Sign in to follow this  
Doitsuyama

Day 10 results and day 11 pairings

Recommended Posts

Yokozuna Hakuho kept his two win lead in the yusho race as he beat sekiwake Kotoshogiku to reach double digit wins. Giant-killer Tochinonada beat another ozeki today with a quick tsukiotoshi over Chiyotaikai who still needs a win to escape kadoban. The other two pursuers Ama and Kotomitsuki met today with the ozeki withstanding a nodo-wa attack to turn Ama around and out. Kotooshu won for the first time in five attempts against Wakanosato since his ozeki promotion. Kaio beat Futeno with a makiotoshi for his 745th makuuchi win, just one win short of sharing third place all-time with Taiho.

The two juryo leaders met today with Kitataiki beating Mongolian Mokonami with an utchari to take the sole lead at 9-1. Kyokunankai lost again to drop two behind the lead, but Tosayutaka broke the emerging nuke-nuke pattern with another win, staying one win behind Kitataiki. Russian Aran and Bushuyama also continued a good basho with wins, moving up to 7-3. The four lead juryo rikishi all lost today, hurting their makuuchi promotion chances. Tamaasuka is closest to demotion as he already is make-koshi with the loss to Ichihara.

Day 10

Juryo

J13w   Sagatsukasa (6-4)   oshidashi	  Ms2e   Ryuho (2-4)
J12w   Ichihara (4-6)	  hatakikomi	 J13e   Tamaasuka (2-8)
J11w   Ryuo (4-6)		  oshidashi	  J10e   Otsukasa (4-6)
J8e	Bushuyama (7-3)	 hatakikomi	 J10w   Wakakoyu (4-6)
J8w	Kirinowaka (4-6)	hikiotoshi	 J11e   Shirononami (4-6)
J14w   Tosayutaka (8-2)	yorikiri	   J7e	Kaiho (3-7)
J14e   Aran (7-3)		  oshitaoshi	 J6w	Kasuganishiki (5-5)
J4e	Kitataiki (9-1)	 utchari		J12e   Mokonami (8-2)
J4w	Hakurozan (6-4)	 hatakikomi	 J9w	Kyokunankai (7-3)
J3e	Kitazakura (6-4)	yorikiri	   J9e	Katayama (2-8)
J3w	Hoshihikari (4-6)   tsukiotoshi	J5w	Hakuba (3-7)
J7w	Ushiomaru (4-6)	 sukuinage	  J2w	Kasugao (4-6)
J5e	Kotokasuga (4-5-1)  oshidashi	  J1e	Tamawashi (5-5)
J6e	Shimotori (5-5)	 yorikiri	   J1w	Toyozakura (4-6)

Makuuchi

M16e   Masatsukasa (6-4)   oshidashi	  J2e	Wakakirin (5-5)
M16w   Chiyohakuho (6-4)   yorikiri	   M15w   Kakizoe (4-6)
M15e   Yoshikaze (5-5)	 oshidashi	  M12w   Kimurayama (6-4)
M13e   Toyohibiki (7-3)	yorikiri	   M11e   Tochiozan (5-5)
M11w   Tamakasuga (1-9)	hatakikomi	 M13w   Koryu (3-7)
M9e	Kyokutenho (7-3)	yorikiri	   M14e   Tosanoumi (5-5)
M14w   Tochinoshin (6-4)   yorikiri	   M9w	Iwakiyama (4-6)
M8w	Dejima (4-6)		hatakikomi	 M12e   Takekaze (5-5)
M7e	Roho (4-6)		  uwatenage	  M8e	Takamisakari (5-5)
M7w	Kakuryu (5-5)	 shitatedashinage M10w   Kokkai (4-6)
M6e	Homasho (6-4)	   hatakikomi	 M10e   Tamanoshima (6-4)

