--yes, I got the whole set AND a Daieisho autograph card! Flags for Hoshoryu, Mei Sei, and Kotozakura for me, plus Asakoryu for a friend. Hoshoryu magnets A Mei Sei keychain Replica tegata for Hoshoryu and Onosato. A Terunofuji t-shirt. A huge towel with a cartoon version of Onosato holding the blade and wearing his Yokozuna gear, plus another towel with cartoon versions of all current makuuchi rikishi. Last, a wonderful reversible jacket with the Kokugikan and some cartoon rikishi on one side and incredibly colourful Nobori flags on the inside. The bill hit 50,000 yen and I coulda spent twice as much. They had these cool statues of Onosato as Yokozuna, Atamifuji, Kotozakura, and Ura. The staff laughed as I pointed and exclaimed the name of each statue. Not picking up one is a big regret. Next time... After all this we went back home and rested. We went to Senso-ji in the evening, as Akua suggested. I walked by myself as my family went ahead of me (I had consumed a bottle of sake at this point...it was my birthday). While walking I saw a guy riding a bicycle who looked familiar...and had a top knot! It was Taranami of Tatsunami who I had seen earlier that day! He saw me looking at him with my Terunofuji t-shirt on and gave me a knowing look and a nod. He was not wearing his yukata so I figured he was on time for himself, so I left him alone. What a crazy Tatsunami day! Kokonoe beya The former Kokonoe beya was left to the family of Chiyonofuji when he passed. They turned it into a restaurant called Chanko Nabe Chiyonofuji. He's my all-time favourite rikishi. I had to go, right? I was outside looking at the statue of Chiyonofuji they have out there--a bust--when an old man on a bicycle stopped to point at the statue and say "Chiyonofuji! Chiyonofuji!" I smiled and said "Yes, I know." but he clearly did not speak English. So I gave him the international hand sign for "wait here" with my hands. Remember that yukata I talked about at the start? Yes, I brought it. I pulled it out of my bag and showed the old man the yukata with "Chiyonofuji" written on it over and over and the look on that old man's face...still warms my heart today. A group of 4 women in their early 50s also saw me as they went into the restaurant and didn't seem to understand why this big goofy white guy was flaunting this Chiyonofuji yukata, but they looked intrigued. I put my yukata back in my bag and went in. The first person I saw was, unmistakably, Kumiko--Chiyonofuji's wife. I was so nervous right away and here she was asking me to take my shoes off and showing me where to put them. After taking my shoes off, I told her, via Google translate, that I did not have a reservation and I only needed 1 seat. She said ok. I said I had something to show her and pulled the yukata out. I told her this was from the 80s and was given to one of Chiyonofuji's supporters by the man himself. This yukata was once in Chiyonofuji's hands. She touched her hands to her mouth for a moment and touched the fabric gingerly with a wistful smile. I sat down with my yukata on and ordered the chanko nabe and some rice. Kumiko came over and asked me to follow her. Yes, absolutely, I will follow you literally anywhere. She took me to the dohyo they had preserved and the staff took my phone...they took pictures of me on the dohyo at Kokonoe beya!!!! I'm standing just to the side of the huge Chiyonofuji portrait they have. Those 4 ladies who saw me outside? They all gave me a thumbs up and it got everyone in the restaurant to do the same! Pretty surreal. I had several conversations with Kumiko and the staff. Wonderful people. During a chat with Kumiko I told her that I was going to go to Chiyonofuji's grave tomorrow wearing my yukata to honour him. She seemed touched by this. I did indeed do just that. Wonderful statue of him. The staff asked me how I was doing and I replied "I'm so happy I could cry." I noticed the shirts all the staff had on and asked if I could buy one, whatever cost they felt was fair. They said yes and it's in my shirt drawer right now! Kumiko then came over to me with a paper bag with gifts! She gave me the most recent banzuke, a fresh table placemat, 3 drink coasters, and my staff shirt was in there. "A BANZUKE!?!" I exclaimed and they all smiled and chuckled. I finished eating around now and one of the staff came over with two tea cups--one with Chiyonofuji on it with a fish and Mount Fuji in the background, the other of top-ranked rikishi from his time. "Extra", the staff said. I was, once again, beside myself and saying thank you in every language I knew. Just the best, best time. I asked if it would be ok if I took pictures of the art around the restaurant and they said yes. I had a chat with one of the 4 ladies I saw coming in and she spoke good english so we had a chat and she said she was very happy I was there and knew who Chiyonofuji was. I sat down and the 4 looked over and we raised our glasses to one another. "To Chiyonofuji!" I told them I was ready to pay my bill and they brought over the machine but asked me to wait before I left. I waited in the hallway and a staff member took my picture with all of his trophies and his yokozuna belt they had on display but still they asked me not to leave...Kumiko wanted one more picture with me! I had taken my yukata off at this point but we went outside and took photos of Kumiko and I standing on either side of the Kokonoe logo. As she was saying goodbye she looked down at the shirt I was wearing--Terunofuji. She saw this and laughed saying his name...and patted me on the belly. Chiyonofuji's wife, Kumiko, patted me on the belly. Like a good pal would. I had felt...my nerves go through the roof earlier when our hands brushed as I accepted the bag from her...but this... I left Kokonoe Beya laughing crazier than any Joker laugh and floated the whole way home to the house I'd rented. The. End. Sorry this was so long. I'm a professional writer/editor and love detail. ;-D Uploading photos on here is not easy so I'm gonna skip it.
