Tatsutagawa stable

Tatsutagawa stable (立田川部屋, Tatsutagawa beya) was a heya of sumo wrestlers, part of the Tokitsukaze ichimon or group of stables. It was active from 1971 until 2000.

History

The stable was founded in 1971 by the former yokozuna Kagamisato.[1] He had become head coach of the Tokitsukaze stable in 1968 upon the death of the previous stablemaster, Futabayama, but was forced out because Futabayama's widow (who retained the rights of the stable and its premises) wanted the former ozeki Yutakayama Katsuo in charge instead.[2] Kagamisato took the elder name of Tatsutagawa (which had previously been used by several gyoji but had remained vacant since 1961) and set up the stable without taking any recruits with him from Tokitsukaze stable.[2] He was joined by Tatsutayama Oyakata, the former ozeki Ouchiyama, who worked as a coach at the new stable until his death in 1985. The stable was unable to attract many promising wrestlers and Kagamisato reached the Japan Sumo Association's mandatory retirement age of 65 in April 1988 without having produced any top division wrestlers, and just one sekitori, Takamichi, who reached a highest rank of jūryō 9.[2]

Following Kagamisato's retirement the stable was taken over by the former sekiwake Aonosato who moved from the parent Tokitsukaze stable. He produced the sekitori Fukunosato, Shikishima, Jūmonji and Ryūhō. The stable folded upon Aonosato's retirement in November 2000 upon reaching 65 years of age, with the remaining wrestlers and personnel transferring to Michinoku stable.[2] Among them were future top division wrestlers Toyozakura and Hakuba.

Owner

Notable wrestlers

gollark: ↓ you
gollark: Wouldn't you rather have that than a cottage which just sits there not crushing anything?!
gollark: Design it right and you could have a giant hamster wall crushing inferior homes as it rolls across the lands.
gollark: I suppose it could roll, which might be fun.
gollark: If you want to be in a sphere that's your problem.

See also

References

  1. Sharnoff, Lora (1993). Grand Sumo. Weatherhill. p. 201. ISBN 0-8348-0283-X.
  2. Kuroda, Joe (June 2006). "Kagamisato Kiyoji (1923-2004)- the 42nd Yokozuna". Sumo Fan Magazine. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.