Tachiyama Mineemon

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太刀山 峯右衞門
Tachiyama Mineemon
Tachiyama Mineemon
Tachiyama Mineemon
Personal information
Birth name Kyuhachi Makise
Date of birth August 15, 1877(1877-08-15)
Place of birth Toyama, Japan
Date of death March 4, 1941 (aged 63)
Height 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in)
Weight 150 kg (330 lb)
Career*
Heya Tomozuna
Record 211-30-73(11 draws)
Debut May, 1900
Highest rank Yokozuna (February, 1911)
Retired January, 1918
Yusho 11 (Makuuchi)

* Career information is correct as of July 2007.

Tachiyama Mineemon (太刀山 峯右衞門, August 15, 1877 - April 3, 1941) was a sumo wrestler from Toyama City, Toyama Prefecture, Japan. He was the sport's 22nd Yokozuna. He was well known for his extreme strength and skill.

Contents

[edit] Career

Tachiyama joined Tomozuna stable at the insistence of Taisuke Itagaki and Tsugumichi Saigo. However, he was so strong that most of the wrestlers in the stable weren't able to practice with him. Therefore, Hitachiyama Taniemon became his practical coach. He was promoted to yokozuna in February 1911.

His most feared skill was tsuki, or pushing.[1] On the 3rd day of June 1910 tournament, komusubi Kohitachi Yoshitaro flew over spectators by Tachiyama's thrust and then fell on the 4th line of seats. Kohitachi was wounded and left the tournament. Tachiyama is reported to have waved a shell weighing 400 kg (880 lb) with one arm.[2]

Tachiyama never had a losing record (make-koshi) in his eighteen year career, and whilst at the yokozuna rank lost only three bouts.[3] He once won 43 bouts in a row, lost one to Nishinoumi Kajirō II, then won another 56 in a row.[3] If he had not lost that match (which he later admitted was deliberate, to help out his rival yokozuna who was struggling at the time),[3] he would have set an all time record of 100 consecutive wins. As it stands, his second streak of 56 bouts, which began on the 9th day of the January 1912 tournament, is the fourth best in history after Futabayama, Tanikaze and Umegatani I.[3]

His run ended on the 8th day of May 1916 tournament, when he was finally defeated by Tochigiyama Moriya. On the final day of January 1917 tournament, he was defeated by Ōnishiki Uichirō. Tochigiyama and Ōnishiki were pupils of Hitachiyama. After this second loss, he retired.

In 1917, he said to wrestlers, "I give one bale of rice if you can walk around a Dohyo shouldering me." A boy, who hadn't made his debut of the professional sumo yet, acceded to his request. He failed at the first attempt but achieved at the 2nd attempt.[4] After about 15 years, the boy became yokozuna Tamanishiki San'emon.

His style of dohyo-iri (yokozuna ring entering ceremony) came to be known as shiranui after it was imitated by later yokozuna Haguroyama. However, he insisted that his style was Unryū Kyūkichi's style.[5]

After retiring from active competition he was an elder of the Sumo Association under the name Azumazeki, but he left the sumo world in May 1919. He became the first yokozuna to perform kanreki dohyō-iri, in 1937.

[edit] Top division record

*Two championships before establishment of yusho system in 1909 aren't admitted officially
*There was no fusensho system until March 1927
*All top division wrestlers were usually absent on the 10th day until 1909

January May
1903 East Maegashira #9 (6-3-1) East Maegashira #2 (4-4-1-1draw)
1904 East Maegashira #2 (7-2-1) East Maegashira #1 (8-1-1)
1905 East Maegashira #1 (7-1-1-1hold) East Sekiwake (5-2-2-1draw)
1906 East Sekiwake (7-2-1) East Sekiwake (4-1-5)
1907 East Sekiwake (5-1-3-1draw) East Sekiwake (8-1-1)
1908 East Sekiwake (6-2-1-1hold) East Sekiwake (7-1-1-1draw)
1909 West Sekiwake (6-1-2-1draw) West Ōzeki (8-2)*
1910 West Ōzeki (6-0-1-2draws-1hold) West Ōzeki (9-0-1draw)*
1911 West Ōzeki (8-0-1draw-1hold) West Yokozuna (10-0)*
1912 East Yokozuna (8-1-1draw) West Yokozuna (10-0)
1913 Sat out due to injury East Yokozuna (10-0)
1914 East Yokozuna (10-0) West Yokozuna (8-0-1-1hold)
1915 Sat out due to injury West Yokozuna (10-0)*
1916 Sat out due to injury West Yokozuna (9-1)
1917 East Yokozuna (9-1) Sat out due to injury
1918 retired x

*tournament actually held one month later than listed.

  • The wrestler's East/West designation, rank, and win/loss record are listed for each tournament.[6][7]
  • A third figure in win-loss records represents matches sat-out during the tournament (usually due to injury)
  • an X signifies the wrestler had yet to reach the top division at that point in his career or a tournament after he retired
Green Box=Tournament Championship

[edit] References

  1. ^ Tachiyama Mineemon. National Diet Library (2004). Retrieved on 2008-04-17.
  2. ^ 太刀山 峯右エ門 (Japanese). Retrieved on 2008-06-05.
  3. ^ a b c d Sharnoff, Lorna (1993). Grand Sumo. Weatherhill. ISBN 0-8348-0283-x. 
  4. ^ 玉錦 三右エ門 (Japanese). Retrieved on 2008-05-19.
  5. ^ The 11th Yokozuna Shiranui Koemon (English). Sumo Fan Magazine. Retrieved on 2007-10-09.
  6. ^ Tachiyama Mineemon Rikishi Information (English). Sumo Reference. Retrieved on 2007-09-25.
  7. ^ 大相撲優勝力士 (Japanese). ja.wikipedia. Retrieved on 2007-09-25.

[edit] See also

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Wakashima Gonshirō
22nd Yokozuna
1911 - 1918
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Ōkido Moriemon
Yokozuna is not a successive rank, and more than one wrestler can share the title
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