peoplepill id: asahisato-kenji
AK
Japan
1 views today
2 views this week
Asahisato Kenji
Sumo wrestler

Asahisato Kenji

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Sumo wrestler
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Ōsaka Prefecture, Japan
Age
59 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Asahisato Kenji (born 9 November 1965 as Kenji Masuda) is a former sumo wrestler from Ikeda, Osaka, Japan. His active career spanned 17 years and 102 tournaments from 1981 until 1998, and his highest rank was maegashira 14. Upon his retirement he became an elder of the Japan Sumo Association and he took charge of Nakagawa stable in January 2017.

Career

He played baseball in elementary school and was a member of the judo club from his second year of junior high school. He joined Oshima stable upon his graduation from junior high, making his professional debut in March 1981. He began as Asahisato but from 1983 to 1987 was known as Kyokutenyu before reverting to his original shikona.He became the first new sekitori of the Heisei period when he was promoted to the juryo division in January 1989. He reached the top makuuchi division in March 1990. In his debut tournament in makuuchi he had seven wins and seven losses coming into the final day but lost to Oginohana who was also on 7–7 and got demoted back to juryo. He reached the top division three more times, but in each case had make-koshi, or a losing record and he was not able to climb higher than the rank of maegashira 14 which he had first made in his debut top division tournament. He fell back to the makushita division for three tournaments from November 1994 to March 1995 but returned to the paid ranks after winning the makushita division championship with a perfect 7–0 record. He was demoted to makushita again for three tournaments in 1997 but again got promoted back. Overall, he fought 1095 career matches across 102 tournaments, with 553 wins, 543 losses and just three absences due to injury. He spent a total of 53 tournaments as a sekitori, 49 in juryo and four in makuuchi.

Retirement from sumo

He retired in January 1998 and became an elder in the Japan Sumo Association under the name Kumagatani, although this kabu was borrowed from the former maegashira Yoshinomine who had retired from the Sumo Association two years before upon reaching 65 years of age. In 2004 he switched to the Nakagawa kabu after the takeover of Miyagino stable by the former Kanechika meant the Kumegatani kabu was needed by the former Chikubayama. Asahisato transferred to Oitekaze stable where he continued to work as a coach. In January 2017 he branched out from Oitekaze stable to become head coach of the Nakagawa stable, which is composed of wrestlers previously from the closed Kasugayama stable which had merged with Oitekaze when its previous head coach, former maegashira Hamanishiki, was forced to step down.

Fighting style

Asahisato was a yotsu-sumo wrestler who preferring grappling techniques to pushing or thrusting. When grabbing the mawashi or belt he used a migi-yotsu (left hand outside, right hand inside) position. He regularly used his left hand outside grip to win by uwatenage or overarm throw.

Career record

Year in sumoJanuary
Hatsu basho, Tokyo
March
Haru basho, Osaka
May
Natsu basho, Tokyo
July
Nagoya basho, Nagoya
September
Aki basho, Tokyo
November
Kyūshū basho, Fukuoka
1981x(Maezumo)West Jonokuchi #35
4–3
 
East Jonidan #134
5–2
 
West Jonidan #88
2–5
 
East Jonidan #110
4–3
 
1982East Jonidan #88
3–4
 
West Jonidan #109
6–1
 
East Jonidan #39
4–3
 
East Jonidan #23
2–5
 
West Jonidan #51
7–0–PPP
Champion

 
East Sandanme #52
2–5
 
1983West Sandanme #75
2–5
 
East Jonidan #13
3–4
 
East Jonidan #33
4–3
 
West Jonidan #20
6–1
 
East Sandanme #53
4–3
 
West Sandanme #39
5–2
 
1984East Sandanme #11
2–5
 
East Sandanme #37
2–5
 
West Sandanme #5
5–2
 
West Makushita #39
2–5
 
East Sandanme #8
5–2
 
West Makushita #41
3–4
 
1985East Makushita #55
5–2
 
East Makushita #34
2–5
 
West Makushita #58
5–2
 
East Makushita #37
5–2
 
East Makushita #21
4–3
 
West Makushita #16
3–4
 
1986West Makushita #25
2–5
 
East Makushita #48
5–2
 
East Makushita #30
2–5
 
West Makushita #60
4–3
 
East Makushita #46
4–3
 
East Makushita #38
4–3
 
1987East Makushita #31
1–6
 
East Sandanme #2
4–3
 
West Makushita #50
3–4
 
West Sandanme #2
4–3
 
West Makushita #46
5–2
 
East Makushita #28
5–2
 
1988East Makushita #14
4–3
 
West Makushita #7
2–5
 
West Makushita #21
5–2
 
West Makushita #12
4–3
 
West Makushita #7
4–3
 
East Makushita #3
5–2
 
1989West Jūryō #13
9–6
 
West Jūryō #9
8–7
 
East Jūryō #6
6–9
 
East Jūryō #11
9–6
 
West Jūryō #7
9–6
 
East Jūryō #4
9–6
 
1990East Jūryō #1
8–7
 
West Maegashira #14
7–8
 
East Jūryō #1
9–6
 
East Maegashira #14
3–12
 
West Jūryō #8
9–6
 
West Jūryō #2
5–10
 
1991East Jūryō #7
9–6
 
West Jūryō #2
8–7
 
West Jūryō #1
6–9
 
West Jūryō #5
8–7
 
West Jūryō #3
5–7–3
 
East Jūryō #8
6–9
 
1992East Jūryō #12
9–6
 
West Jūryō #7
8–7
 
West Jūryō #5
8–7
 
East Jūryō #3
8–7
 
East Maegashira #16
6–9
 
West Jūryō #2
5–10
 
1993West Jūryō #7
8–7
 
West Jūryō #3
7–8
 
East Jūryō #5
8–7
 
East Jūryō #4
8–7
 
East Jūryō #3
8–7
 
West Jūryō #2
8–7
 
1994East Jūryō #2
9–6
 
East Jūryō #1
8–7
 
East Maegashira #16
5–10
 
West Jūryō #4
4–11
 
East Jūryō #12
2–13
 
West Makushita #9
2–5
 
1995East Makushita #25
5–2
 
West Makushita #14
7–0
Champion

 
East Jūryō #13
9–6
 
East Jūryō #9
8–7
 
East Jūryō #8
6–9
 
East Jūryō #11
9–6
 
1996West Jūryō #6
8–7
 
West Jūryō #5
6–9
 
West Jūryō #8
7–8
 
West Jūryō #11
9–6
 
West Jūryō #5
7–8
 
West Jūryō #7
1–14
 
1997West Makushita #10
4–3
 
West Makushita #6
4–3
 
West Makushita #3
5–2
 
West Jūryō #12
10–5
 
East Jūryō #5
4–11
 
East Jūryō #10
9–6
 
1998West Jūryō #4
Retired
5–10
xxxxx
Record given as win-loss-absent    Top Division Champion Top Division Runner-up Retired Lower Divisions

Sanshō key: F=Fighting spirit; O=Outstanding performance; T=Technique     Also shown: =Kinboshi(s); P=Playoff(s)
Divisions: Makuuchi — Jūryō — Makushita — Sandanme — Jonidan— Jonokuchi

Makuuchi ranks: Yokozuna — Ōzeki — Sekiwake — Komusubi — Maegashira
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Asahisato Kenji is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Credits
References and sources
Asahisato Kenji
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes