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 th ...
wrestler from
Osaka Prefecture
is a prefecture of Japan located in the Kansai region of Honshu. Osaka Prefecture has a population of 8,778,035 () and has a geographic area of . Osaka Prefecture borders Hyōgo Prefecture to the northwest, Kyoto Prefecture to the north, Nara ...
,
Japan
Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean off the northeast coast of the Asia, Asian mainland, it is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan and extends from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea ...
. He made his professional debut in January 2005 and reached the top ''
makuuchi'' division in September 2007. Long regarded as one of the most promising Japanese wrestlers in sumo, Gōeidō holds the modern record for the most consecutive appearances at sumo's third highest rank of ''
sekiwake'', at 14 tournaments. He was finally promoted to the rank of ''
ōzeki'' following the July 2014 tournament,
after scores of twelve wins against three losses in two of the previous three tournaments. However, he only managed to win ten or more bouts in a tournament as an ''ōzeki'' on six occasions, and was ''
kadoban,'' or in danger of demotion, eight times. He won his only top division tournament in September 2016 with a perfect 15–0 record
and was a runner-up seven times in his career. He retired in January 2020 after two consecutive losing records that would have seen him demoted, to become an
elder of the
Japan Sumo Association under the name of Takekuma.
Early life and sumo background
Born in
Neyagawa, Sawai began sumo in his first year of primary school. He was well known for being a strong contender from the beginning, and was encouraged by his family to take on older and bigger boys to improve his sumo even further. In junior high, his light weight compared to most of his contemporaries held him back and demoralized him. However, he made the decision to attend
Saitama Sakae High School which had a well-known sumo program. With a new found determination and a supportive coach, he won 11 national titles. At the 53rd All Japan Sumo Championships held at the
Ryōgoku Kokugikan in December 2004, in which he was the only high school student to compete, he finished in the top four. He made his professional debut one month later in January 2005, joining the
Sakaigawa stable.
Career
Early career
He initially fought under his own surname of Sawai. He moved through the lower ranks quickly and took the championship in the third highest ''
makushita'' division in September 2006 with a perfect 7–0 record, which earned him promotion to the second highest ''
jūryō'' division. At this point he adopted the ''
shikona'' of Gōeidō.
''Makuuchi'' career
Gōeidō was promoted to the top ''
makuuchi'' division after a 12–3 score and runner-up honours at the rank of ''jūryō 5'' in July 2007. He had a very successful top division debut, leading the race for the championship after the 11th day with a score of 10–1. Pitted against higher ranked opposition on the next three days, he lost to
Ama, ''
ōzeki''
Chiyotaikai and ''
yokozuna''
Hakuhō. He was the first ''makuuchi'' debutant to face a ''yokozuna'' since
Tosanoumi in 1995. He ended the tournament with an 11–4 score and was awarded the Fighting Spirit prize. In the November tournament he won six of his first seven bouts, and though he began losing in the second week he still finished with a majority of wins (8–7).
He was promoted up the ranks to ''maegashira'' 3 in January 2008. For this tournament he faced all the top-ranked men at the beginning instead of during the second week as had been the case in his debut. He fell short with five wins against ten losses, although did upset ''ōzeki''
Kotomitsuki on the third day. After this tournament he was named as one of seven wrestlers who
NHK
, also known by its Romanization of Japanese, romanized initialism NHK, is a Japanese public broadcasting, public broadcaster. It is a statutory corporation funded by viewers' payments of a television licence, television license fee.
NHK ope ...
commentator Shuhei Nagao (the former
Mainoumi) called the "
Seven Samurai" and identified as "holding the key" to a Japanese resurgence in sumo, which was dominated by foreigners in the top ranks. (The others were his stablemate
Toyohibiki,
Kisenosato,
Kotoshogiku,
Homasho,
Toyonoshima and
Tochiozan). Back at ''maegashira'' 8 for the March 2008 tournament, he clinched his ''
kachi-koshi'' score of 8–7 with victory on the final day. He produced the same score in the May 2008 tournament, in which his best result was a victory over tournament runner-up
Toyonoshima.

