Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Nishikigi is now the first rikishi since Aonosato in Aki 1964 who has both won and lost by amiuchi in the same basho.

  • Like 11
  • Thanks 1
Posted
On 12/03/2025 at 23:29, Asashosakari said:

Rookies who had to wait until Day 4 for their ranked debut, since 1989:

1996.05 Jk70e Kaitanaka*
1996.11 Jk54e Tochiakagi*
2002.07 Jk49e Tamashinzan
2003.03 Jk34w Hizume
2003.07 Jk40w Maeamami
2004.11 Jk40w Maekawa
2006.03 Jk35w Urata
2007.03 Jk36e Akatsuki
2008.05 Jk43w Kanaya
2010.01 Jk28w Kohiyama
2010.09 Jk32w Tamayuki**
2011.07 Jk23w Kumamoto
2011.11 Jk18w Ashitakayama
2016.05 Jk31w Sawanofuji
2022.11 Jk16w Kokiryu
2025.03 Jk18w Asakawasumi**

 

Usagifuji can be added to that group after waiting until Day 4 to fight his first honwari bout this basho.

Btw, without that list I doubt I would ever have come across Urata's wacky schedule - separate blocks of three and four bouts and never fought again.

They and a few others from that group can also claim another unusual feat, that of fighting on four consecutive days. Since 1989 also:
 

Basho		Rikishi		Days	Results

1994.05		Tamahoriki	6-9	2-2
1994.09		Morita		8-11	4-0
1996.07		Motozono *	4-7	3-1
1997.03		Hama *		8-11	4-0
1997.09		Akafuji		6-9	2-2
1997.11		Fukushima *	4-7	0-4
1999.03		Kijima *	6-9	0-4
2000.07		Wakatamaki *	4-7	3-1
2003.07		Maeamami	4-7	1-3
2004.01		Morikawa *	6-9	0-4
2006.03		Urata		10-13	0-4
2006.05		Terasawa	8-11	1-3
2006.07		Hata		6-9	3-1
2007.03		Akatsuki	4-7	1-3
2007.11		Azumanami	8-11	2-2
2008.05		Kanaya		4-7	0-4
2009.07		Mizuta		6-9	0-4
2010.07		Shinohara *	4-7	4-0
2011.07		Kumamoto	8-11	2-2
2014.07		Nakayama	8-11	2-2
2020.07		Kaihiryu	8-11	3-1
2021.11		Koga		8-11	1-3
2022.09		Higohikari *	6-9	0-4
2025.05		Usagifuji	4-7	2-2

* = not honbasho debut.

 

  • Like 3
Posted (edited)

Losing to Oshoma today, Midorifuji became the 34th 33rd rikishi in the 15-bout era (since 1949) to have started both 8-0 and 0-8 in top division tournaments. Reference: Query, everybody in there whose listed result is neither x-0 nor 0-x (except Ouchiyama and Futeno whose MK wasn't a real 0-8 but rather 0-1-7 and 0-4-4 after joining a basho in progress). 

The other active rikishi with that feat are Takayasu and Daieisho.


Late edit: Arguably Chiyotaikai should also be excluded, his sole 0-8 was with a fusenpai at the end.

Edited by Asashosakari
  • Like 8
  • Thanks 2
Posted
13 hours ago, Asashosakari said:

Losing to Oshoma today, Midorifuji became the 34th 33rd rikishi in the 15-bout era (since 1949) to have started both 8-0 and 0-8 in top division tournaments.

Can he do 10-0 and 0-10? 

Posted

A question has been bothering me for many years now, but I'm too incompetent and lazy to even start checking. Are there any rikishi who do much better from a certain side of the dohyo? I know the sanyaku, unless facing each other, fight from the side of their banzuke ranking, i.e. Kotozakura will fight from the west. But the hiramaku guys- I'm wondering if there is any importance to which side they fight from for any of them. Example: Kisenomita wins many more times (12-2) when he fights from the west and is (1-13) from the east. 

Posted
On 14/05/2025 at 22:58, Reonito said:

This is Hidenoumi's 50th Juryo basho, which ties him for 6th all-time. He needs 6 more basho in the second division for sole position of first plac

Now watch him spoil it by getting promoted. Juryo wouldn't be juryo without Hidenoumi.

  • Like 1
  • Haha 1
Posted (edited)

Quoting this over from the basho thread as it's quite interesting trivia.
 

