
Nicholas Tarasenko Aiming To Become Second British Professional Sumo Wrestler in History
Hidenokuni
, the London-born wrestler garnered quite a followin
g.
After his second tournament, he was p
romoted to the fifth jonidan division of the sport
. However, h
is stablemates treated him harshly as they
weren't
too pleased with the attention he was getting. As a result, he retired within a few months. Since then, there have been no professional British sumo wrestlers. Looking to change that is Nicholas Tarasenko, a 15-year-old student from Hull city.
List of Contents:
Nicholas Tarasenko Joins Minato Stable
Lofty Ambitions
Related Posts
Nicholas Tarasenko Joins the Minato Stable
Earlier this month, after he finished his GCSE exams, the 187-centimeter-tall teenager left his hometown in Yorkshire to head to Japan. He has joined the Minato-beya in Saitama Prefecture, which is led by Minatofuji, who reached the rank of maegashira 2. The stable's most successful wrestler to date was Ichinojo from Mongolia, who was promoted all the way to sekiwake and won the top division championship in July 2022. It will be some achievement if Tarasenko can achieve anything like that, but he has already shown a lot of potential.
Having spent years
practicing
judo and playing rugby, the youngster made his sumo debut two years ago in Estonia during a trip to visit his grandmother. His Estonian-born father had connections with
Baruto
, who reached sumo's second
–
highest rank of
ozeki
.
Baruto
hosts a
sumo tournament
for people aged under 18
, which Tarasenko decided to join. He went on to win the 90-kilogram class gold despite only having had one hour of sumo training prior to the competition. He was also four years under the age limit. The following year, he was invited to train at
the Minato-beya
.
Lofty Ambitions
An ambitious young man, he has already joked about making his mark in the sport. Speaking to
The Japan Times
' John Gunning last year, he said with a smile, 'I'm trying to get past yokozuna — see if I can become so good that they make a new ranking. You always gotta aim high.' He added, 'There's more pressure on me to be the best because it's one foreigner per stable and if I don't do my best, it feels like I'm disrespecting everyone that was helping me as well, so now I have to become the best. I can't settle for less.'
If Tarasenko passes his Japanese exams, he could make his professional debut as early as the spring basho in Osaka next March. British fans of the sport will be excited to see how he progresses. Sumo first appeared on television in the UK in the 1960s when the BBC broadcast segments on Japanese culture and sports. Its popularity reached its peak between 1988 and 1992 thanks to the program,
Channel 4 Sumo
. During that period, London's historic Royal Albert Hall hosted a five-day tournament. The 154-year-old Kensington venue will be hosting its second sumo competition in October 2025.
Related Posts
The Greatest Sumo Rivalries of All Time | List of 7
London To Host First Overseas Sumo Tournament in 20 Years
A Guide to Sumo in Tokyo
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Mainichi
4 hours ago
- The Mainichi
Tennis: Junior Wimbledon champ Mochizuki gets 1st win at Grand Slam
LONDON (Kyodo) -- Japan's Shintaro Mochizuki won his first match at a Grand Slam on Tuesday after coming from behind to edge Giulio Zeppieri of Italy in five sets at Wimbledon. Mochizuki, the 2019 Wimbledon junior singles champion and first Japanese to win the title, prevailed 2-6, 3-6, 6-3, 7-6(6), 7-5 in a 3-hour, 14-minute marathon in the men's singles first round. The match was suspended at the end of the fourth set on Monday due to the late-night curfew. The players held serve for a combined 11 games after the match's resumption, before 144th-ranked Mochizuki capitalized on the 351st-ranked Italian's double fault to earn two match points. He clinched the victory on the first by sending a forehand return down the line. "I was quite fatigued after playing four sets, and the suspension (on Monday) wasn't a negative thing," Mochizuki said. "The best thing was managing to grind out a win from a hard, difficult match, more than getting a win at a Grand Slam." His compatriot Yoshihito Nishioka, 82nd in the world, lost 6-2, 6-3, 6-4 to 21st-ranked Grigor Dimitrov of Bulgaria.