In the September 2008 tournament he was the tournament co-leader with only one loss up to Day 10, although he lost four of his last five matches. He did defeat tournament runner-up Ama for the first time on Day 14 and finished with a strong 10–5 record. He was awarded his second Fighting Spirit prize and was promoted to a ''
san'yaku'' position at ''
komusubi'' for the November 2008 tournament. He could only win one bout in the first ten days (over Ama once again) and finished with a 5–10 score.
In the January 2009 tournament he won ten bouts from the ''maegashira'' 3 ranking, earning his first Technique prize and promotion back to ''komusubi''. His second attempt at ''komusubi'', in his hometown tournament, proved more successful and he compiled a 9–6 score which included a first win in five attempts over
Kotoōshū and two other victories over ''ōzeki''. This earned him promotion to ''
sekiwake'' for the first time for the May 2009 tournament. He began the tournament brightly, defeating three ''ōzeki'' in the first three days (the best start by a new ''sekiwake'' since
Tochinowaka in September 1987), but he faded after that and recorded a disappointing 6–9. Ranked at ''maegashira'' 1 in July, he could only score 5–10. In August he had
endoscopic surgery on his right elbow. Despite this, he fought his way to a 10–5 record in the September tournament after a poor start, and returned to ''komusubi'' for the Kyushu tournament in November. After scoring only seven wins there he was demoted back to the ''maegashira'' ranks.
In January 2010 he earned his first ''
kinboshi'' by defeating
Asashōryū on Day 5. This was his first victory over a ''yokozuna'', discounting a win by default in September 2008. However a defeat to
Aminishiki on the final day meant he finished on 7–8 and he missed out on the Outstanding Performance prize as a result. He was forced to pull out of the March tournament, his first career withdrawal, after injuring his left knee in a defeat to
Hōmashō Noriyuki on Day 5.
He was suspended along with over a dozen other wrestlers from the July 2010 tournament after admitting involvement in illegal betting on baseball. As a result, he fell to the ''jūryō'' division in September. Ranked at ''jūryō'' 1 he had no problem in securing an immediate return to the top division by scoring 12–3. In the May 2011 'technical examination' tournament he defeated all four ''ōzeki'' and was awarded his second Technique prize. His 11–4 score meant he scored double-digit wins from the ''maegashira'' ranks in three consecutive tournaments, a feat previous achieved by only three wrestlers (
Yoshibayama,
Dewanishiki and
Wakachichibu) and not seen for 49 years. However, his return to the ''san'yaku'' ranks in the July 2011 tournament was unsuccessful as he lost eight of his first nine bouts, finishing on 5–10.
Gōeidō's best result for some time came in the March 2012 tournament in Osaka, where he finished on 12–3 and won his third Fighting Spirit award. He was promoted to ''sekiwake'' for the second time, three years after his debut at the rank. During the tournament he defeated
Hakuhō for the first time in 14 attempts, handing the struggling ''yokozuna'' his third defeat of the basho. He also defeated three ''ōzeki'' during the tournament and was awarded his first Outstanding Performance Prize.
In the November 2012 tournament Gōeidō achieved double digit wins in a ''san'yaku'' rank for the first time, scoring 11–4 and winning his third Technique Award. He remained at ''sekiwake'' for the July 2013 tournament despite only scoring seven wins in May, because of the lack of qualified candidates to take his slot. This had also been the case in September 2012, and Gōeidō is the first wrestler to see this happen to him twice.
Gōeidō finished runner-up to
Kakuryū on 12–3 and won his third Outstanding Performance Prize. In the July 2014 tournament, he logged his fourteenth consecutive appearance at ''sekiwake'' a modern age record, passing up
Kaiō's thirteen. He finished 12–3, beating two ''yokozuna'' and two ''ōzeki'' and earning another Outstanding Performance Prize (his 3rd in a row).
''Ōzeki'' career
In recognition of his continued outstanding performance at ''sekiwake'' he was promoted to ''ōzeki'' for the September 2014 tournament despite having a mediocre 8–7 record in the May tournament and only 32 wins in his last 3 tournaments when 33 is generally the standard for promotion.
