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Showing results for 'shunjuen'.
Found 43 results
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...after theShunjuen Incident, where the rikishi walked out on the kyokai to demand better conditions NSK pics from the rikishi-kai o o o o
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Heya A-Z with (partial) pictorial history
Naganoyama replied to Naganoyama's topic in Ozumo Discussions
(By complete coincidence given it has just been mentioned elsewhere) I have added a section 'Shunjuen Incident' accessible via Special Categories. -
The Shunjūen Incident
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...the 1932Shunjuen incident, etc)?
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...And Kaneminato was the last champion before he joined theShunjuen mass walkout in 1932, although he returned to the Kyokai a year later.
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...He was one of the main rebels of theshunjuen incident and left the sumo kyokai, they formed another in Osaka. When that collapsed, he collapsed as well and died a month later. http://mitinoku.biz/hist_walk/hist_aomori/?p=997 the grounds have a dohyo as well o The stone monument...
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...It'sShunjuen for the incident
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...one for the returners after theShunjuen incident. They are those listed as BS.
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...As a result of theShunjuen Incident he couldn't make his debut at the rank in Haru 1932. So the query function didn't work here. I was informed about it when NHK showed this: (+) Wakatakakage is also the 3rd makuuchi champion from Fukushima pref. after Tokitsuyama and Tochiazuma I
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...02 (±0): > O Musashiyama > i Onosato Musashiyama got promoted for the January 1932 tournament which ended up not happening due to theShunjuen mass walkout of rikishi. Onosato retired as part of that and was off the banzuke for the next basho that actually took place.
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...TheShunjuen incident (in the year after his series of yusho) was a big hit to their power base since it was primarily supported by rikishi from their group, and Tamanishiki, a top ozeki regardless of the non-promotion, came to be seen as a big name the Association needed to show gratitude to for h...
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...I know he was around during theShunjuen Incident; is that what was involved?
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...Day 1 (Dewagatake defeated Tamanishiki) 80 honbasho days passed during this kinboshi-less spell which straddled the turmoil of theShunjuen incident, but kinboshi weren't possible for much of it. Having given up four kinboshi in the opening four days, 36-year-old Miyagiyama fought and defeated...
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...In January 1932 there was theShunjuen Incident where dozens of rikishi walked out and only 11 remained in the top division. I know a lot of individuals have run away so it's not a rare occurrence. Saito from Tokitsukaze eventually ended up having his life brutally taken away from him a...
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...after theShunjuen incident, there was no Osaka basho anymore - the rebel sumo organization was located in Kansai. The dai-NSK persuaded one rikishi after the other to come back. The predecessor of the tozaikai (tamarikai in Tokyo, the people on the best cushions around the dohyo) then planned...
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...but sanspo as dattai 脱退: he went out of the kyokai with half the sekitori at theshunjuen incident. After his return, he made it to sanyaku eventually.
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...b=193301 They are the rikishi rejoining the Kyokai after theShunjuen incident, a walkout starting January 1932 involving 48 of the 62 sekitori.
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...id=sumo-jikenshi201712210001 1932 theShunjuen incident with a group of rikishi separating from the then Dai-NSK 1947 Futabayama (Tokitsukaze-oyakata) gets arrested after he turned to one of the new cults - the Jikouson incident: he tried to protect the founder of the sect from police...
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...Musashiyama's promotion was simultaneous with theShunjuen incident, which may complicate the reasons for that particular promotion. Followup: No one has ever had two yusho and/or yusho-doten at komusubi and/or sekiwake rank two tournaments in a row (jun-yusho is another matter ent...
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...) and in 1932 left the then Dai-NSK to join theShunjuen rebels - Yamanishiki https://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/山錦善治郎 http://www.sankei.com/west/news/161226/wst1612260040-n1.html What really strikes me as odd are his banzuke movements - I wonder what kind of promotion rules they had at the ti...
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I don't get your point here. Why do you think this not comparable? 69 consecutive wins means Futabayama has faced 69 aites in a row on the Dohyo and beat them all. No matter whether he has achieved this within 8 months or within 3 years. And mathematically the numbers (69 > 63) are easily comparable...
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I don't get your point here. Why do you think this not comparable? 69 consecutive wins means Futabayama has faced 69 aites in a row on the Dohyo and beat them all. No matter whether he has achieved this within 8 months or within 3 years. And mathematically the numbers (69 > 63) are easily comparable...
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...modernity only started to set in after the 1932Shunjuen incident when they were forced to actually change a few important things, not just swallow up Osaka and double the number of tournaments as they had done in 1927. Edit: Way too late after I walked away from a half-complete post for a bit...
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...As far as I can see 7 rikishi have managed that in the modern era: Takanobori - emergency promotion from M15 to K due to theShunjuen mass walk-out Fudoiwa - end of WWII, only one 7-bout basho as upper maegashira before reaching sanyaku Kitanofuji - wouldn't happen today; 13-2 from M10 in his...
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...Of the 48 rikishi expulsed after theShunjuen incident in 1932.1, about half came back in 1933.1, later yokozuna Minanogawa was a makuuchi separate rank幕内別席 and took the yusho 11-0. Special is sekiwake Tamanofuji (now Tateyama-oyakata), (old topic), running away after one basho at jonokuchi, ente...