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Katayama Shinji

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Record
  
241-239-0

Name
  
Katayama Shinji

Weight
  
142 kg

Championships
  
1 (Jonokuchi)

Height
  
1.8 m


Retired
  
January, 2009

Makuuchi rank
  
Maegashira

Debut
  
March, 2002

Role
  
Sumo wrestler

Career start
  
March 2002

Katayama Shinji Katayama Shinji Wikipedia

Born
  
Shinji Katayama September 6, 1979 (age 44) Yaizu, Japan (
1979-09-06
)

Highest rank
  
Maegashira 13 (July, 2005)

Stable
  
Onomatsu stable (until 2009)

Similar People
  
Toyozakura Toshiaki, Otsukasa Nobuhide, Tosanoumi Toshio, Tamakasuga Ryoji, Dejima Takeharu

Katayama Shinji (born September 6, 1979) is a former sumo wrestler from Yaizu, Shizuoka, Japan. His highest rank was maegashira 13.

Contents

Katayama Shinji Katayama Shinji Rikishi Information

Career

Katayama practised amateur sumo at Senshu University, finishing third at the All Japan Sumo Championships. He made his professional debut in March 2002 at the age of 22, joining Onomatsu stable. He did not have enough amateur titles to enter at the makushita level, instead beginning his career at the lowest level of sumo entry, maezumo. Nevertheless, he moved through the divisions quickly, reaching sekitori status upon promotion to the second highest jūryō division in July 2004.

Katayama was promoted to the top makuuchi division in May 2005. He earned eight wins against seven losses in that tournament, but did not manage to achieve kachi-koshi in the top division again. He could manage only a 7-8 score at the rank of jūryō 13 in March 2008, leaving him dangerously close to demotion to the unsalaried ranks. He maintained his sekitori status with a 9-6 mark in May 2008, but a disastrous 2-13 in July meant he was demoted to makushita for the September tournament. He retired in January 2009.

Unlike most sumo wrestlers, Katayama never adopted a traditional shikona, instead using his own surname as his fighting name. Other recent sekitori to use their own names include Shimotori, Satoyama, Kakizoe and Ichihara.

He was admired for the quality of his stamps during the pre-bout rituals, known as shiko, as he was able to raise his leg straight up in the air.

Fighting style

He was an oshi-sumo specialist who referred pushing and thrusting techniques. His most common winning kimarite was a straightforward oshidashi, or push out.

References

Katayama Shinji Wikipedia