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Ōnomatsu Midorinosuke
Sumo wrestler

Ōnomatsu Midorinosuke

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Sumo wrestler
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Noto
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Ōnomatsu Midorinosuke (阿武松 緑之助, 1794 – January 20, 1852) was a sumo wrestler from Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan. He was the sport's 6th yokozuna. He trained ōzeki Tsurugizan Taniemon.

Early career

He was born in Shitsumi, Noto and went to Edo in 1815. His birth name remains ambiguous, but was claimed to be Sasaki Jokichi. He made his debut under the ring name Koyanagi in March 1815. He reached the top makuuchi division in October 1822. In January 1824, he was defeated by Inazuma, but defeated others at the maegashira #2 rank and was promoted to komusubi.

In the summer of 1825, he defeated Inazuma at the Hirakawa Tenjin Shrine. He was promoted to ōzeki in October 1826. He changed his ring name to Ōnomatsu in March 1827.

Yokozuna

Ōnomatsu was awarded a yokozuna license in February 1828. On March 25, 1829, Ienari Tokugawa saw that Ōnomatsu defeated Inazuma.

Because he grew up in a poor family, he attempted to win bouts by fair means or foul. To shake competitors' confidence, he would often do matta, or waiting, at the initial charge, or tachi-ai of his sumo bouts. He was often criticized for his fighting style. Even so, he was popular in Edo.

He retired in November 1835. In the top makuuchi division, he won 142 bouts and lost 31 bouts, recording a winning percentage of 82.1. The 7th yokozuna Inazuma was his rival. His overall career record was quite far behind Inazuma, but his record over Inazuma was five wins (including two other than honbasho), four losses, five draws and one hold.

Top division record

  • The actual time the tournaments were held during the year in this period often varied.
Ōnomatsu Midorinosuke
-SpringWinter
1822xEast Maegashira #7
6–3–1
1d

 
1823East Maegashira #5
4–2
1nr

 
East Maegashira #2
7–2
1d

 
1824East Maegashira #2
8–1–1
Unofficial

 
East Komusubi
6–2–2
 
1825East Komusubi
8–2
Unofficial

 
East Sekiwake
6–2–2
 
1826East Sekiwake
5–1–3
1h

 
East Ōzeki
8–0–1
1d
Unofficial

 
1827East Ōzeki
4–1–1
1h

 
East Ōzeki
6–0
Unofficial

 
1828East Ōzeki
3–3–2
1d 1h

 
East Ōzeki
7–1–2
 
1829East Ōzeki
5–0–1
1d

 
East Ōzeki
6–0–1
2d 1h

 
1830East Ōzeki
7–1–1
1h

 
East Ōzeki
3–1–4
2h

 
1831East Ōzeki
4–0–4
2d

 
East Ōzeki
3–0–5
 
1832Not heldEast Ōzeki
7–1–1
1d

 
1833East Ōzeki
5–0–1
4d

 
East Ōzeki
2–2
3d 1h

 
1834East Ōzeki
6–1–1
2d

 
East Ōzeki
5–3–1
1d

 
1835East Ōzeki
7–0–1
2d
Unofficial

 
East Ōzeki
Retired
4–2–2
2d
Record given as win-loss-absent    Top Division Champion Retired Lower Divisions

Key:   d=Draw(s) (引分);   h=Hold(s) (預り);   nr=no result recorded
Divisions: Makuuchi — Jūryō — Makushita — Sandanme — Jonidan — Jonokuchi

Makuuchi ranks: 
Yokozuna (not ranked as such on banzuke until 1890)
Ōzeki — Sekiwake — Komusubi — Maegashira

*Championships for the best record in a tournament were not recognized or awarded before the 1909 summer tournament, and the unofficial championships above are historically conferred. For more information, see yūshō.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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