Musashiyama Takeshi

Musashiyama Takeshi
武藏山 武
Musashiyama Takeshi
Personal information
Born Takeshi Yokoyama
December 5, 1909(1909-12-05)
Kanagawa, Japan
Died March 15, 1969(1969-03-15) (aged 59)
Height 1.86 m (6 ft 1 in)
Weight 117 kg (260 lb)
Career
Heya Dewanoumi
Record 240-79-71-2draws
Debut January 1926
Highest rank Yokozuna (May 1935)
Retired May 1939
Yūshō 1 (Makuuchi)
1 (Juryo)
1 (Makushita)
1 (Jonidan)
Kinboshi 2 (Miyagiyama)
* Career information is correct as of October 2007.

Musashiyama Takeshi (武藏山 武, December 5, 1909 – March 15, 1969) was a sumo wrestler from Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. He was the sport's 33rd Yokozuna. He had a rapid rise through the ranks, setting several youth records, and was very popular with the public. However he did not fulfil his great potential at sumo's highest rank, missing many matches because of injury and winning no tournaments.

Contents

Career

Born in Kohoku ward, he came from a poor peasant family, and he entered local sumo tournaments to provide for them.[1] He was scouted by the former Ryogoku Yujiro, who persuaded him to join Dewanoumi stable. Musashiyama made a professional debut in January 1926. He was far superior to his early opponents, becoming an elite sekitori at the age of just 19.[1] He reached the top makuuchi division in May 1929, and was runner-up in his second makuuchi tournament. He reached the sanyaku ranks at komusubi in May 1930. His rapid rise was considered miraculous in an era when it was not unusual for new recruits to take several years to even progress from the lowest jonokuchi division.[1] He missed out on the yusho or tournament championship in March 1931 only because he was of a lower rank than Tamanishiki, who finished with the same score.[1] (There was no playoff system until 1947). However, he won what was to be his only top division championship the next tournament in May 1931.

A lean and handsome wrestler, Musashiyama was popular with tournament crowds.[2] His picture sold more copies than any other wrestler.[1] Fighting alongside other popuar rikishi such as Tamanishiki, Minanogawa, and his stable mate, sekiwake Tenryu, Musashiyama was expected to become a figurehead of the sumo world for years to come.[1] Two major events, however, had a severe impact on his career. He injured his right elbow in the October 1931 tournament, which reduced his power and never healed properly.[1] Then in January 1932 he was promoted from komusubi to ozeki, but in the same month Tenryu and many other top wrestlers went on strike against the Japan Sumo Association, demanding reform of the organization, in what was to become known as the Shunjuen Incident. Musashiyama was criticized for his lukewarm support of the strike, but he never felt close to Tenryu's group.[3] In addition, several people insisted that the reason for Tenryu's walkout was Tenryu's jealousy of Musashiyama's fast promotion to ozeki while he remained at sekiwake.[3] Musashiyama had been considering giving up sumo altogether and turning to boxing instead, but eventually decided to stay in the Sumo Association.[3]

He was promoted to yokozuna in 1935, after finishing as runner-up in the May tournament that year. He had had good scores in the previous two tournaments as well, and had never had a make-koshi or losing score in his career.[1] Nevertheless, his promotion at that point came as a surprise, and it was suggested that it had been engineered by the Takasago ichimon or stable group, so that Musashiyama's Dewanoumi group would be obliged to support the promotion of Minanogawa in return.[4] Unfortunately, Musashiyama proved to be one of the least successful yokozuna ever. He was often absent from tournaments because of his elbow injury and did not win any further championships. He was so popular that he was always in demand to perform on regional tours, and rarely had a chance to recuperate properly from his injury.[1] In his eight tournaments at yokozuna rank, he missed five, withdrew from two, and only managed one kachi-koshi or winning score. In his only kachi-koshi tournament, he faced yokozuna Minanogawa in a battle of 6-6 Yokozunas, and he defeated Minanogawa, which resulted in his opponent having the make-koshi.[5] He retired at the age of 29 without achieving any lasting success as a yokozuna, in May 1939. He had long been overshadowed by Futabayama, then at the peak of his career.

Retirement from sumo

He remained in the sumo world for a time as a coach, and was known as Dekiyama and then Shiranui Oyakata. However, he left the Sumo Association in 1945.[1] He tried his hand at farming, running a restaurant and operating a pachinko parlour in Tokyo, before returning to his home town to work in the real estate business.[1] He died in 1969. His son also became a sumo wrestler at Dewanoumi stable but did not rise higher than the makushita division.[1]

Top division record

January March May October
1929 x x East Maegashira #8 (9-2) East Maegashira #8 (7-4)*
1930 East Maegashira #2 (9-2) East Maegashira #2 (8-3) East Komusubi (6-5) East Komusubi (9-2)
1931 West Komusubi (7-4) West Komusubi (10-1) East Komusubi (10-1) East Komusubi (8-2-1)
1932 West Ōzeki (5-3)** West Ōzeki (7-3) West Ōzeki (8-3) West Ōzeki (8-3)
1933 West Ōzeki (8-3) no tournament held East Ōzeki (6-4-1draw) no tournament held
1934 East Ōzeki (8-3) no tournament held East Ōzeki (9-2) no tournament held
1935 West Ōzeki (8-2-1draw) no tournament held East Ōzeki (9-2) no tournament held
1936 West Yokozuna (3-5-3) no tournament held Sat out no tournament held
1937 Sat out no tournament held Sat out no tournament held
1938 West Yokozuna (5-4-4) no tournament held West Yokozuna (7-6) no tournament held
1939 Sat out no tournament held retired no tournament held

*tournament actually held one month earlier
**tournament actually held one month later

  • The wrestler's East/West designation, rank, and win/loss record are listed for each tournament[6]
  • 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
Green Box=Tournament Championship = Number of Kinboshi.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Kuroda, Joe (February 2009). "Rikishi of Old:Musashiyama Takeshi". Sumo Fan Magazine. http://www.sumofanmag.com/content/Issue_23/Rikishi_of_Old.pdf. Retrieved 2009-03-12. 
  2. ^ Sharnoff, Lora (1993). Grand Sumo. Weatherhill. ISBN 0-8348-0283-X. 
  3. ^ a b c "Rikishi of old: Tenryu Saburo and Shunjuen Incident". Sumo Fan Magazine. http://www.sumofanmag.com/content/Issue_2/Rikishi_of_Old.htm. Retrieved 2007-10-10. 
  4. ^ Kuroda, Joe (August 2006). "Rikishi of Old:Minanogawa Tozo". Sumo Fan Magazine. http://www.sumofanmag.com/content/Issue_8/Rikishi_of_Old.htm. Retrieved 2008-06-05. 
  5. ^ "Natsu 1938 Musashiyama Takeshi". Sumo Reference. http://sumodb.sumogames.com/Rikishi_basho.aspx?r=3743&b=193805. Retrieved 2008-06-06. 
  6. ^ "Musashiyama Takeshi". Sumo Reference. http://sumodb.sumogames.com/Rikishi.aspx?r=3743&l=e. Retrieved 2008-05-31. 

See also

previous:
Tamanishiki San'emon
33rd Yokozuna
1935 - 1939
next:
Minanogawa Tōzō
Yokozuna is not a successive rank, and more than one wrestler can share the title

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