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Does anyone know what happened to Matsugashima? He hit his head really hard and looked unconscious for a bit. He was taken out on a stretcher (Takakeisho helped pick him up) in a neck brace.
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The people of Japan were great. We're going back next year to explore even further, get up north to Sapporo and visit some small villages ...and it will be in July so I can attend the July basho AND the after-party with all the Tatsunami guys! How did your meet with Kumiko (Chiyonofuji's wife) go for you? They let me on the dohyo for a photo, took 2 photos with her, and they gave me a free placemat, 3 coasters, a banzuke, and 2 teacups with Chiyonofuji on them. Kumiko was very impressed by my 1980s-era yukata that was made for one of Chiyonofuji's supporters and given to said supporter by the man himself. She patted me on the belly when I took my yukata off and had my Terunofuji tshirt on under it and laughed! What an absolutely wonderful woman. I walked in the door and right away my brain said "THIS IS CHIYONOFUJI'S WIFE TELLING ME WHERE TO PUT MY SHOES WHAT IS HAPPENING RIGHT NOW?!?!?"
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Yes, there absolutely is a chance to watch keiko if you join the supporter's association at the $20/month level and arrange it ahead of time. Your choices are to either do that, or to pay about $150/person to join a tourist group. French guy living in Japan usually leads them. Nice guy, but I'd rather give my money to Tatsunami, to sumo, than to a tour company.
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Banihana, the love I got as a foreigner at Tatsunami, Kokonoe, and from random Japanese people because I was wearing sumo clothes...is something I will treasure for a long, long time. I will be fair and say that my friend at Tatsunami was already working on ideas for an international fan club...I just gave them the last push and advice that got it over the finish line. For the record; I am the first, official member of Tatsunami Beya's International Fan Club. My pal sent me an advanced link to join before the email was sent. To all others...ho...lee...F$@#$^FGHBSRCK!!!!! Have I got some stories to tell you all about visiting Tatsunami, meeting Chiyonofujis' wife and seeing the original Kokonoe beya where The Wolf trained AND STEPPING ON THE DOHYO...ending in Chironofuji's wife laughing at my Terunofiju shirt and PATTING ME ON THE BELLY...and later also dropping BIG stacks of yen at the official grand sumo merch store at the Kokugikan. I will have to organize it all in a post and get all the pics together. Can confirm Yarden was still training at Tatsunami on August 6 when I visited. Delightful guy. If you're doing anything less than wishing him the best and hoping for his dreams, man, give your head a shake. He does not live there. I personally saw him walking in for training. He and Syunrai also sing a mean rendition of Happy Birthday though. August 6 is my birthday. Yes, I have video proof. Alright, the jet lag from Tokyo to Vancouver is killer.
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Hey all, for all those following along, I started talking to Tatsunami Beya a few months ago about joining their fan club. They had nothing set up for this, so we started talking about an internation fan club. I'm a fairly high-level online marketer for a major publisher, and I was all too glad to advise them on what they should set up. Without further blah blah... https://tatsunamibeya.club/ This is legit, you can check the description in recent videos on their official YouTube for confirmation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=li2s1O9XPrw&ab_channel=TheTatsunamiStable-SumoFoods
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Ha, ya, I have a lot of cringe moments listening to Leo during broadcasts. I also wish he'd spend more time talking about sumo and less about Pokemon.
