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Yutakayama Hiromitsu

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Record
  
491-505-0

Role
  
Sumo Wrestler

Career start
  
March 1970

Name
  
Yutakayama Hiromitsu

Weight
  
130 kg

Retired
  
May, 1981

Height
  
1.85 m

Debut
  
March, 1970

Makuuchi rank
  
Komusubi


Yutakayama Hiromitsu ecximagesamazoncomimagesI51YWu0y5zfLSY445jpg

Born
  
Hiromitsu Nagahama October 22, 1947 (age 76) Shibata, Niigata, Japan (
1947-10-22
)

Highest rank
  
Komusubi (September, 1972)

Championships
  
2 (Juryo) 2 (Makushita)

Special Prizes
  
Outstanding Performance (1) Fighting Spirit (2)

Stable
  
Tokitsukaze stable (until 1981)

Similar People
  
Kyokutenho Masaru, Wajima Hiroshi, Tosanoumi Toshio, Kaio Hiroyuki, Miyabiyama Tetsushi

Yutakayama Hiromitsu (豊山広光) (born 22 October 1947 as Hiromitsu Nagahama) is a former sumo wrestler from Shibata, Niigata, Japan. A former amateur champion, he turned professional in 1970. His highest rank was komusubi. He wrestled for Tokitsukaze stable and took his shikona or fighting name from the head coach who recruited him, former ozeki Yutakayama Katsuo. After his retirement in 1981 he became an elder of the Japan Sumo Association, and founded the Minato stable which he led from 1982 until 2010.

Contents

Yutakayama Hiromitsu httpsimagesnasslimagesamazoncomimagesI6

Career

He began sumo from a young age and became a high school yokozuna. He graduated in 1966 and then became an amateur champion at Tonodai University. He came from a poor family of farmers, and having to work to support himself as well as study, he had less time for training and did not win as many amateur titles as his rival at the time, Nihon University's Wajima Hiroshi. He had plans to become a teacher, but was persuaded to join the professional sport in March 1970, debuting in the third highest makushita division. His head coach at Tokitsukaze stable was ex-ōzeki Yutakayama Katsuo, also from Tonodai University. Wajima had joined professional sumo one tournament earlier, and when the two met in the juryo division, on two occasions sponsors placed kensho money on the bout, the only two times this has happened in the juryo division. He initially fought under his own surname of Nagahama, and continued to use it upon reaching the top division in November 1971, but in July 1972 he adopted his stablemaster's old shikona. He fought in the top division for 51 tournaments, earning three special prizes and earning eight gold stars for defeating yokozuna, including four from Wajima, his rival from his amateur days. He first reached the sanyaku ranks in September 1972 when he was promoted to komusubi. Although he was to hold the rank on two further occasions, he never managed a winning record there. Despite his success against several yokozuna he was never able to defeat Kitanoumi, losing to him 21 times in 21 matches. He also had a poor record against ozeki Takanohana, beating him only once in 22 matches.

He did not miss a single bout in his career, fighting 996 consecutive matches. This is the second longest streak for former collegiate competitors, after Asanowaka's 1145.

Retirement from sumo

He retired in May 1981 and became an elder of the Japan Sumo Association under the name Minato Oyakata. He founded Minato stable in 1982 and remained head coach there until 2010, when he passed control of the stable over to former maegashira Minatofuji, and took the name Tatsutagawa. He was also a Deputy Director of the Sumo Association. He reached the mandatory retirement age for elders of 65 in October 2012.

Fighting style

Yutakayama was a yotsu-sumo specialist who liked to fight on the mawashi or belt and his most common winning kimarite were yori-kiri (force out), tsuri-dashi (lift out) and uwatenage (overarm throw).

Family life

He is married with two daughters. His stablemaster did not allow him to get married until he reached the juryo division in September 1970. The wedding reception took place in October 1971.

References

Yutakayama Hiromitsu Wikipedia