Wakakōyū Masaya
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Wakakōyū Masaya (born 24 February 1984 as Masaya Yakigaya) is a former professional
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
Funabashi is a city located in Chiba Prefecture, Japan. , the city had an estimated population of 644,668 in 309,238 households and a population density of . The total area of the city is . It is the Greater Tokyo Area's 7th most populated city (after p ...
, Japan. His highest rank was '' komusubi''. The last two characters of his
ring name A ring name is a type of stage name used by an athlete such as a professional wrestler, mixed martial artist, or boxer whose real name is considered unattractive, dull, difficult to pronounce or spell, amusing for the wrong reasons, or projecting ...
were taken from his mentor and coach at Ōnomatsu, the former Masurao. He was only the second wrestler from his stable to reach the top division. He was runner-up in one tournament and earned one special prize, for Fighting Spirit. He is now a sumo coach.


Early life and sumo background

Two years after his birth in Funabashi, his father was killed in a car accident and he was subsequently raised alone by his mother. Ōnomatsu stable being very near the home of one of his relatives, he began visiting it from a young age. This eventually led to him entering the stable in 1999.


Career

Fighting under his own surname of Yakigaya, he rose steadily through the ranks until reaching '' sandanme'' where he started to struggle. He managed to reach '' makushita'' in September 2002 but was demoted back to ''sandanme'' after one tournament. In 2003, he missed two tournaments, but upon returning earned two impressive records topped off with a perfect 7–0 record to win the ''sandanme'' championship in the last tournament of that year. He fought for four years in the ''makushita'' ranks with occasional temporary demotions to ''sandanme'' before finally achieving a record that enabled his promotion to the second division, jūryō, in January 2008. To mark his arrival in the elite '' sekitori'' ranks he changed his '' shikona'' to Wakakōyū. After a year and half in ''jūryō'' with two demotions to ''makushita'' he managed a 9–6 record at the ''jūryō'' 2 rank and was promoted to the bottom of the ''makuuchi'' division in July 2009. He only managed a 4–11 record and fell back to ''jūryō''. After a one off 6–9 record this tournament, he took in a string of winning records over the next several tournaments to again reach the top division ''makuuchi'' in May 2010. This time he proved himself with a 10–5 record that would have allowed him to fight in the next tournament at a career high ''maegashira'' 8. However, at this time, he admitted to having been involved in baseball gambling along with a number of other higher ranked wrestlers and was forced to sit out the tournament and was demoted back to ''jūryō'' having never fought at his (then) highest achieved rank. He bounced back from this setback with two winning tournaments, the second being an impressive 10–5 at ''jūryōs highest rank. This awarded him another chance to prove himself in ''makuuchi'' in the January 2011 tournament. Wakakōyū and Toyohibiki were the last two wrestlers to again reach the top division after being demoted from it in the gambling scandal. After an 8–7 score at ''maegashira'' 10 in the May Technical Examination Tournament, he reached the upper ''maegashira'' ranks for the first time at #3. He managed to defeat two '' ōzeki'' ( Kotooshu and Kaiō) but finished with a losing score of 5–10. His best performance in the top division came in November 2011 when he finished runner-up to ''yokozuna'' Hakuhō with a score of 12–3 and was awarded his first '' sanshō'' or special prize, for Fighting Spirit. It also saw him promoted to the '' sanyaku'' ranks for the first time at '' komusubi'' for the following tournament in January 2012. However, a decline in his performances saw him demoted back to the ''jūryō'' division at the end of 2012 having scored only 4–11 at ''maegashira'' 13 in November. After a few years as a fixture in the second division he retired mid-tournament in September 2014 when his losing record had assured his demotion to the unsalaried ranks.


Retirement from sumo

Wakakōyū has stayed in the sumo world as a coach at Ōnomatu stable. He has secured one of the Sumo Association's 105 '' toshiyori-kabu'' or elder names, and is now known as Shiranui Oyakata. His ''danpatsu-shiki'' or official retirement ceremony was held at the Ryogoku Kokugikan on January 31, 2015.


Fighting style

Wakakōyū was an ''oshi-sumo'' specialist, preferring pushing and thrusting techniques to fighting on the '' mawashi''. His most common winning '' kimarite'' were ''oshi-dashi'' (push out), ''tsuki dashi'' (thrust out) and ''hiki-otoshi'' (pull down).


Career record


See also

* List of sumo tournament top division runners-up * Glossary of sumo terms * List of past sumo wrestlers * List of sumo elders * List of komusubi


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Wakakoyu, Masaya 1984 births Living people Japanese sumo wrestlers People from Funabashi Sumo people from Chiba Prefecture Komusubi