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Sagatsukasa Hiroyuki

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University
  
Toyo University

Role
  
Sumo Wrestler

Martial art
  
Sumo

Name
  
Sagatsukasa Hiroyuki

Weight
  
131 kg

Debut
  
March, 2004

Height
  
1.65 m

Current rank
  
see below

Division
  
Juryo (since 2012)


Sagatsukasa Hiroyuki

Born
  
Hiroyuki Isobe December 21, 1981 (age 42) Shizuoka, Japan (
1981-12-21
)

Highest rank
  
Maegashira 9 (Sept, 2011)

Championships
  
1 (Juryo) 1 (Makushita)

Stable
  
Irumagawa stable (since 2004)

Similar People
  
Tochinowaka Michihiro, Kimurayama Mamoru, Tosayutaka Yuya, Asasekiryu Taro, Aran Hakutora

Sagatsukasa Hiroyuki (born 21 December 1981 as Hiroyuki Isobe) is a sumo wrestler from Mishima, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan. A former amateur comptetitor at Toyo University, he made his professional debut in March 2004, reaching the top makuuchi division for the first time in March 2010. He has both a makushita and a jūryō division championship. His highest rank has been maegashira 9. He is one of the shortest wrestlers in professional sumo at 1.66 m (5 ft 5 12 in).

Contents

Sagatsukasa Hiroyuki Sagatsukasa Hiroyuki Wikipedia

Early life and sumo background

Isobe began practicing sumo as a fourth grader in Mishima City, his hometown. His father encouraged him to drink milk to try to increase his height. In his sixth year of primary school he won a national boys sumo tournament, earning the title of "young boy yokozuna" for this accomplishment. In junior high school as a representative for Shizuoka prefecture in a national tournament, he won both the team and individual competitions. In his second year of high school in 1998 he took the championship to take the high school yokozuna title. In his third year, he won a Kanazawa tournament and was chosen for a tournament expedition to China, which was also attended by many future stars in sumo. He defeated the future top makuuchi division wrestler Futeno, and also finished ahead of the future Asashōryū. He was a bronze medallist in the inaugural Junior World Sumo Championships in 1999. He went on to Toyo University where the future Kimurayama was his teammate.

Career

Joining Irumagawa stable in March 2004, he was below the official height requirement at just 166 cm but was accepted after passing a secondary examination. Initially fighting under his own surname of Isobe, he recovered from an elbow injury sustained in 2006 to reach the second highest jūryō division in November 2007. He was the second wrestler to pass the secondary height exam and reach juryo, following Toyonoshima. After changing his shikona to Sagatsukasa he initially remained near the bottom of jūryō and was demoted to makushita on several occasions. However he fought his way back and reached the top division in March 2010 after a 9-6 score at jūryō 1. He lasted only one tournament in makuuchi and a series of poor performances back in jūryō saw him demoted to makushita once again. Returning to jūryō in May 2011 he won the yūshō or championship with a 13-2 record and was promoted back to the top division. He lasted four tournaments at the top before being relegated to jūryō for the March 2012 tournament. After six tournament in the second division, the last two of which he achieved consecutive 9-6 records, he was promoted back to the top division for the March 2013 tournament. However, he was injured and missed the last seven days of the tournament and was again relegated. He only lasted one tournament in jūryō and dropped out of the salaried divisions back to makushita in July 2013 where he has remained, apart from one brief appearance in jūryō in March 2014.

Fighting style

Sagatsukasa's Sumo Association profile lists his favoured techniques as kuisagari, an unusual move employed by shorter wrestlers that involves pushing the head against the opponent's chest and grabbing the front part of the mawashi, oshi (pushing) and nage (throwing). His most common winning kimarite in his career to date have been oshi dashi (push out), hiki otoshi (pull down) and tsuki otoshi (thrust over). In September 2011 he defeated Tochinowaka with the spectacular ipponzeoi move, which had only been seen twice in the top division since 1974.

References

Sagatsukasa Hiroyuki Wikipedia