M4w	Goeido (5-5)		yorikiri	   M5e	Miyabiyama (6-4)
M2e	Asasekiryu (6-4)	uwatedashinage M6w	Tokitenku (6-4)
M5w	Baruto (6-4)		hatakikomi	 M2w	Hokutoriki (0-10)
M1w	Wakanoho (2-8)	  yorikiri	   K1e	Kisenosato (3-7)
K1w	Toyonoshima (6-4)   yorikiri	   M1e	Aminishiki (4-6)
O1e	Kotooshu (7-3)	  oshidashi	  M4e	Wakanosato (4-6)
M3w	Tochinonada (4-6)   tsukiotoshi	O2w	Chiyotaikai (7-3)
O2e	Kaio (6-4)		  makiotoshi	 M3e	Futeno (2-8)
O1w	Kotomitsuki (8-2)   okuridashi	 S1e	Ama (7-3)
Y1w	Hakuho (10-0)	   yorikiri	   S1w	Kotoshogiku (4-6)


Day 11

Day 11

Juryo

J14w   Tosayutaka (8-2)				   J13w   Sagatsukasa (6-4)
J13e   Tamaasuka (2-8)					Ms2w   Asofuji (4-1)
J11e   Shirononami (4-6)				  J12e   Mokonami (8-2)
J10w   Wakakoyu (4-6)					 J9w	Kyokunankai (7-3)
J9e	Katayama (2-8)					 J14e   Aran (7-3)
J12w   Ichihara (4-6)					 J7w	Ushiomaru (4-6)
J11w   Ryuo (4-6)						 J5w	Hakuba (3-7)
J10e   Otsukasa (4-6)					 J4w	Hakurozan (6-4)
J8w	Kirinowaka (4-6)				   J3w	Hoshihikari (4-6)
J3e	Kitazakura (6-4)				   J6w	Kasuganishiki (5-5)
J5e	Kotokasuga (4-5-1)				 J2w	Kasugao (4-6)
J2e	Wakakirin (5-5)					J8e	Bushuyama (7-3)
J7e	Kaiho (3-7)						J1w	Toyozakura (4-6)
J1e	Tamawashi (5-5)					J6e	Shimotori (5-5)

Makuuchi

J4e	Kitataiki (9-1)					M16w   Chiyohakuho (6-4)
M15e   Yoshikaze (5-5)					M13w   Koryu (3-7)
M12e   Takekaze (5-5)					 M14w   Tochinoshin (6-4)
M15w   Kakizoe (4-6)					  M11w   Tamakasuga (1-9)
M16e   Masatsukasa (6-4)				  M10w   Kokkai (4-6)
M10e   Tamanoshima (6-4)				  M13e   Toyohibiki (7-3)
M14e   Tosanoumi (5-5)					M9w	Iwakiyama (4-6)
M7e	Roho (4-6)						 M12w   Kimurayama (6-4)
M9e	Kyokutenho (7-3)				   M6w	Tokitenku (6-4)
M6e	Homasho (6-4)					  M11e   Tochiozan (5-5)
M8w	Dejima (4-6)					   M5w	Baruto (6-4)

M8e	Takamisakari (5-5)				 M4w	Goeido (5-5)
M4e	Wakanosato (4-6)				   M7w	Kakuryu (5-5)
M2w	Hokutoriki (0-10)				  M1w	Wakanoho (2-8)
M3e	Futeno (2-8)					   K1w	Toyonoshima (6-4)
K1e	Kisenosato (3-7)				   M2e	Asasekiryu (6-4)
M1e	Aminishiki (4-6)				   S1w	Kotoshogiku (4-6)
O1e	Kotooshu (7-3)					 M5e	Miyabiyama (6-4)
O2w	Chiyotaikai (7-3)				  O1w	Kotomitsuki (8-2)
O2e	Kaio (6-4)						 M3w	Tochinonada (4-6)
Y1w	Hakuho (10-0)					  S1e	Ama (7-3)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Kotokasuga vs. Kasugao... talk about two beat up guys! Somewhat fair perhaps?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

i am afraid Kaiho is getting closer and closer to makushita and quite possibly to intai. B-)

Daiyubu and Hoshihikari are in a slump too ... bad basho for my boys ...

does he have to stay active more in order to get a permanent position in the Kyokai? I always tend to forget things like that.

in general i wasn't able to watch much sumo "live" but Hakuho looks really strong and he'll get this one cruising.

