Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Kenko Satoshi

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Record
  
404-403-59

Name
  
Kenko Satoshi

Weight
  
150 kg

Retired
  
March, 1998

Height
  
1.91 m

Makuuchi rank
  
Sekiwake

Debut
  
November, 1984

Role
  
Sumo wrestler


Kenko Satoshi sumodbsumogamesdepics1286jpg

Born
  
Satoshi Hoshimura June 27, 1967 Moriguchi, Osaka (
1967-06-27
)

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

Gold Stars
  
2 (Akebono, Takanohana II)

Died
  
March 10, 1998, Osakasayama, Osaka Prefecture, Japan

Stable
  
Takadagawa stable (until 1998)

Similar People
  
Daishoho Masami, Tochinowaka Kiyotaka, Takamisugi Takakatsu, Kotonishiki Katsuhiro, Kotofuji Takaya

Highest rank
  
Komusubi (May, 1995)

Kenkō Satoshi (剣晃 敏志, 27 June 1967 – 10 March 1998) was a sumo wrestler from Osaka, Japan. His highest rank was komusubi.

Contents

Career

Debuting in November 1984, he reached the second highest jūryō division in March 1991. His first tournament in the top makuuchi division was in July 1992. Scoring only three wins there he fell back to jūryō, but reappeared in makuuchi in March 1993. He reached his highest rank of komusubi in May 1995. He fell back to maegashira 4 in July but turned in a strong 11-4 record, defeating yokozuna Akebono and returning to komusubi in September 1995. He also defeated yokozuna Takanohana in May 1996, the only wrestler to do so in that tournament.

In May 1997 Kenkō managed an 8-7 record at maegashira 11, but that was to be the last tournament in which he competed. He was hospitalised from July 1997, suffering from pancytopenia caused by an extremely rare form of leukemia (only four previous cases had ever been reported in Japan). His name remained on the ranking sheets, but unable to compete he had dropped to makushita 55 by March 1998. He died on 10 March, from a pulmonary embolism.

Fighting style

Kenkō favoured techniques involving grabbing the opponent's mawashi, or yotsu-sumo. His favourite grip was hidari-yotsu, with his right hand outside and left hand inside his opponent's arms. His most common winning kimarite was yorikiri, a straightforward force out, followed by uwatenage (overarm throw) and yoritaoshi (force out and down).

References

Kenkō Satoshi Wikipedia