Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

900th career win for Wakanosato today, the sixth rikishi to reach that milestone. Hakuho is three wins short of becoming the seventh.

Yet another stat to prove how great a rikishi Hakuho is. Wakanosato had a nine year head start on Hakuho and they reach 900 in the same basho! And it's not like Waka is a slouch... I would consider him one of the best Sekiwake of all-time

  • Like 4
Posted

Random statistic: with his day 2 win Hakuho has the record for most wins ranked Sekiwake or above (731, previous best was Kitanoumi with 730). This is the first rank at which Hakuho has such a record.

  • Like 3
Posted

900th career win for Wakanosato today, the sixth rikishi to reach that milestone. Hakuho is three wins short of becoming the seventh.

Yet another stat to prove how great a rikishi Hakuho is. Wakanosato had a nine year head start on Hakuho and they reach 900 in the same basho! And it's not like Waka is a slouch... I would consider him one of the best Sekiwake of all-time

In fact, Wakanosato is the only rikishi that has managed to beat Hakuho six times in a row (I'm pretty sure). Sure, Hakuho wasn't even Ozeki at the time, but it is pretty impressive anyway. Not even Asashoryu has managed such a feat.

Posted

Keep in mind that Osunaarashi has been hospitalized for about one week for a serious infectious skin condition. He's lost 10kg (22lbs!). He'll get better but i've noticed what's with all the knee injuries? Does not look good for this tournament.

Posted

I really, really, really dislike Gagamaru. He always seems clumsy in the ring, like he doesn't know how to handle the size of his own body, often slipping and falling.

I understand that point, but somehow this is why I like him. :)

  • Like 2
Posted

Keep in mind that Osunaarashi has been hospitalized for about one week for a serious infectious skin condition. He's lost 10kg (22lbs!). He'll get better but i've noticed what's with all the knee injuries? Does not look good for this tournament.

He did not look too good on day 3, tried a hard tachiai as usually, but it looked like an easy win for Yoshikaze.

Posted

Kyokutenho seems to be in trouble... Hope he turns it around soon to at least manage to hold on to Makuuchi, otherwise we'll really be talking about the end of an era :-(

Posted

At the risk of alienating some people who might be fans: I really, really, really dislike Gagamaru. He always seems clumsy in the ring, like he doesn't know how to handle the size of his own body, often slipping and falling. I used to hate Aoiyama for this same reason but I have to admit Aoiyama is slightly growing on me and has been showing some skill recently.

I think lack of balance is a general problem for guys of Gagamaru's size (and perhaps more importantly, shape). The thing is, back a few years ago he was able to bring a good amount of speed to the dohyo so he often just steamrolled his opponents before they had any chance of unbalancing him. That speed is mostly gone, so he's just a sitting duck much of the time now.
  • Like 1
Posted

Ichinojo and Osunaarashi disappoint me so much lately.

Ichi is still a very young guy and developing. Today he proved against Harumafuji, that he is very strong. Not a disappointment at all!

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)

Ichinojo and Osunaarashi disappoint me so much lately.

Ichi is still a very young guy and developing. Today he proved against Harumafuji, that he is very strong. Not a disappointment at all!

Showed great balance today, Thought Hara would succeed in slapping him down during the bout but he stayed upright. Hoping the Fuji/Ichi grace the sekiwake ranks next basho. Would be great seeing consecutive promotions like Geeku/Kise. Probably getting a bit (or more) too ahead of myself.

-This is looking like another typical Hak Yusho. Starts shaky, picks up steam, and Hara loses an early bout (and probably a couple more like last basho).

Edited by Mongolith
Posted

Kyokutenho seems to be in trouble... Hope he turns it around soon to at least manage to hold on to Makuuchi, otherwise we'll really be talking about the end of an era :-(

I hate to see him drop out of Makuuchi after staying in it for so long. I hope he can turn it around.

Posted

At the risk of alienating some people who might be fans: I really, really, really dislike Gagamaru. He always seems clumsy in the ring, like he doesn't know how to handle the size of his own body, often slipping and falling. I used to hate Aoiyama for this same reason but I have to admit Aoiyama is slightly growing on me and has been showing some skill recently.

I think lack of balance is a general problem for guys of Gagamaru's size (and perhaps more importantly, shape). The thing is, back a few years ago he was able to bring a good amount of speed to the dohyo so he often just steamrolled his opponents before they had any chance of unbalancing him. That speed is mostly gone, so he's just a sitting duck much of the time now.

If Gaga did what he did today every day he'd be a Yok by now. Textbook example of how to use weight to your advantage

Posted (edited)

Some thoughts:

Teronofuji is going places. Just constant improvement, knows how to use his weight and size to his advantage, strong and skillful. Really impressive.

Aminishiki worked Tochinoshin over perfectly.

A strong confident Myogiryu is good for sumo.

And, Jokoryu, despite injuries, continues his improvement. He has impressed the last couple of bashos and continues to look good here as well.

Edited by Morty
  • Like 5
Posted

At the risk of alienating some people who might be fans: I really, really, really dislike Gagamaru. He always seems clumsy in the ring, like he doesn't know how to handle the size of his own body, often slipping and falling. I used to hate Aoiyama for this same reason but I have to admit Aoiyama is slightly growing on me and has been showing some skill recently.

I think lack of balance is a general problem for guys of Gagamaru's size (and perhaps more importantly, shape). The thing is, back a few years ago he was able to bring a good amount of speed to the dohyo so he often just steamrolled his opponents before they had any chance of unbalancing him. That speed is mostly gone, so he's just a sitting duck much of the time now.

I was starting to think about how, since the days of, say, Musashimaru, we haven't had any Yokozuna that had humongous bellies. It makes me wonder why we don't see a wing back towards more rikishi trying to be leaner and muscular, Chiyonofuji-style, to compete with the Mongolians who are quick and don't carry too much excess baggage.

Posted

If Gaga did what he did today every day he'd be a Yok by now. Textbook example of how to use weight to your advantage

Hahahahahahaaaaaa.... Sorry, Morty... I'm sure you had a context in mind and all that... but Gaga "The Belly-flop" maru a yokozuna? Hahahahaaaa.

Posted (edited)

Ichi is still a very young guy and developing. Today he proved against Harumafuji, that he is very strong. Not a disappointment at all!

Not to mention Terunofuji. Did you see that uwatenage?? The man's only 23. If he can keep injury free he has a bright future in 大相撲.

Edited by inhashi
Posted

I started noticing Terunofuji 5 or 6 basho ago and he has quickly become one of my favorites. Always awesome to watch and constantly improving. With all the hype over Jokoryu, Endo and Ichinojo, it seems that Terunofuji has flown under the radar to become one of the best prospects on the dohyo today. I am excited for the coming year and what he will do.

  • Like 1
Posted

I started noticing Terunofuji 5 or 6 basho ago and he has quickly become one of my favorites. Always awesome to watch and constantly improving. With all the hype over Jokoryu, Endo and Ichinojo, it seems that Terunofuji has flown under the radar to become one of the best prospects on the dohyo today. I am excited for the coming year and what he will do.

Well, its not hard to fly under the sumo radar if you're not Japanese... at least in Japan. They seem to focus most of their hype on the likes of Endo.

Btw, I think part of Ichinojo's win today was that Harumafuji simply didn't seem to have any kind of a plan. He kinda tried to wing it but just bounced off of Ichinojo's humongous body.

Posted (edited)

Not to mention Terunofuji. Did you see that uwatenage?? The man's only 23. If he can keep injury free he has a bright future in 大相撲.

The problem is keeping injury-free. Terunofuji does sumo with a never give up mentality that, while good for the spectator, has its downside and might affect him.

Huge guys like Gagamaru are certainly not the pinnacle of technique but play an entertaining if not important role in sumo. Given, I wouldn't like to see a makuuchi division full of Gagas, but one is nice.

I am afraid to say age is finally catching up with Takekaze and Kyokutenho; specially the former looked bad in his losses. I am also a bit worried about Ikioi; it is too early to judge his perfomances, but losing 2 out of 3 in the bottom of the division doesn't bode well for him.

Edited by shumitto
Posted

Aminishiki-Tochinoshin was the best bout of day three in my book.

Sometimes I can't believe how much of an amazing comeback Tochinoshin has made/is making, since he got badly injured in 2013. He seems better than before his injury.

Posted

What's wrong with Ikioi? Is he injured? (Eh?) He used to be a very nice M4-M6

And Osuna... humm... street brawler again. I like him, but he must try more sumo and less slapfest; I don't deslike tsuppari, but...

Homarefuji, nice start! Looks good!

Aminishiki! How we'll miss his bout some years from now. A very inteligent rikishi. And "wily", off course.

That was from Kinta's video - from Kaisei to the end I could watch live, a really nice experience. Before that only when the official feed was free I watched live sumo, and only up to low makushita.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...