The Mainichi
5 hours ago
- The Mainichi
Ohtani reaches 30 homers for 5th straight season as Yamamoto and the Dodgers beat the White Sox 6-1
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Shohei Ohtani reached 30 homers for the fifth straight season, hitting a fourth-inning drive after fouling a pitch off the plate umpire, and the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Chicago White Sox 6-1 on Tuesday night. Ohtani fouled the ball off Alan Porter's right knee in the fourth. Ohtani checked on the umpire and stood by watching until Parker got up under his own power. The three-time MVP then hit a 408-foot shot to center, snapping an 0-for-6 skid and extending the lead to 6-1. Ohtani walked over and checked on Porter again during the seventh-inning stretch before leading off. Los Angeles scored its most runs this season in support of Yoshinobu Yamamoto (8-6), staking the Japanese right-hander to a 4-0 lead in the first inning. The Dodgers won for the 13th time in 16 games and opened a season-high, eight-game NL West lead. Every run in the game was scored with two outs. Yamamoto allowed one run and three hits in seven innings, struck out eight and walked one. White Sox rookie Shane Smith (3-6) got two quick outs in the first before walking Will Smith and Max Muncy back-to-back. Teoscar Hernandez followed with a RBI single, Andy Pages hit a run-scoring double and Michael Conforto a two-run single. Chicago's lone run came on Lenyn Sosa's RBI single in the third. Key moment Ohtani joined Seattle's Cal Raleigh (33) and Aaron Judge of the Yankees (30) as players with at least 30 homers by the All-Star break. Key stat The Dodgers had been averaging just 2 1/2 runs of support for Yamamoto. Up next White Sox RHP Sean Burke (4-7, 4.22 ERA) makes his first career start against the Dodgers on Wednesday. Los Angeles LHP Clayton Kershaw (4-0, 3.03) is three strikeouts from reaching 3,000 in his 18-year career.


Kyodo News
8 hours ago
- Kyodo News
Baseball: Ohtani homers No. 30, Yamamoto earns win as Dodgers cruise
LOS ANGELES - Shohei Ohtani reached 30 home runs for the fifth straight season and Yoshinobu Yamamoto earned his eighth win with a seven-inning gem as the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Chicago White Sox 6-1 on Tuesday. Ohtani leads the National League by four homers after he connected on a 3-2 slider from Shane Smith (3-6) and sent it over the right-center-field wall for a solo run at Dodger Stadium, scoring the last run of the game with two outs in the fourth inning. "I was kept at bay with my first two trips to the plate but managed to get a good swing with the third," said Ohtani after going 1-for-4. "It was also great, Yoshinobu did a wonderful job." Ohtani had 46 home runs in 2021 when he broke a Japanese home run record in a Major League Baseball season, previously set at 31 by Hideki Matsui. The two-way star homered 34 and 44 times the next two years with the Los Angeles Angels, before getting 54 in his first season with the Dodgers last season to win his second straight home run title. Yamamoto (8-6) held the White Sox to three hits and a walk while striking out eight in a 98-pitch effort, with Lenyn Sosa's RBI double plating the visiting team's only run in the fourth that briefly made it a 5-1 game. "I'm pitching with good mechanics," the right-hander said after he bettered the seven wins from his MLB-debuting season last year. "Things that work for me are starting to get clearer. My condition is as good as it's always been, and I was able to go on the mound with confidence." Seiya Suzuki had his 23rd homer of the season, meanwhile, as the Chicago Cubs beat the Cleveland Guardians 5-2. Suzuki made it a 4-2 game in the sixth with a solo shot to left-center off Gavin Williams (5-4) as he continues to rewrite his home run season record for a right-handed Japanese hitter in the big leagues. "I'm prioritizing getting a proper swing rather than trying to meet the ball," he said after going 1-for-4. "I have one-off good at-bats but can't continue getting them, and that needs to be corrected going forward."