He turned in an unimpressive 8–7 (with one win by default) in his ''ōzeki'' debut followed by a disastrous 5–10 in the November tournament, leaving him in danger of demotion (''
kadoban'') in the upcoming January 2015 tournament. A 7–8 record in September 2015 saw him ''kadoban'' for the second time in less than a year. After recording wins over
Terunofuji,
Kakuryū and
Kisenosato he escaped demotion on the final day of the November 2015 tournament with a victory over
Tochiōzan which saw him end with an 8–7 record. However, another losing record (4–11) in January 2016 meant he would be ''kadoban'' for the third time in the March 2016 tournament. Fighting in front of his hometown supporters Gōeidō produced a career best effort to record 12 wins including victories over the ''yokozuna''
Kakuryū and
Harumafuji and was in contention for the championship until losing to Kisenosato on the final day. It was the first time in his ''ōzeki'' career that had scored ten wins or more. He managed nine wins in May but a defeat to Kisenosato on the final day of the July tournament saw him ''kadoban'' for the fourth time.

In September 2016 Gōeidō started strongly with six straight wins including victories over ''komusubi'' Tochiōzan and both ''sekiwake'' (
Takarafuji and
Takayasu). He gained the sole lead in the tournament with a victory over
Okinoumi on day seven and went on to secure his ''ōzeki'' rank by beating
Yoshikaze a day later. In the tournament's second week he maintained his unbeaten run with wins over his fellow ''ōzeki'' Terunofuji and Kisenosato and the ''yokozuna'' Kakuryū to open up a two-win lead over his rivals. On day thirteen he defeated Harumafuji with a neck throw (''kubinage'') meaning that he needed only one win in the last two days to secure his first tournament victory. On September 24, the penultimate day of the tournament Gōeidō clinched the title with a force-out (''
yorikiri'') win over
Tamawashi. After his win he commented, "I just focused on wrestling as hard as I could. I’m really happy. There was a time when things didn’t go my way, but I’m glad I stuck it out. I concentrated on my performance and took it one bout at a time, which led to this result". When asked about his prospects of advancing to ''yokozuna'' he added "I really can't think about it right now. I want to soak up the moment for a little bit". He was the first wrestler from Osaka to win a top division championship since
Yamanishiki in 1930. On the final day he completed a ''
zenshō-yūshō'' with a win over
Kotoshōgiku.
He was the first wrestler to win his first championship with a 15–0 record since
Musashimaru in 1994, at 30 years five months he was the fifth oldest first-time ''yūshō'' winner, and he was the first to win with a 15–0 record as a ''
kadoban'' ''ōzeki''.
Gōeidō won his first five bouts in the following Kyūshū tournament, but then was defeated by ''komusubi''
Tamawashi on Day 6. On Day 8 against ''sekiwake''
Okinoumi he was forced to the edge of the ring but with his left heel back on the straw bales he threw his opponent down. The
referee awarded the bout to Gōeidō but the
judges overruled his decision, with the chief judge
Tomozuna announcing to the crowd that in his opinion Gōeido's body was already out of the ring ''(
shini-tai)'' before Okinoumi hit the ground. Gōeidō's promotion hopes were ended by a third defeat to fellow ''ōzeki'' Kisenosato on Day 9. Gōeidō went on to win the next three days, but then lost the final three days where he faced all three ''yokozuna''. Gōeidō finished the tournament with a 9–6 record, dashing his hopes of perhaps being under consideration for promotion in January.
He withdrew from the January 2017 tournament on Day 13 having injured his right ankle in a defeat to
Endō the previous day.
His withdrawal gave a win by default to the tournament leader Kisenosato.
He was still troubled by the injury in the March tournament in Osaka and pulled out on the sixth day having suffered four straight losses. He retained his status with nine wins in May but went ''kadoban'' for the sixth time after a 7–8 record in July. The September 2017 tournament saw Gōeidō as the only ''ōzeki'' participant with
Takayasu withdrawing on Day 3 and
Terunofuji on Day 6. After losing his opening match he then won ten in a row to stand as the clear tournament leader on 10–1, two wins ahead of rank-and-filers
Chiyotairyu,
Asanoyama and
Takanoiwa on 8–3. He lost two of his next three matches but still went into the final day one win ahead of the only ''yokozuna'' in the tournament,
Harumafuji. However, Harumafuji defeated him twice, once in their regulation match and again in a playoff after both finished with 11–4 records. Although he missed out on his second ''yūshō'' this was Gōeido's first runner-up performance as an ''ōzeki'' and only the third time he has recorded double-digit wins at the rank. He withdrew from the May 2018 with an ankle injury after suffering five defeats in the first eight days. With his fellow ''ōzeki''
Takayasu also absent, this marked the first time since 15-day tournaments began in 1949 that two ''ōzeki'' had withdrawn. In September 2018 he was a runner-up for the second time as an ''ōzeki'', and seventh time in his career, with a 12–3 record. He withdrew on Day 12 of the following tournament in November with a right arm injury, having already secured his majority of wins. He produced a 12–3 score in March 2019, although it was only good enough for third place behind Hakuhō on 15–0 and
Ichinojō on 14–1. In July he withdrew from the tournament on Day 7 having already suffered four defeats, citing a right shoulder injury. He withdrew from the November 2019 tournament after sustaining a left ankle injury in his opening day defeat to
Endo.