Edited by aderechelsea

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Regarding Taikai... 7 wins, so near and yet perhaps so far? He still has Kotomitsuki, Kotooshu and Hakuho to meet in his last 5 matches, probably Toyonoshima too. Normally he'd meet Asa here as well but instead I assume he'll see another joi member, Wakanosako, Goeido, Miyabiyama or Baruto; would they go any lower than joi? I was really hoping he'd beat Tochinonada as I thought it was a good chance for him to get KK B-) I really hope he can win one of his last 5. Ganbatte Taikai. Kotomitsuki tomorrow may be one of his best chances, he at least has a winning record against him along with Miyabiyama and Baruto.

Edited by Harry

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I feel a bit mean saying this, but personally I would like to see Chiyotaikai retire ASAP, and if that means finally dropping his Ozeki rank, well then I guess I'm rooting for him to lose all the remaining five.

He was an amazing rikishi but now he's just a pale shadow of this former self, and I don't think he does either himself (that paycheck aside) or sumo any good continuing to hang by a thread.

Time for some new Ozekis to step up and do the rank proud...

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Do you really expect much resistance from Mickey tomorrow?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Do you really expect much resistance from Mickey tomorrow?

Don't make me change my Tippspiel guess - I gave him 4 points B-) . He still might be able, fingers crossed ... crossed .... crossed ......... to win the yusho (Shaking head...)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

If there was someone else doing an ozeki run which was practically prevented from the new rank by the presence of old ozeki I'd agree but I still don't see anyone making a run. I really hoped it would be Ama and I suppose he still has a chance to do it but once again some silly losses (Wakanoho...) are hurting his chances. Kisenosato is going backwards, Kotoshogiku has more silly losses than Ama. If Toyonoshima can buck up and put together another double digit record I'd say he might be our best bet. Do you really see any great ozeki candidates today? Next year, maybe... so Taikai and Kaio can hold on a little longer as I might have a trip to Japan in the fall B-)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I feel a bit mean saying this, but personally I would like to see Chiyotaikai retire ASAP, and if that means finally dropping his Ozeki rank, well then I guess I'm rooting for him to lose all the remaining five.

He was an amazing rikishi but now he's just a pale shadow of this former self, and I don't think he does either himself (that paycheck aside) or sumo any good continuing to hang by a thread.

Time for some new Ozekis to step up and do the rank proud...

B-)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
If there was someone else doing an ozeki run which was practically prevented from the new rank by the presence of old ozeki I'd agree but I still don't see anyone making a run. I really hoped it would be Ama and I suppose he still has a chance to do it but once again some silly losses (Wakanoho...) are hurting his chances. Kisenosato is going backwards, Kotoshogiku has more silly losses than Ama.

Yeah, it's just an odd situation where the old guard is still good for 8-10 wins (albeit aided by the kadoban rule) often enough, while the new guys aren't yet capable of doing any better than that. And it doesn't help that even the meatgrinder riffraff (Tokitenku, Miyabiyama, Wakanosato, Asasekiryu, Aminishiki etc.) are always good for 6+ wins, so there just aren't enough wins to go around for any serious promotion push. I don't think Chiyotaikai or Kaio retiring would change that too much, either...perhaps once both are gone. Otherwise, one of the current hopefuls really needs to start separating himself from the pack; Ama seems to be on that path sometimes, but the difference between him and e.g. Kotoshogiku isn't nearly large enough yet.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

What was the head judge saying after the Wakanoho-Kisenosato mono-ii? I thought I heard "Wakanoho isamiashi", but still they declared gunbai-dori.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
If there was someone else doing an ozeki run which was practically prevented from the new rank by the presence of old ozeki I'd agree but I still don't see anyone making a run. I really hoped it would be Ama and I suppose he still has a chance to do it but once again some silly losses (Wakanoho...) are hurting his chances. Kisenosato is going backwards, Kotoshogiku has more silly losses than Ama. If Toyonoshima can buck up and put together another double digit record I'd say he might be our best bet. Do you really see any great ozeki candidates today? Next year, maybe... so Taikai and Kaio can hold on a little longer as I might have a trip to Japan in the fall B-)

Guess I don't really see any candidates today no...but Chiyotaikai's constant Kadoban yo-yoing seems very un-Ozeki like to me.

I guess I'm of the the 'better go out when you're at your peak then after declining into mediocrity' school.

Still, he is still strong enough to school many of the up-and-comers...

Edited by kotoeikoku

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
What was the head judge saying after the Wakanoho-Kisenosato mono-ii? I thought I heard "Wakanoho isamiashi", but still they declared gunbai-dori.

They were debating whether or not it was 'isamiashi' but decided in the end that Kisenosato's heel touched out first, making it 'gunbai-dori.'

Edited by kotoeikoku

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
If there was someone else doing an ozeki run which was practically prevented from the new rank by the presence of old ozeki I'd agree but I still don't see anyone making a run. I really hoped it would be Ama and I suppose he still has a chance to do it but once again some silly losses (Wakanoho...) are hurting his chances. Kisenosato is going backwards, Kotoshogiku has more silly losses than Ama. If Toyonoshima can buck up and put together another double digit record I'd say he might be our best bet. Do you really see any great ozeki candidates today? Next year, maybe... so Taikai and Kaio can hold on a little longer as I might have a trip to Japan in the fall (Shaking head...)

Guess I don't really see any candidates today no...but Chiyotaikai's constant Kadoban yo-yoing seems very un-Ozeki like to me.

I guess I'm of the the 'better go out when you're at your peak then after declining into mediocrity' school.

Still, he is still strong enough to school many of the up-and-comers...

I admire his will power for him not to give up and quit, but fight to save his rank all the time! B-)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Hokutoriki seems determined to become the first since Itai in 1991 to chalk up fifteen straight losses in the top division. On his current form I wouldn't bet against him achieving that...

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I feel a bit mean saying this, but personally I would like to see Chiyotaikai retire ASAP, and if that means finally dropping his Ozeki rank, well then I guess I'm rooting for him to lose all the remaining five.

He was an amazing rikishi but now he's just a pale shadow of this former self, and I don't think he does either himself (that paycheck aside) or sumo any good continuing to hang by a thread.

Time for some new Ozekis to step up and do the rank proud...

I disagree completely. I find Chiyotaikai's spirit really admirable. Never giving up. Remember Hatsu this year? He was on the dohyo every day, no matter of the pain. And even if he was going to end 0-15, I find it very honorable, and I can have nothing but B-) to him.

Edit:

If you compare it with some cases of withdrawals recently, which behaviour you would prefer? "Fight-till-the-end" 0-15, or "I-am-going-kyujo-after-2-losses"?

Edited by Sashohitowa

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
If you compare it with some cases of withdrawals recently, which behaviour you would prefer? "Fight-till-the-end" 0-15, or "I-am-going-kyujo-after-2-losses"?

I would rather neither.

From my point of view (ignorant, I admit) the rank of Ozeki, as with Yokozuna, carries certain responsibilities, one of which is to post double-digit wins every basho and contend for the Yusho.

Now I am aware that, like the idea that a yokozuna should always aim for zensho-yusho, such an ideal may not be realistic or historically accurate, but nevertheless I feel that the number of Kadobans Chiyotaikai has had make him unsuitable for the rank.

Of course this is just my opinion. I enjoy watching a genki Chiyotaikai very much. But I feel that his determination to walk the kadoban tightrope is not enough for the Ozeki rank.

Edited by Manekineko
quote fix

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Kotomitsuki owes Taikai a win I believe but is it too early to collect?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Kotomitsuki owes Taikai a win I believe but is it too early to collect?