9 hours ago, Jakusotsu said:

Probably stupid question: is Mitakeumi currently the rikishi with the most strokes in his kanji?


If you meant sekitori, then I believe Mudoho has the most strokes with 44. Mitakeumi and Fujiseuin both have 38.

Across the whole banzuke, Kirinryu has a whopping 59 strokes in his shikona. These are the shikona I know of that have 50 or more, there may be others I've missed though.

Kirinryu, 麒麟龍 - 59
Kotoganshu, 琴巖鷲 - 58
Baraki, 爆羅騎 - 56
Satsumanada, 薩摩灘 - 54
Yanasedake, 簗瀬嶽 - 53
Harimanada, 播磨灘 - 53
Satsumahibiki, 薩摩響 - 52
Tsurugifuji, 都留樹富士 - 52
Furanshisu, 冨蘭志壽 - 51
Wakakirin, 若麒麟 - 51
Satsumafuji, 薩摩藤 - 50

Yanasedake was a mid-19th century rikishi. Satsumahibiki was later known as Shosei, who retired earlier this year.

And for what it's worth, the most strokes I've seen in a shikona of two kanji is 42, but again there may be others I've missed.

Nadahibiki, 灘響
Kakuo, 鶴櫻

Edited by Yubinhaad
  • Like 6
  • Thanks 3
Posted
22 hours ago, Tigerboy1966 said:

Now watch him spoil it by getting promoted. Juryo wouldn't be juryo without Hidenoumi.

He needs something to hang his hat on besides: "Did you know he's Tobizaru's brother?" ... "Ehh, I don't see it."

  • Like 1
Posted
On 19/05/2025 at 00:22, Bunbukuchagama said:

Can he do 10-0 and 0-10? 

Kind of poetic that this was averted via blatant henka on Chiyoshoma of all people.

  • Like 4
  • Haha 1
  • Sad 1
Posted

Assuming Onosato gets the rope, he will be the third to start as Yokozuna-Ozeki at the top rank (the others were Akinoumi and Chiyonofuji).

Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, Koorifuu said:

So... who knows who the latest person to get back-to-back juryo yusho was? (Laughing...)

Boy, things change fast.

Shimanoumi, the Juryo-Yokozuna whom can never be demoted

Edited by Faustonowaka
  • Haha 3
Posted (edited)

Each time a sekitori enters a basho late I wish I had a way to compare their subsequent performance to others who did the same thing, but it's non-trivial to find those others, so here's a reference list for the 15-bout era since 1949:

1949.05 Day  7   J8w  Tamahikari      1-8-6
1950.01 Day  7   S1w  Mitsuneyama     3-6-6
1950.01 Day 13   M13w Kuninobori      1-2-12
1951.01 Day  6   M19w Nachinoyama     4-6-5
1951.09 Day  4   M7e  Kotogahama      6-6-3
1952.01 Day  7   M3e  Hirosegawa      0-5-10    fusen Day 1, out again Day 10
1952.09 Day 12   J11w Onoura          1-4-10    fusen Day 1
1953.05 Day  7   J13e Toyonobori      6-3-6
1956.09 Day  5   J3e  Hakuryuyama     6-5-4
1957.01 Day  5   J17e Hidenishiki     7-5-3     fusen Day 1
1957.11 Day  8   M4e  Ouchiyama       2-6-7
1958.01 Day  6   J13e Hidenishiki     6-4-5
1958.07 Day  9   J21w Ichinoya        2-6-7     fusen Day 1
1958.11 Day  9   J4w  Dairyu          1-6-8
1959.05 Day  3   J4w  Tsunenishiki    6-7-2
1959.07 Day 11   M12w Atagoyama       4-1-10
1959.11 Day  8   J8e  Tokinishiki     3-5-7

1960.05 Day  4   M5w  Wakamaeda       5-7-3
1961.07 Day  4   M7e  Dewanishiki     9-4-2     fusen Day 1
1961.11 Day  6   J10e Sawakaze        6-4-5
1962.03 Day  3   M11w Wakanoumi       7-6-2
1962.05 Day  5   J3w  Kochi           4-7-4
1962.11 Day  6   M14e Wakanokuni      3-7-5
1966.07 Day  7   J5w  Tochiazuma      3-6-6
1966.07 Day 10   J4w  Wakayoshiba     1-5-9
1966.11 Day  6   J16w Dairyu          1-9-5
1967.01 Day  6   J11w Tsunenishiki    4-6-5

