Sneha Girap (Editor)

Takekaze Akira

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Current rank
  
see below

Championships
  
1 (Juryo)

Height
  
1.70 m

Record
  
524-524-46

Name
  
Takekaze Akira

Spouse
  
Naomi Narita (m. 2006)

Debut
  
May 2002

Role
  
Sumo Wrestler

Education
  

Takekaze Akira sumodbsumogamesdepics1284jpg

Born
  
Akira Narita June 21, 1979 (age 44) Akita, Japan (
1979-06-21
)

Weight
  
145 kg (320 lb; 22.8 st)

Stable
  
Oguruma stable (since 2002)

Similar People
  
Yoshikaze Masatsugu, Aminishiki Ryuji, Tochiozan Yuichiro, Goeido Gotaro, Tamawashi Ichiro

Highest rank
  
Sekiwake (Sep, 2014)

Makuuchi rank
  
Maegashira (since 2008)

Takekaze Akira (born June 21, 1979 as Akira Narita) is a professional sumo wrestler from Akita Prefecture, Japan. A former amateur sumo champion, he turned professional in 2002, reaching the top makuuchi division the following year. He has been a runner-up in one tournament, earned two special prizes for Fighting Spirit, and one gold star for defeating a yokozuna. Takekaze is in first place for the slowest promotion from makuuchi debut to the third highest sekiwake rank in history. Aged 35 years and 2 months, he is in first place for the eldest to make his sekiwake debut post World War II, and as of January 2017 he is the oldest wrestler in the top division. He is a member of Oguruma stable.

Contents

Early life and sumo background

Born in Moriyoshi, Kitaakita District, Narita practised sumo in college and was a very dominant player, having achieved the student equivalent of yokozuna after winning the Kokutai (Japan Games) and All Japan University Championship sumo tournaments in 2001, his fourth year at Chuo University. He made his professional debut in May 2002, joining former ōzeki Kotokaze's Oguruma stable.

Career

Upon entry he was given makushita tsukedashi status and allowed to enter at the rank of makushita 15 due to his amateur achievements. He reached sekitori level in just two tournaments, and was promoted to the top makuuchi division in March 2003, the first wrestler from his stable to achieve this.

Takekaze had to pull out of his debut tournament in the top division due to injury and fell back to the jūryō division. However upon winning the jūryō championship in September 2003 with a 13–2 record he was promoted back to the top division. He took time to adjust to the stronger opposition in makuuchi and did not achieve a kachi-koshi or winning record above the mid maegashira ranks until May 2007. However, in January 2008 he produced his best score in the top division, 12–3, which included a defeat of ōzeki Kotoōshū. He was awarded his first special prize, for Fighting Spirit. Consequently, in the March, 2008 tournament he debuted at the komusubi rank, finally breaking into san'yaku. He was the first wrestler from his stable to make the titled ranks.

Takekaze could manage only three wins in his komusubi debut and was demoted to maegashira 8 for the May 2008 tournament. However, an 8–7 score at maegashira 4 in March 2009, which included a defeat of ōzeki Kotomitsuki, saw him climb to maegashira 2 for the May 2009 tournament. He also reached maegashira 1 in November 2009. In September 2010 he finished runner-up in a tournament for the first time, and was awarded his second Fighting Spirit prize, shared with stablemate Yoshikaze. He has managed to stay in the top division since May 2005, but has rarely posted more than 9 wins in any tournament.

In July 2014 Takekaze earned his first kinboshi or gold star for a defeat of a yokozuna with a win over Harumafuji. His 9–6 score at maegashira 4 was enough to earn him promotion to sekiwake for the first time, as everyone else in the division from sekiwake down to maegashira 3 had a losing score, with the exception of sekiwake Gōeidō who was promoted to ōzeki. Not only did Takekaze become the oldest sekiwake debutant since the end of World War II at the age of 35 years two months, but the 64 tournaments it took to reach the sekiwake rank from his top division debut is also a record. He performed creditably in the September 2014 tournament, only just missing out on kachi-koshi with a 7–8 record. He remained in the san'yaku ranks at komusubi for the following tournament in November, but could only score 2–13. In 2015 he managed only two winning tournaments and dropped down the rankings. By January 2016 he had fallen to maegashira 13, his lowest rank for seven years but secured his top division status with a 10–5 result. He went on to secure four winning records out of six tournaments in 2016.

In September 2017 Takekaze appeared in his 83rd top division tournament, a record for a college graduate and 10th all-time. He has also fought more top division matches than any other former amateur champion and is in the top ten all-time.

He is the owner of the Oshiogawa toshiyori kabu or elder stock, indicating he intends to stay in sumo as a coach upon his retirement.

Fighting style

Takekaze is almost entirely reliant on oshi-sumo or pushing techniques, and usually loses if his opponents grab hold of his mawashi or belt. He has commented, "Sumo at the mawashi is not my style – I haven't learned to do it." He has won only around four percent of his career matches by yori-kiri (force out), which is the most popular overall technique in sumo. As well as oshi-dashi (push out) he also regularly employs hiki-otoshi, the pull-down, and tsuki-otoshi, the thrust over. At just 172 cm (5 ft 7 12 in) he is one of the shortest wrestlers in the top division, and with the demotion of Aminishiki to jūryō in September 2016, he is also the oldest.

Personal life

Takekaze was married in August 2006. He has a son, born at the end of 2007.

References

Takekaze Akira Wikipedia