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Kotozakura Prepares By Going Back to Basics
Vancouver BC Sumo Fan replied to Gaijingai's topic in Honbasho Talk
Let's get 'em in July, Kotozakura! -
Max Verstappen has entered the chat...
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Rikishi on the ball - throwing first pitch..
Vancouver BC Sumo Fan replied to Kintamayama's topic in Ozumo Discussions
Everyone is an editor... (This is a joke because I'm literally an editor.) -
Rikishi on the ball - throwing first pitch..
Vancouver BC Sumo Fan replied to Kintamayama's topic in Ozumo Discussions
Damn, if we could get some connection between Ura and Iciro Suzuki, who played for Orix, or have a sumo come out and do the first pitch for Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters and get a Shohei connection...that could move the needle. -
Konishiki genki after renal failure
Vancouver BC Sumo Fan replied to Akinomaki's topic in Japan-Japanese Discussions
Good health, Konishiki. Been great seeing him do around and doing interviews lately. -
I am a Rikishi book I picked up
Vancouver BC Sumo Fan replied to Vancouver BC Sumo Fan's topic in Japan-Japanese Discussions
Winky face. Still waiting on the other one. Sent it via a much cheaper and slower service. -
Oh damn that poster goes hard! Fuck, that was hosted here in Vancouver?!?! Before my time living in the city. Akebono, Takanohana, and Wakanohana were all there? Frick. London, Paris, then a return trip to Vancouver next, guys! Let's do this! Thanks for sharing this, John. I actually found this by mistake but what a mistake. I think I wanna print that off and add it to a sumo scrapbook I wanna build.
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Hey all, didn't see much discussion of this book since it was released in 2004 after doing a search of the site. If anyone out there wants a really sweet blast from the past, Hakuho is in here as a humble wrestler aspiring to greatness. Looks like the interview took place around when his Juryo promotion happened in early 2004. They ask him 15 questions. My favourite? "Who are your role models?" "The speed of Chiyonofuji, the composure of Takanohana, the fighting spirit of Asashoryu; I want to become a rikishi with these attributes." Whatcha think? Did the teenager who said that live up to these ideals as a man? I also had a laugh at the "favourite type of women" question and he replied he likes tall women over 170cm. His eventual wife does look on the taller side. I hope their kids grow up to be monsters like papa.
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I found out earlier today in a Chris Sumo video that Sadanoumi was 38! I had no idea. Looks younger for sure.
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I hope he comes back strong next basho and starts fighting his way back up, but if not it may be time to hang up the belt by the end of the year. That'll be sad. He's great but at least we still have Tamawashi inspiring old guys like me.
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That's bugging me, too. He needed to fight a little higher up this basho if anyone can entertain him being in sanyaku. You gotta fight sanyaku to prove you are sanyaku worthy in my books.
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Onosato to win 14-1 (loss to my guy Kotozakura) and get the white rope. Hoshoryu to go 14-1 (loss to Onostato) and dominate many. My guy Kotozakura to go 14-1 (because he already has a loss). Mei Sei with 10 wins and a move up to the top of Maegashira. Kusano to get to top division with a solid 10+ wins. Takerufuji to wreck some shit, double digits. All my Tatsunami guys to have kachi kochi, with Okaryu going 7-0 and starting a trend where no one ever wears shirts.
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I didn't feel like starting a new thread for this, but I finally bought some sumo merchandise this week! I found a guy on ebay doing estate sales. He had 2 yukata fabric rolls for Takanohana. The owner said that Takanohana himself handed him the fabric rolls, during Taka's active career, as he was a supporter back then. They both say Takanohana on them in kanji. One is navy blue with white bamboo and some white flowers (hana=flower), the other is white and black horizontal stripes with these crazy circular patterns with pink in them. Hyped to make some button up shirts out of this fabric. May sell what's left over...I'll probably only use about 3 out 12 yards. Anyway, I'll upload shots when the fabric gets here from Tokyo, and after my tailor gets a crack at it.
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