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Tochiōzan Yūichirō

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Current rank
  
see below

Championships
  
1 (Sandanme)

Name
  
Tochiozan Yuichiro

Stable
  
Kasugano stable

Height
  
1.88 m

Martial art
  
Sumo

Debut
  
January 2005

Gold Stars
  
2 (Hakuho, Harumafuji)

Role
  
Sumo Wrestler

Makuuchi rank
  
Maegashira (since 2012)

Weight
  
152 kg

Tochiozan Yuichiro httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu
Born
  
Yuichiro Kageyama March 9, 1987 (age 37) Kochi, Japan (
1987-03-09
)

Highest rank
  
Sekiwake (September 2010)

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

Similar People
  
Goeido Gotaro, Kisenosato Yutaka, Kotoshogiku Kazuhiro, Terunofuji Haruo, Kakuryu Rikisaburo

Tochiōzan Entering Sumo Tournament Basho Nagoya Japan


Tochiōzan Yūichirō (born March 9, 1987 as Yūichirō Kageyama) is a sumo wrestler from Kōchi Prefecture, Japan. He made his professional debut in January 2005 and reached the top makuuchi division in March 2007. At one point he was regarded as one of the most promising Japanese rikishi. His highest rank has been sekiwake. His best performance came in May 2012 when he tied with Kyokutenhō after fifteen days but was beaten in a play-off. He has made twenty-five appearances in the san'yaku ranks.

Contents

Early life and sumo background

Tochiōzan Yūichirō httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Kageyama was exposed to sumo from a very young age because it was popular in his area and his parents were fans of the sport. His parents arranged for him to join a local sumo club. He did not enjoy sumo at all at first, disliking the fierceness and the constant training that was necessary. He considered quitting many times, but as he continued he eventually came to enjoy and excel at the sport and transferred to Meitoku Gijuku junior high school which was a school in his native Kōchi prefecture which was known for its strong sumo program. In his third year of junior high he won a national competition and was named the junior high yokozuna. Upon graduation, he transferred to far away Saitama Sakae high school, in the greater Tokyo area to continue his sumo training, as this school was also known for its strong sumo program. The future ōzeki Gōeidō was already a member there, and the two would began a spirited rivalry that continues to this day in their professional roles. As high school graduation approached he considered university, but eventually chose to enter professional sumo directly from high school.

Career

Several different heya were interested in recruiting him for professional sumo, but he eventually chose Kasugano stable. He made his ring debut at the March 2005 tournament, under his family name Kageyama. He rose through the divisions quickly, winning the third lowest sandanme division championship in November of that same year. In September 2006 at the age of 19 he became a salaried sekitori wrestler when he entered jūryō, the second highest division, adopting the ring name Tochiōzan.

He made his debut in the top makuuchi division in March 2007, where he was in contention for the championship until the 14th day. He finished with a strong 11-4 record and won the Fighting Spirit award. Promoted to maegashira for the May tournament, he faced all the top ranked wrestlers for the first time and faltered with a 6-9 record, suffering the first tournament in his career where he had more losses than wins (make-koshi). At the July tournament the same year he suffered a dislocated shoulder on the tenth day and was forced to withdraw. Ranked at maegashira 13 in September, he finished the tournament with a disappointing 7-8 score, losing his last five bouts. He remained at the bottom of the division for the next few tournaments, struggling with lower back pain, but returned to form in March 2008, finishing with 11-4 and winning the Technique award. He struggled once again in May however, losing his first eight bouts before staging a partial recovery to finish on 5-10.

After disappointing 6-9 scores in September and November 2008, he fell to maegashira 12, where he responded by winning his first eight matches in January 2009, finishing on 10-5. This resulted in promotion to maegashira 2 for the March 2009 tournament. He had a good start to this tournament as well, defeating three ōzeki (Kotoōshū, Harumafuji and Chiyotaikai) and standing at 7-3 after ten days. He then lost four matches in a row, before securing his kachi-koshi with a win on the final day.

This was enough to earn Tochiōzan promotion to the san'yaku ranks for the first time for the May 2009 tournament, at the rank of komusubi. When the banzuke for the tournament was released in late April he held a press conference and said he would like to go one win better than his rival from high school sumo days, Gōeidō, who had just made sekiwake for the first time. They began their professional careers in the same tournament and Tochiōzan preceded him into the jūryō and makuuchi divisions, but he had beaten Gōeidō just once in six meetings, in September 2007. In the end both wrestlers finished on 6-9, although Tochiōzan did beat his rival for the second time in their individual match. Falling back to the maegashira ranks for July, he could only produce a very poor 2-13 record, with one of his wins coming against Gōeidō. An 11-4 score in September 2009 put him back up to maegashira 3 for the November tournament in Kyushu, where he beat two ōzeki (Harumafuji and the struggling Chiyotaikai) but fell short with a 5-10 record.

At maegashira 6 in March 2010 he defeated ōzeki Kotomitsuki and scored 11-4, returning to komusubi. A strong 9-6 record in July, which included defeats of two more ōzeki, earned him promotion to sekiwake for the first time for the September 2010 tournament. His sekiwake debut was a success as he scored 11-4 and was awarded his second Technique prize. However, two losing scores in his next two tournaments saw him fall out of san'yaku, and a disappointing 4-11 in May 2011 saw him lose further ground. He withdrew from the November tournament on the 11th day after suffering a ligament injury to his right ankle. However he returned with a strong performance in the opening tournament of 2012, posting an 11-4 record. He would have received his first Fighting Spirit prize since his top division debut had he defeated Gagamaru on the final day, but he failed to do so.

In May 2012, he lost the final playoff for the Emperor's Cup, being defeated by fellow maegashira Kyokutenhō after both finished with 12-3 records. This was the first ever playoff match between two maegashira ranked wrestlers, and his defeat meant he just missed out on becoming the first Japanese born makuuchi division yūshō winner since Tochiazuma in January 2006. He received a share of the Fighting Spirit Award for his efforts. He returned to the sekiwake rank for the next tournament. In September he defeated Hakuhō for the first time in 15 attempts to earn his first gold star or kinboshi, and won the Outstanding Performance Award.

Tochiōzan has been ranked mainly in san'yaku since the beginning of 2013, although he has been unable to mount a serious challenge for ōzeki promotion. After dropping temporarily to a maegashira position because of injury he picked up his second gold star in November 2014 with a win over Harumafuji. In July 2015 he defeated both yokozuna competing in that tournament, Hakuhō and Kakuryū, and won the second Outstanding Performance Prize of his career. He maintained his sekiwake rank until March 2016, then fell from san'yaku after scoring only 4–11 at komusubi in May. He earned the third kinboshi of his career by defeating Kakuryū on the third day of the July 2016 tournament. In September 2016 rose back the ranks to Komusubi but just barely failed to get a winning record, with a 7-8, and was demoted from the rank. November didn't prove much better for Tochiōzan getting 6-9.

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

Fighting style

Tochiozan's most common winning techniques or kimarite are yori-kiri, oshi-dashi, yori-taoshi and oshi-taoshi, meaning he wins most often by simply forcing his opponents out and down with a grip on the mawashi or push to the chest. He rarely uses throwing moves or slap downs. His preferred mawashi grip is migi-yotsu, with his left arm outside and right arm inside his opponent's arms.

References

Tochiōzan Yūichirō Wikipedia