Well, obviously not.. Strange dive by Mickey (judging by the feed only).

Edited by Bilu

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Kotomitsuki owes Taikai a win I believe but is it too early to collect?

Well, obviously not.. Strange dive by Mickey (judging by the feed only).

Obviously Kotomitsuki owed Futeno a win too with an even stranger dive on day 9.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Day 11 results are in, and now it's clear that short of an extremely rare sequence of events, Hakuho (11-0) will win the yusho, and from all indications should be regarded as the dominant rikishi in sumo today. I watched his bout on you tube vs. Kotoshogiku, and Hakuho easily shrugged off the very strong gappuri-yotsu that Kotoshogiku can demonstrate, and just drove him straight back and out. Now that's power! Shades of former yokozuna Takanohana!

Kotooshu has won several bouts in a row and at 8-3 seems to be on his way to 10 or 11 wins, respectable for an ozeki but disappointing for those who were hoping that he would be the next yokozuna. Quite simply, Kotooshu still has way too much trouble with several rikishi who should not be defeating him with such frequency. In particular, he loses too often to Wakanosato, Roho, Aminishiki and Toyonoshima. He's not close to yokozuna material until he exhibits a reliable approach to defeating those rikishi, along with a few others. I still believe that Kotooshu can make yokozuna, but it will take intensive training over the next 2 or 3 years or else ozeki will be the highest rank that he achieves.

Maybe some of the sumo fans here remember Mainoumi and the incident with the silicone implanted into the top of his skull so that he would qualify for the height requirement to get into Japanese sumo. Mainoumi's success in Makunouchi was an important factor in the Kyokai removing that height requirement. Now we see how foolish that height requirement was in the 1st place, given that Toyonoshima has become a strong rikishi at only 5'6 1/2" (169 cm.) tall. At the moment he's 7-4 at Komusubi and has knocked off a yokozuna and 2 ozeki, and has shown reasonable power in all his bouts. When you do a physical comparison of Toyonoshima with some of the other Makunouchi regulars, he looks unimpressive, but his short stature sometimes works to his advantage, since he gets underneath many of the others, particularly Kotooshu. Being 14 inches shorter than Kotooshu doesn't seem to bother him! He's excellent technically, and seems to always have a plan to defeat the other rikishi.

It's also clear that I was dead wrong about Kaio (7-4 so far), who has lasted over a year longer at the ozeki rank than I thought he would. He's still winning most of his bouts with simple power yotsu-zumo, and although he has a few more bad days than he did in his prime, he's still winning 8 houts or more each basho. He's no longer a threat to win the yusho, but what can we expect for a guy who will be 36 years old soon.

Although he's not quite ready for the big breakthrough, it appears to me that Ama will be the next ozeki. He seems to have the quickness, technical skill and intelligence to adjust to whatever his opponents can do. I give him around an even chance to be an ozeki at this time next year.

Once again Hokutoriki is setting new records as an "elevator rikishi". It seems that he simply gives up when facing the joi-jin. He makes a token effort at a thrusting attack with nodo-wa, and if it doesn't do much he's finished. He's 1 of the worst rikishi at yotsu-zumo I'v ever seen, right up there with Toki and Aogiyama.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Day 11 results are in, and now it's clear that short of an extremely rare sequence of events, Hakuho (11-0) will win the yusho, and from all indications should be regarded as the dominant rikishi in sumo today. I watched his bout on you tube vs. Kotoshogiku, and Hakuho easily shrugged off the very strong gappuri-yotsu that Kotoshogiku can demonstrate, and just drove him straight back and out. Now that's power! Shades of former yokozuna Takanohana!

I second that :-S

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
He's no longer a threat to win the yusho, but what can we expect for a guy who will be 36 years old soon.

Just look at Your avatar pic. :-S

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I want to see the young guns grab ozeki promotion rather than wait till the old guard are retired.

Can't disagree with that. :-S

Maybe I've been to quick to judge the Ozeki.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
Sign in to follow this