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Sumo: Onosato survives against Ichiyamamoto, stays 1 win off pace
Sumo: Onosato survives against Ichiyamamoto, stays 1 win off pace

Kyodo News

time5 days ago

  • Sport
  • Kyodo News

Sumo: Onosato survives against Ichiyamamoto, stays 1 win off pace

NAGOYA - New yokozuna Onosato stayed one win off the pace at the Nagoya Grand Sumo Tournament following a lucky escape against joint overnight leader Ichiyamamoto on Thursday. The 25-year-old grand champion won a rematch with the No. 8 maegashira after the ringside officials could not determine a clear winner in the day's final scheduled bout, which was initially awarded to Ichiyamamoto. The result saw Onosato (9-3) finish Day 12 at IG Arena alongside Ichiyamamoto and two other wrestlers on the second rung of the leaderboard, as the four-man leading pack was whittled down to young Ukrainian sensation Aonishiki and No. 15 maegashira Kotoshoho at 10-2. Having failed to beat Onosato in two previous attempts, Ichiyamamoto appeared to find success with a push out after the yokozuna opted for a badly judged pull. But replays showed the maegashira's leg hitting the clay as his top-ranked opponent flew off the dohyo, prompting the judges to convene in the middle. After a long deliberation, the officials ordered a rematch, with Onosato once again ceding ground with a pull but ultimately winning by push out. No. 1 maegashira Aonishiki continued his stunning run at the 15-day tournament with victory over two-time Emperor's Cup winner Tamawashi (8-4). The 21-year-old European absorbed Tamawashi's initial thrusts before securing a belt grip and executing an underarm throw. The 25-year-old Kotoshoho, whose career-high ranking is No. 3 maegashira, kept his share of the lead by slapping down title-contending komusubi Takayasu (8-4), the winner of six of their eight past meetings. Top-division rookie Kusano (9-3) relinquished his share of the lead in a loss to sekiwake Wakatakakage (8-4). The former college star, fighting as a No. 14 maegashira, succumbed to a frontal crush out after a vigorous battle between the two athletic combatants. No. 10 maegashira Atamifuji (9-3) stayed one win back from the lead by thrusting out No. 16 maegashira Mitakeumi (8-4). Ozeki Kotozakura (7-5) closed to within one win of the eight needed to avoid demotion-threatened "kadoban" status in September with a force-out victory over sekiwake Kirishima (8-4) that dented the Mongolian-born grappler's title hopes.

Sumo: Onosato survives against Ichiyamamoto, stays 1 win off pace
Sumo: Onosato survives against Ichiyamamoto, stays 1 win off pace

The Mainichi

time5 days ago

  • Sport
  • The Mainichi

Sumo: Onosato survives against Ichiyamamoto, stays 1 win off pace

NAGOYA (Kyodo) -- New yokozuna Onosato stayed one win off the pace at the Nagoya Grand Sumo Tournament following a lucky escape against joint overnight leader Ichiyamamoto on Thursday. The 25-year-old grand champion won a rematch with the No. 8 maegashira after the ringside officials could not determine a clear winner in the day's final scheduled bout, which was initially awarded to Ichiyamamoto. The result saw Onosato (9-3) finish Day 12 at IG Arena alongside Ichiyamamoto and two other wrestlers on the second rung of the leaderboard, as the four-man leading pack was whittled down to young Ukrainian sensation Aonishiki and No. 15 maegashira Kotoshoho at 10-2. Having failed to beat Onosato in two previous attempts, Ichiyamamoto appeared to find success with a push out after the yokozuna opted for a badly judged pull. But replays showed the maegashira's leg hitting the clay as his top-ranked opponent flew off the dohyo, prompting the judges to convene in the middle. After a long deliberation, the officials ordered a rematch, with Onosato once again ceding ground with a pull but ultimately winning by push out. No. 1 maegashira Aonishiki continued his stunning run at the 15-day tournament with victory over two-time Emperor's Cup winner Tamawashi (8-4). The 21-year-old European absorbed Tamawashi's initial thrusts before securing a belt grip and executing an underarm throw. The 25-year-old Kotoshoho, whose career-high ranking is No. 3 maegashira, kept his share of the lead by slapping down title-contending komusubi Takayasu (8-4), the winner of six of their eight past meetings. Top-division rookie Kusano (9-3) relinquished his share of the lead in a loss to sekiwake Wakatakakage (8-4). The former college star, fighting as a No. 14 maegashira, succumbed to a frontal crush out after a vigorous battle between the two athletic combatants. No. 10 maegashira Atamifuji (9-3) stayed one win back from the lead by thrusting out No. 16 maegashira Mitakeumi (8-4). Ozeki Kotozakura (7-5) closed to within one win of the eight needed to avoid demotion-threatened "kadoban" status in September with a force-out victory over sekiwake Kirishima (8-4) that dented the Mongolian-born grappler's title hopes.