Rivalry with Tochiōzan
Gōeidō joined professional sumo at the same time as
Tochiōzan, who Gōeidō had fought a number of times in high school amateur sumo competitions and regarded as his chief rival. In his first professional bout on 15 March 2005 Gōeidō defeated Tochiōzan who was also making his debut. He reached ''
sekitori'' status one tournament later than Tochiōzan, who also preceded him into the top division. Gōeidō made his ''sekiwake'' debut in the same tournament that Tochiōzan made his debut at ''komusubi''. In their head-to-head clashes in professional sumo, Gōeidō led 25–14, including a win by default, and won their last six encounters until a day 3 defeat in the 2018 Kyūshū Basho. They are also scheduled to have their retirement ceremonies on the same weekend in January 2022.
Retirement from sumo
Entering the January 2020 tournament as a ''kadoban ōzeki'', Gōeidō suffered his eighth loss in his Day 12 match against
Asanoyama. He chose to retire rather than be demoted to ''
sekiwake'' for the March 2020 tournament in his native prefecture of
Ōsaka. The Sumo Association's head of Public Relations,
Shibatayama Oyakata said on 27 January that he had received word of Gōeidō's decision from his stablemaster,
Sakaigawa, and the following day it was confirmed that Gōeidō would be taking the ''
toshiyori'' name of Takekuma Oyakata. He was the first to retire at the ''ōzeki'' rank since
Kaiō in 2011, and this left only one ''ōzeki'' on the ''
banzuke'' for the first time in 38 years.
Gōeidō retired having been ''ōzeki'' for 33 straight tournament, the tenth highest in history.
At a press conference on 29 January he said, "A few years back, I promised myself I'd retire when I fell from ozeki rank. So there was no doubt in my mind."
Gōeidō's ''
danpatsu-shiki'', or retirement ceremony, was planned to be held at the end of January 2021 at the
Ryōgoku Kokugikan following that month's sumo tournament,
[ but it was postponed due to the ]COVID-19 pandemic
The COVID-19 pandemic (also known as the coronavirus pandemic and COVID pandemic), caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), began with an disease outbreak, outbreak of COVID-19 in Wuhan, China, in December ...
. The ceremony was eventually held two years after his retirement on 29 January 2022. Shortly before his rescheduled retirement ceremony, it was announced that Gōeidō was approved to open his own stable, Takekuma stable.
In March 2024, it was announced that he would take on the role of ringside judge starting with the May tournament.
Fighting style
Gōeidō was a ''yotsu-sumo'' wrestler, preferring grappling rather than pushing or thrusting techniques. His preferred grip on his opponent's '' mawashi'' was ''migi-yotsu'', a left hand outside, right hand inside position. His most common winning '' kimarite'' was ''yorikiri'', or force out, but he used a wide variety of techniques in his career, including ''sotogake'', an outer leg trip, and ''kubinage'', the neck throw.
Personal life
Gōeidō's marriage was announced through the Sumo Association in December 2020. The marriage was registered in May and the couple's first son was born in November.
Career record
See also
* List of sumo tournament top division champions
* List of sumo tournament top division runners-up
* List of sumo record holders
* Glossary of sumo terms
* List of past sumo wrestlers
* List of ōzeki
References
External links
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Goeido Gotaro
1986 births
Living people
Japanese sumo wrestlers
Sportspeople from Neyagawa, Osaka
Sumo people from Osaka Prefecture
Ōzeki