- Mitoizumi Masayuki
-
水戸泉 眞幸
Mitoizumi MasayukiPersonal information Born Masato Koizumi
September 2, 1962
Mito, IbarakiHeight 1.94 m (6 ft 4 1⁄2 in) Weight 183 kg (400 lb) Career Heya Takasago Record 807-766-162 Debut March, 1978 Highest rank Sekiwake (September, 1986) Retired September, 2000 Yūshō 1 (Makuuchi)
1 (Jūryō)
1 (Makushita)Sanshō Outstanding Performance (1)
Fighting Spirit (6)* Career information is correct as of August 2007. Mitoizumi Masayuki (born 2 September 1962 as Masato Koizumi) is a former sumo wrestler from Mito, Ibaraki, Japan. His professional career spanned 22 years, from 1978 until 2000. The highest rank he reached was sekiwake. He won over 800 career bouts and took the yusho or championship in the top makuuchi division in 1992. Mitoizumi was nicknamed the "Salt Shaker", due to his habit of throwing enormous quantities of purifying salt onto the ring (dohyō) during the pre-match preliminaries.[1] He is now a coach, and is known as Nishikido-oyakata.
Contents
Career
Mitoizumi was discovered by Takamiyama, a famous Hawaiian born sumo wrestler, who met the 16 year old and his brother at a department store where Takamiyama was making a personal appearance. He was persuaded to join Takasago stable and made his professional debut in March 1978. Initially fighting under his own surname of Koizumi, he switched to the shikona of Mitoizumi (reference to his birthplace) in 1981. He was troubled early in his career by illness and in 1982 he seriously injured his knee and was hospitalised for four months, causing him to miss tournaments and plunge down the rankings.[2] This was just one of many injuries he would have to battle with over the course of his long career.
He made the breakthrough to the salaried sekitori ranks in May 1984 when he reached the jūryō division, in the same tournament in which Takamiyama announced his retirement. Mitoizumi was promoted to the top makuuchi division just two tournaments later in September 1984. However, he was to suffer more misfortune. Just before the May 1985 tournament he was involved in a motor accident, receiving cuts to his face; and was forced to sit out part of the tourney. After the next basho, he was demoted back to jūryō. In September 1986, after he had managed to return to the top division and reach a new highest rank of sekiwake, he injured his knee again in a bout with Onokuni[3] and returned to the second division once more. It took him until January 1988 to fight his way back to the top division, but this time he was to remain there for the next eleven years.
Mitoizumi was ranked at sekiwake on several more occasions and won seven special prizes, but the highlight of his career came in July 1992, when he took the top division tournament championship for the only time. Ranked at maegashira 1, he took advantage of the absence of the top ranked wrestler at the time, ozeki Akebono, and clinched the championship on the 14th day with a win over Takanonami. He finished on 13-2, two wins ahead of his nearest challengers Kirishima and Musashimaru.
Mitoizumi was never able to reach those heights again, but after his final appearance in the sanyaku ranks in November 1992 he remained in the top division until March 1999. He carried on fighting in the jūryō division until September 2000, when he finally announced his retirement at the age of 38,[4] rather than be demoted to the third makushita division. He had been an active wrestler for more than 22 years. His tally of 807 career wins is the ninth highest in sumo history. He never earned any kinboshi, as all his victories over yokozuna came when he was fighting at komusubi or sekiwake rank.
Mitoizumi's nickname of the "Salt Shaker" was given to him by British sumo fans who followed his matches on Channel 4 and in the exhibition at the Royal Albert Hall in 1991.[5] It referred to his habit during the pre-match rituals (but only on the final throw) of grabbing a huge handful of purifying salt and flinging it high into the air. After his retirement his routine was taken up by maegashira Kitazakura.
Retirement from sumo
Mitoizumi's official retirement ceremony (danpatsu-shiki) took place on 9 June 2001, with a record 470 patrons, wrestlers and coaches taking part in the hair-cutting ritual.[6] He has remained in the sumo world as a coach at Takasago stable and he effectively led it during the illness of its head, former komusubi Fujinishiki. However, he lost out on the chance to succeed him, due to personal problems with his fianceé from whom he eventually split. Instead, control of Takasago stable passed to former ozeki Asashio who merged it with Wakamatsu stable. As a result, in December 2002 Mitoizumi instead opened up his own training stable, or heya, Nishikido stable, operating out of the old Takasago building. It has yet to produce any jūryō or makuuchi wrestlers. He remains unmarried, very unusual for the head of a stable. Mitoizumi also works as a shimpan or judge of tournament bouts.
Fighting style
Mitoizumi was not noted as a technician, and never won a Technique prize. His most common winning kimarite was overwhelmingly yori-kiri, a straightforward force out, which accounted for over half of his victories at sekitori level. However, due to his height and strength he also regularly employed kimedashi, or arm barring force out, a technique seldom seen today.
Family
Mitoizumi's younger brother, Umenosato, was also a sumo wrestler at Takasago stable. He fought for 21 years from 1980 to 2001 but only made the jūryō division on one occasion in July 1993.[3] He now works at Nishikido stable as a manager.
Top division record
Mitoizumi Masayuki[7]
year in sumo January
Hatsu basho, TokyoMarch
Haru basho, OsakaMay
Natsu basho, TokyoJuly
Nagoya basho, NagoyaSeptember
Aki basho, TokyoNovember
Kyūshū basho, Fukuoka1984 x x x x West Maegashira #11
7–8
East Maegashira #13
8–7
1985 East Maegashira #10
11–4
FWest Maegashira #1
7–8
East Maegashira #2
2–5–8
West Maegashira #14
3–12
(Juryo) (Juryo) 1986 (Juryo) West Maegashira #12
12–3
FWest Maegashira #1
6–9
East Maegashira #6
10–5
FWest Sekiwake
1–3–11
Sat out due to injury
0–0–151987
Sat out due to injury
0–0–15(Juryo) (Juryo) (Juryo) (Juryo) (Juryo) 1988 (Juryo) East Maegashira #13
9–6
East Maegashira #8
9–6
FEast Maegashira #2
8–7
West Komusubi
10–5
OEast Komusubi
0–2–13
1989
Sat out due to injury
0–0–15West Maegashira #8
9–6
East Maegashira #2
8–7
West Komusubi
7–8
West Maegashira #1
9–6
East Komusubi #1
11–4
F1990 East Sekiwake
7–8
East Komusubi
2–9–4
East Maegashira #7
8–7
West Maegashira #3
6–9
East Maegashira #7
5–10
East Maegashira #14
8–7
1991 East Maegashira #11
7–8
West Maegashira #13
8–7
West Maegashira #12
8–7
East Maegashira #9
10–5
East Maegashira #2
8–7
East Maegashira #2
8–7
1992 East Maegashira #1
8–7
West Komusubi
8–7
West Komusubi
7–8
West Maegashira #1
13–2
FWest Sekiwake
8–7
West Sekiwake
1–12–2
1993 West Maegashira #10
8–7
West Maegashira #7
4–11
East Maegashira #14
10–5
West Maegashira #5
9–6
West Maegashira #1
4–10–1
Sat out due to injury
0–0–151994 East Maegashira #11
8–7
West Maegashira #6
4–11
East Maegashira #14
8–7
East Maegashira #13
8–7
West Maegashira #11
7–8
West Maegashira #14
8–7
1995 East Maegashira #13
7–8
West Maegashira #15
9–6
East Maegashira #7
5–10
East Maegashira #13
8–7
East Maegashira #9
8–7
West Maegashira #2
8–7
1996 West Maegashira #1
3–12
East Maegashira #8
7–8
East Maegashira #10
9–6
West Maegashira #3
4–11
East Maegashira #8
8–7
West Maegashira #2
4–11
1997 East Maegashira #8
7–8
East Maegashira #10
8–7
East Maegashira #5
4–11
East Maegashira #10
8–7
East Maegashira #6
5–10
East Maegashira #11
8–7
1998 East Maegashira #10
6–9
West Maegashira #14
9–6
East Maegashira #10
6–9
East Maegashira #13
8–7
East Maegashira #8
5–10
West Maegashira #14
8–7
1999 West Maegashira #11
8–7
East Maegashira #10
5–10
(Juryo) (Juryo) (Juryo) (Juryo) 2000 (Juryo) (Juryo) (Juryo) (Juryo) West Jūryō #11
Retired
1–12–0x Record given as win-loss-absent Top Division Champion Retired Lower Divisions
Sanshō key: F=Fighting spirit; O=Outstanding performance; T=Technique Also shown: ★=Kinboshi(s) P=Playoff(s)
Makuuchi ranks: Yokozuna — Ōzeki — Sekiwake — Komusubi — Maegashira
Divisions: Makuuchi — Jūryō — Makushita — Sandanme — Jonidan — JonokuchiSee also
References
- ^ "My Superstition". The Observer. 2000-09-03. http://observer.guardian.co.uk/osm/story/0,,362362,00.html. Retrieved 2007-06-10.
- ^ Patmore, Angela (1990). The Giants of Sumo. MacDonald & Co. ISBN 0-356-18120-0.
- ^ a b Lewin, Brian (December 2005). "Brothers In Sumo". sumofanmag.com. http://www.sumofanmag.com/content/Issue_4/Brothers4.htm. Retrieved 2007-06-10.
- ^ "Musashimaru stays on top". BBC News. 2000-09-018. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/other_sports/931074.stm. Retrieved 2007-06-10.
- ^ "Former sekiwake Mitoizumi retires". Japan Times. 16 Sept 2000. http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/ss20000916a2.html. Retrieved 2009-09-10.
- ^ "Mitoizumi has topknot removed". Japan Times. 10 June 2001. http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/ss20010610a1.html. Retrieved 2009-09-10.
- ^ "Mitozumi Masayuki Rikishi Information". Sumo Reference. http://sumodb.sumogames.com/Rikishi.aspx?shikona=mitoizumi&heya=-1&shusshin=-1&b=-1&high=-1&hd=-1&entry=-1&intai=-1&sort=1. Retrieved 2007-07-15.
External links
Categories:- 1962 births
- Living people
- Japanese sumo wrestlers
- People from Mito, Ibaraki
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