1970.03 Day  8   J3e  Hanahikari      0-5-10    out again Day 12
1971.09 Day  6   M11e Masuiyama       1-4-10    out again Day 10
1971.09 Day  8   J3w  Fujinokawa      4-4-7
1972.01 Day  3   J8e  Iwatora         6-7-2
1975.03 Day 10   K1w  Asahikuni       4-2-9
1979.05 Day  3   J2w  Chiyonofuji     9-4-2

1985.05 Day  9   M2e  Mitoizumi       2-5-8
1988.03 Day  5   M4w  Fujinoshin      5-6-4
1989.03 Day  8   M1e  Wakasegawa      1-7-7

1990.09 Day  5   M4e  Ryogoku         3-8-4
1992.05 Day  9   M6w  Kirinishiki     5-2-8
1997.03 Day  3   M10w Konishiki       6-7-2

2003.09 Day  4   J3w  Kasugao         4-9-2     fusen Day 1
2006.01 Day  8   J3e  Toki            4-5-6     fusen Day 1
2006.05 Day  3   J14e Masatsukasa     8-5-2
2006.05 Day  6   M16e Tokitsuumi      2-9-4     fusen Day 1
2009.07 Day  8   J8e  Sakaizawa       5-4-6     fusen Day 1

2011.09 Day  3   J6e  Aoiyama        10-3-2
2013.01 Day  5   J6w  Asasekiryu      5-7-3     fusen Day 1
2014.09 Day  7   J7w  Masunoyama      1-4-10    out again Day 11
2017.03 Day  6   M8e  Kaisei          3-7-5
2017.09 Day  6   M12w Sadanoumi       2-8-5
2017.09 Day  8   M2w  Aoiyama         3-5-7
2018.11 Day  3   K1w  Kaisei          3-9-3

2020.09 Day  8   M13w Ishiura         4-4-7
2021.05 Day  9   M3e  Aoiyama         4-3-8
2021.07 Day  3   S1e  Takayasu        7-6-2
2021.11 Day  5   M13w Tochinoshin     6-6-3     fusen Day 1
2023.05 Day 11   M2e  Takayasu        3-3-9     fusen Day 1
2023.07 Day  4   O1w  Kirishima       6-7-2     fusen Day 1
2023.11 Day  8   M1e  Asanoyama       4-4-7
2024.05 Day  4   J5w  Kitanowaka      8-5-2     fusen Day 1
2024.05 Day  4   J7w  Shimazuumi      5-8-2     fusen Day 1
2024.07 Day  6   M15e Chiyoshoma      5-5-5
2024.07 Day  8   J2e  Takerufuji      2-1-12    out again Day 10
2025.01 Day  5   M8e  Roga            0-3-12    out again Day 7
2025.05 Day  6   M14e Kotoshoho       6-1-5  (ongoing)

Kotoshoho is one win away from becoming the first rikishi to get 7+ wins after missing more than 4 days at the start of a tournament, and could become the first to get kachikoshi after missing more than 3 days.


Edit: He finished the basho 6-4-5, missing both milestones.

Edited by Asashosakari
  • Like 5
  • Thanks 1
Posted

Hatooka won the sandanme title today, and with that he has become the first rikishi ever (under modern circumstances*) to win two makushita-and-under yusho from the exact same rank.

Two past rikishi came close by doing it from the East and West, both in makushita: Chibanoyama and Iwatora.


* Modern circumstances because three rikishi did it in 1929/30 when each ranking was used for two tournaments, which makes it a more trivial achievement: Tonoshiroyama in jonokuchi, Ichinonami in jonidan, Mikumayama in sandanme.

  • Like 7
Posted

For the six tournaments from Nagoya 2018 to Natsu 2019 all makushita yusho were won by rikishi ranked in the top 5 ranks. No other streak in the 7-bout era lasted longer than three basho. (Haru-Nagoya 2002, Aki 1993-Hatsu 1994, Hatsu-Natsu 1961.)

  • Like 1
Posted
1 hour ago, Tochinoumi said:

When was the last time only sanyaku rikishi participated in the koreyori sanyaku bouts?

Kyushu 2024

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...