Sumo: Ichiyamamoto falls into share of lead, Onosato stays in hunt
Sumo: Ichiyamamoto falls into share of lead, Onosato stays in hunt

Kyodo News

time6 days ago

  • Sport
  • Kyodo News

Sumo: Ichiyamamoto falls into share of lead, Onosato stays in hunt

NAGOYA - Rank-and-filer Ichiyamamoto suffered his second loss of the Nagoya Grand Sumo Tournament at the hands of veteran komusubi Takayasu on Wednesday, dropping him into a four-way tie for the lead at 9-2. Grand champion Onosato, the lone yokozuna at Nagoya's new IG Arena after Hoshoryu's injury withdrawal, managed to beat Mongolian-born sekiwake Kirishima, leaving the two at 8-3 after Day 11 of the 15-day tournament. Onosato is bidding to win his yokozuna debut tournament after winning the previous two meets in March and May to raise his career top-division title count to four. No. 8 maegashira Ichiyamamoto is now tied for the lead with rising Ukrainian star Aonishiki, Kusano and Kotoshoho, fellow maegashira wrestlers who are ranked first, 14th and 15th. Former ozeki Takayasu (8-3) executed an underarm throw to win his hard-fought battle against Ichiyamamoto, a 31-year-old who is looking for his first championship in the elite makuuchi division. "Without giving up, I've been trying to improve my sumo, so I'm glad to have secured a winning record," Takayasu said. "I wanted to take the initiative (against Ichiyamamoto). He was tough and made me work hard for the win." Aonishiki continued his impressive run with a force-out victory over No. 2 maegashira Abi (6-5). Trailing behind at 8-3 are Onosato, Kirishima, Takayasu, No. 4 maegashira Tamawashi, No. 10 maegashira Atamifuji and No. 16 maegashira Mitakeumi. Struggling ozeki Kotozakura (6-5) picked up an important victory in his attempt to secure at least a winning record of 8-7, defeating 40-year-old iron man Tamawashi.

Sumo: Ichiyamamoto falls into share of lead, Onosato stays in hunt
Sumo: Ichiyamamoto falls into share of lead, Onosato stays in hunt

