Tamaryū Daizō
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Tamaryū Daizō (born 22 July 1954 as Daizō Nagata) is a former
sumo is a form of competitive full-contact wrestling where a ''rikishi'' (wrestler) attempts to force his opponent out of a circular ring (''dohyō'') or into touching the ground with any body part other than the soles of his feet (usually by thr ...
wrestler from Nagasaki,
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. He made his debut in 1970, retiring in 1992. He was one of the lighter '' sekitori'' wrestlers. His highest rank was '' komusubi.'' He was a member of Kataonami stable.


Career

He was the second son of a forester. He did judo at the Higashi-Nagasaki junior high school. In his third year of junior high he was persuaded by the former head coach of Nishonoseki stable, the former '' sekiwake'' Tamanoumi Umekichi, to try sumo. He was initially reluctant, but was persuaded by the fact that Tamanoumi Umekichi, by then a well-known NHK sumo commentator, was also from Nagasaki. He joined an offshoot of Nishonoseki stable, Katonami, set up by another former ''sekiwake'',
Tamanoumi Daitarō 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 K ...
. He made his professional debut in January 1970. Due to his small size, (he was only and when he first joined) he made slow progress through the divisions. In March 1972 he changed his shikona from his family name of Nagata to Tamaryū ("jewelled dragon"). By 1974 he was tall, but still only . He did not reach '' sekitori'' status until May 1979 when he was promoted to the '' jūryō'' division. Due to a fractured finger he was able to score only three wins in his ''jūryō'' debut and was demoted. He finally managed to return to ''jūryō'' in July 1981, and he reached the top '' makuuchi'' division in May 1982. It had taken 73 tournaments from his professional debut, or years. He fought in the middle to the lower half of the '' maegashira'' ranks for the next year and a half, but due to a long-standing elbow injury he dropped back to ''jūryō'' at the end of 1983. He was the last man to fight Takamiyama, the first foreigner to win a top division tournament, in May 1984. He continued to struggle and in November 1984 he fell back to the '' makushita'' division. He was over 30 years old by this time, but won the ''makushita'' championship or '' yūshō'' with a perfect 7–0 record. He followed this up by winning the '' jūryō'' division championship in March 1985 and was promoted back to ''makuuchi''. In June 1985 he participated with other top division wrestlers in a three-day exhibition tournament at
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, the first time a tournament had been held in New York. In March 1986 he reached his highest rank to date of ''maegashira'' 2, and though he only scored 5–10 he defeated the tournament winner Hoshi and '' ōzeki'' Asashio. In November 1986 on the fourth day he defeated
Chiyonofuji , born , was a Japanese professional sumo wrestler and the 58th ''yokozuna'' of the sport. Following his retirement as a wrestler, he was the stable master of Kokonoe stable until the time of his death. Chiyonofuji was considered one of the gr ...
to earn his first (and only) '' kinboshi'' for a win over a '' yokozuna,'' in his 102nd career tournament, which is the slowest ever. His highest rank was '' komusubi'' which he held for one tournament in November 1987 at the age of 33. It had taken him 108 tournaments from his professional debut to reach the rank, which is also the slowest ever. Although he had only scored 8–7 from ''maegashira'' 5 in September, the lack of success from other ''maegashira'' around him had given him an opening. He scored only three wins in his '' sanyaku'' debut, but one of those was over ''yokozuna'' Hokutoumi on the opening day. His 30th and last ''makuuchi'' appearance came in March 1989, and he had been unable to win a special prize in that time. He continued to fight for another three years. Following the retirement of Kurama in September 1989 he became the oldest man in any of the professional sumo divisions, and he was the last active sumo wrestler born in the Showa 20s (1945 to 1954).


Retirement from sumo

He retired in January, 1992 after a 22-year career, having fallen into the '' makushita'' division for the first time in seven years. As he had been unable to purchase or borrow
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stock in the Japan Sumo Association he had to leave the sumo world. He managed a sumo tea house in Utsunomiya, Tochigi Prefecture, until it closed in 2013.


Fighting style

Tamaryū was a yotsu-sumo wrestler who specialized in fighting on the '' mawashi'' or belt. He preferred a ''migi-yotsu'' grip (left hand outside, right hand inside) and his favourite '' kimarite'' were ''yorikiri'' (force out), ''uwatenage'' (outer arm throw) and leg trips.


Career record


See also

* Glossary of sumo terms * List of past sumo wrestlers * List of komusubi


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Tamaryu, Daizo 1954 births Living people Japanese sumo wrestlers Sumo people from Nagasaki Prefecture Komusubi