Tamanoumi Daitarō
Tamanoumi Daitarō | |
---|---|
玉乃海 代太郎 | |
Personal information | |
Born |
Tomohiro Miura January 2, 1923 Ōita, Japan |
Died | September 27, 1987 64) | (aged
Height | 1.81 m (5 ft 11 1⁄2 in) |
Weight | 120 kg (260 lb) |
Career | |
Stable | Nishonoseki |
Record | 390-325-36 |
Debut | May, 1937 |
Highest rank | Sekiwake (January 1957) |
Retired | January, 1961 |
Championships |
1 (Makuuchi) 1 (Jonokuchi) |
Special Prizes |
Outstanding Performance (2) Fighting Spirit (3) |
Gold Stars |
9 Tochinishiki (4) Chiyonoyama (2) Haguroyama Kagamisato Yoshibayama |
* Up to date as of June 2008. |
Tamanoumi Daitarō, real name Tomohiro Miura, (2 January 1923 - 27 September 1987) was a sumo wrestler from Ōita, Japan. His highest rank was sekiwake. He won a top division tournament championship in 1957. He was later the head coach of Kataonami stable.
Career
He made his professional debut at the age of 14 in May 1937, joining Nishonoseki stable, then run by active yokozuna Tamanishiki, although upon Tamanishiki's death the following year Tamanoumi Umekichi became his stablemaster. He used the shikona of Fukusumi. However, during a sumo tour of Shanghai in 1940, he got into a drunken argument with a driver. Military police went to the site and he also began to fight with them. Police officers wanted him shot, but ōzeki Haguroyama (later yokozuna) and his stablemaster apologized to them. He survived, but was forced to leave sumo and was drafted into the Japanese army.[1] After escaping a POW camp in Siberia and returning to Japan to work in a shipyard, he was invited to return to sumo in 1950. He was allowed to resume his career in the third makushita division where he had left off, and made the juryo division in 1951, adopting the Tamanoumi name, and the top makuuchi division the year after, when he was already 29 years old. In May 1953, he faced Haguroyama in the ring for the only time. Tamanoumi defeated the man who had helped save his life, in what was to be the last bout of Haguroyama's career.
Tamanoumi reached his highest rank of sekiwake in 1957 but then was forced to sit out a couple of tournaments through injury. He fell to the maegashira ranks and considered retiring, but came back to win the top division tournament championship in November 1957 (the first time the Kyūshū honbasho had been staged) with a perfect 15–0 score. During that tournament he wore a gold-coloured mawashi, the first wrestler to flout the Japan Sumo Association's rule that only dark colours should be worn.[2] It had been given to him by the chairman of his supporter's club, who was also the head of the shipping company for whom he had worked in his years out of sumo.[3] Because other wrestlers regarded it as a symbol of good luck, and also because NHK began colour broadcasts of sumo matches in 1960, many others have followed Tamanoumi's lead and worn brightly coloured mawashi.[4] He was runner-up in two other tournaments and earned nine kinboshi or gold stars for defeating yokozuna.
Retirement from sumo
He retired in January 1961 at the age of 38, and opened up the Kataonami stable, which he ran until his death. The stable produced the yokozuna Tamanoumi Masahiro. In his later years he was also a somewhat controversial commentator for NHK's sumo coverage.[4]
Top division record
- The Osaka tournament resumed in 1953. The Kyūshū tournament was first held in 1957, and the Nagoya tournament in 1958.
Year in sumo | January Hatsu basho, Tokyo |
March Haru basho, Osaka |
May Natsu basho, Tokyo |
July Nagoya basho, Nagoya |
September Aki basho, Tokyo |
November Kyūshū basho, Fukuoka |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1952 | x | x | x | Not held | East Maegashira #18
10–5 |
Not held |
1953 | East Maegashira #9
13–2 F |
West Maegashira #1
7–8 |
West Maegashira #2
5–7–3 ★ |
Not held | East Maegashira #4
8–7 |
Not held |
1954 | East Maegashira #3
7–8 |
East Maegashira #4
5–10 |
West Maegashira #6
6–6–3 |
Not held | West Maegashira #7
9–6 |
Not held |
1955 | East Maegashira #5
8–7 |
East Maegashira #4
7–8 ★ |
West Maegashira #4
6–9 |
Not held | West Maegashira #6
8–7 ★★ |
Not held |
1956 | West Maegashira #3
5–10 |
East Maegashira #6
10–5 |
East Maegashira #2
10–5 ★★ |
Not held | East Komusubi
9–6 O |
Not held |
1957 | West Sekiwake
11–4 F |
East Sekiwake
11–4 O |
East Sekiwake
0–6–9 |
Not held |
Sat out due to injury 0–0–15 |
West Maegashira #14
15–0 F |
1958 | West Komusubi
5–10 |
East Maegashira #3
6–9 ★ |
West Maegashira #6
11–4 |
West Komusubi
6–9 |
East Maegashira #2
10–5 ★★ |
West Komusubi
8–7 |
1959 | West Sekiwake
9–6 |
West Sekiwake
4–9–2 |
East Maegashira #5
8–7 |
East Maegashira #2
4–11 |
West Maegashira #7
9–6 |
West Maegashira #1
12–3 |
1960 | West Komusubi
4–11 |
East Maegashira #5
3–12 |
West Maegashira #13
10–5 |
West Maegashira #5
4–11 |
East Maegashira #8
7–8 |
East Maegashira #9
6–9 |
1961 | East Maegashira #13
Retired 7–8 |
|||||
Record given as win-loss-absent Top Division Champion Retired Lower Divisions Sanshō key: F=Fighting spirit; O=Outstanding performance; T=Technique Also shown: ★=Kinboshi(s); P=Playoff(s) |
See also
- List of sumo record holders
- List of sumo tournament second division champions
- List of sumo tournament top division champions
- Glossary of sumo terms
- List of past sumo wrestlers
References
- ↑ Newton, Clyde (2000-11-05). "Big guns head for Kyūshū tourney". Japan Times. Retrieved 2008-06-19.
- ↑ Sharnoff, Lora (1993). Grand Sumo. Weatherhill. ISBN 0-8348-0283-X.
- ↑ [sumo] Yokozuna Tamanoumi
- 1 2 Gould, Chris (April 2008). "NSK meets NHK" (PDF). Sumo Fan Magazine. Retrieved 2008-04-28.
- ↑ "Tamanoumi Daitaro Rikishi Information". Sumo Reference. Retrieved 2013-04-21.