The Mainichi

time6 days ago

  • Sport
  • The Mainichi

Sumo: Ichiyamamoto falls into share of lead, Onosato stays in hunt

NAGOYA (Kyodo) -- Rank-and-filer Ichiyamamoto suffered his second loss of the Nagoya Grand Sumo Tournament at the hands of veteran komusubi Takayasu on Wednesday, dropping him into a four-way tie for the lead at 9-2. Grand champion Onosato, the lone yokozuna at Nagoya's new IG Arena after Hoshoryu's injury withdrawal, managed to beat Mongolian-born sekiwake Kirishima, leaving the two at 8-3 after Day 11 of the 15-day tournament. Onosato is bidding to win his yokozuna debut tournament after winning the previous two meets in March and May to raise his career top-division title count to four. No. 8 maegashira Ichiyamamoto is now tied for the lead with rising Ukrainian star Aonishiki, Kusano and Kotoshoho, fellow maegashira wrestlers who are ranked first, 14th and 15th. Former ozeki Takayasu (8-3) executed an underarm throw to win his hard-fought battle against Ichiyamamoto, a 31-year-old who is looking for his first championship in the elite makuuchi division. "Without giving up, I've been trying to improve my sumo, so I'm glad to have secured a winning record," Takayasu said. "I wanted to take the initiative (against Ichiyamamoto). He was tough and made me work hard for the win." Aonishiki continued his impressive run with a force-out victory over No. 2 maegashira Abi (6-5). Trailing behind at 8-3 are Onosato, Kirishima, Takayasu, No. 4 maegashira Tamawashi, No. 10 maegashira Atamifuji and No. 16 maegashira Mitakeumi. Struggling ozeki Kotozakura (6-5) picked up an important victory in his attempt to secure at least a winning record of 8-7, defeating 40-year-old iron man Tamawashi.

Sumo: 40-yr-old Tamawashi topples Onosato as Ichiyamamoto keeps lead
Sumo: 40-yr-old Tamawashi topples Onosato as Ichiyamamoto keeps lead

The Mainichi

time7 days ago

  • Sport
  • The Mainichi

Sumo: 40-yr-old Tamawashi topples Onosato as Ichiyamamoto keeps lead

NAGOYA (Kyodo) -- Forty-year-old Tamawashi stunned Onosato to set a record as the oldest rank-and-file winner against a yokozuna on Tuesday as No. 8 maegashira and surprise leader Ichiyamamoto remained in control of the Nagoya Grand Sumo Tournament title race. Mongolian-born No. 4 maegashira Tamawashi (8-2) was kept on the back foot against Onosato (7-3) but showed great tenacity belying his age to never surrender full control before thrusting down the yokozuna debutant at the edge for a historic "kinboshi" win at IG Arena. "It feels great," said the two-time Emperor's Cup winner and former sekiwake Tamawashi, who continues to rewrite his own record of 1,700-plus consecutive appearances since his March 2004 debut. "I was filled with excitement heading into this bout (against Onosato). I still have a lot left in me." Onosato has handed out three kinboshi during the current meet, tying the worst record for a yokozuna debutant. A day after taking the outright lead, Ichiyamamoto (9-1) continued his scintillating form by pushing down former sekiwake Meisei (3-7). Having backed off slightly at the start, Ichiyamamoto went on the offensive and kept driving at the No. 5 maegashira en route to a morale-boosting win. Five wrestlers joined Tamawashi in improving to 8-2 and securing a winning record at the 15-day meet, with sekiwake Kirishima ranked the highest. The former ozeki found a tiny opening to grab hold of lively No. 5 maegashira Hiradoumi (5-5) in a frontal-crush-out win. Ukrainian Aonishiki beat Kazakhstani Kinbozan (2-8) to stay in the title race as the No. 1 maegashira's timely pull-down attempt had his No. 3-ranked opponent touching the sand with both hands seconds into the contest. "It wasn't the best of bouts but I'm happy to have secured a winning record," said Aonishiki, who went 11-4 in his first two tournaments at the elite makuuchi division. "My body is moving well so it's been good so far." Top-division debutant Kusano (8-2) had a hard bout against trickster Ura (6-4), who scurried around the raised ring in the face of the No. 14 maegashira's pressure, but he eventually pushed the No. 9 maegashira out from behind to secure a winning record for the 15-day tournament. No. 15 maegashira Kotoshoho and No. 16 maegasihra Mitakeumi, a former ozeki, also won their bouts to keep up the pressure on Ichiyamamoto. Ozeki Kotozakura (5-5) slumped to his third straight defeat, meanwhile, after getting outlasted and forced out by Wakatakakage (6-4) in a long, grueling encounter.

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