Yubinhaad

The Yobidashi

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All names, ranks and heya correct as of the 2016 Hatsu banzuke.

Tate and Sanyaku yobidashi.

Tate yobidashi - Takuro, Kasugano-beya

01_Takuro.jpg

Sanyaku yobidashi - Jiro, Kasugano-beya

02_Jiro.jpg

Sanyaku yobidashi - Katsuyuki, Shibatayama-beya

03_Katsuyuki.jpg

Sanyaku yobidashi - Shiro, Odake-beya

04_Shiro.jpg

Sanyaku yobidashi - Shigeo, Kokonoe-beya

05_Shigeo.jpg

Makuuchi yobidashi.

Goro, Odake-beya

06_Goro.jpg

Kokichi, Tomozuna-beya

07_Kokichi.jpg

Akira, Tomozuna-beya

08_Akira.jpg

Ryuji, Miyagino-beya

09_Ryuji.jpg

Kotozo, Sadogatake-beya

10_Kotozo.jpg

Kotoyoshi, Sadogatake-beya

11_Kotoyoshi.jpg

Daikichi, Azumazeki-beya

12_Daikichi.jpg

Teruki, Isegahama-beya

13_Teruki.jpg

Juryo yobidashi.

Koji, Asakayama-beya

14_Koji.jpg

Rikinojo, Takasago-beya

15_Rikinojo.jpg

Mitsuaki, Tagonoura-beya

16_Mitsuaki.jpg

Kunio, Takasago-beya

17_Kunio.jpg

Matsuo, Nishonoseki-beya

18_Matsuo.jpg

Hiroyuki, Minezaki-beya

19_Hiroyuki.jpg

Rokuro, Oguruma-beya

20_Rokuro.jpg

Masao, Minezaki-beya

21_Masao.jpg

Satoru, Nishonoseki-beya

22_Satoru.jpg

Tasuke, Yamahibiki-beya

23_Tasuke.jpg

Shigetaro, Kokonoe-beya

24_Shigetaro.jpg

Makushita & Sandanme yobidashi.

Makushita yobidashi - Fujio, Isegahama-beya

25_Fujio.jpg

Makushita yobidashi - Keisuke, Shibatayama-beya

26_Keisuke.jpg

Makushita yobidashi - Yohei, Dewanoumi-beya

27_Yohei.jpg

Makushita yobidashi - Soichi, Yamahibiki-beya

28_Soichi.jpg

Makushita yobidashi - Teruya, Isegahama-beya

29_Teruya.jpg

Makushita yobidashi - Mamoru, Tokitsukaze-beya

30_Mamoru.jpg

Sandanme yobidashi - Shunsuke, Tamanoi-beya

31_Shunsuke.jpg

Sandanme yobidashi - Kohei, Kasugayama-beya

32_Kohei.jpg

Sandanme yobidashi - Yuto, Tatsunami-beya

33_Yuto.jpg

Sandanme yobidashi - Takahiro, Odake-beya

34_Takahiro.jpg

Sandanme yobidashi - Setsuo, Shikoroyama-beya

35_Setsuo.jpg

Jonidan & Jonokuchi yobidashi.

Jonidan yobidashi - Naoki, Kise-beya

36_Naoki.jpg

Jonidan yobidashi - Shin, Michinoku-beya

37_Shin.jpg

Jonidan yobidashi - Kaito, Kokonoe-beya

38_Kaito.jpg

Jonidan yobidashi - Masayuki, Isenoumi-beya

39_Masayuki.jpg

Jonokuchi yobidashi - Tsurutaro, Nishikido-beya

40_Tsurutaro.jpg

Jonokuchi yobidashi - Hiromasa, Yamahibiki-beya

41_Hiromasa.jpg

Jonokuchi yobidashi - Shuntaro, Tomozuna-beya

42_Shuntaro.jpg

Jonokuchi yobidashi - Yuji, Sakaigawa-beya

43_Yuji.jpg

Jonokuchi yobidashi - Hiroshi, Chiganoura-beya

44_Hiroshi.jpg

Edited by Yubinhaad
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With no jungyo between bashos, the younger yobidashi have been practising their art in the shitaku-beya at the Kokugikan. Here, newest yobidashi Shuntaro practises on the taiko, advised by Juryo yobidashi Kunio. Watching behind are Mikio and Tsurutaro.

Yobidashi01_Taiko.jpg

Yobidashi02_Taiko.jpg

Naoki practices with the hyoshigi.

Yobidashi03_Naoki.jpg

And Masayuki this time - this one was taken on the day of the NHK charity tournament, hence the uniform.

Yobidashi04_Masayuki.jpg

Yobidashi Shotenro?

Yobidashi05_Shotenro.jpg

This is a picture I found somewhere a while back, the hyoshigi belonging to Makuuchi yobidashi Shigeo. Probably the senior yobidashi each have their own set.

Yobidashi06_Shigeo_Hyoshigi.jpg

Edited by Yubinhaad
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And while the young gyoji have been doing their training, their yobidashi counterparts have again been practising their skills on the taiko.

Hiromasa.

Yobidashi07_Hiromasa.jpg

Shuntaro watches Mikio practice, and vice-versa.

Yobidashi08_Shuntaro_Mikio.jpg

Yobidashi09_Mikio_Shuntaro.jpg

Juryo yobidashi Rikinojo watches Hiromasa.

Yobidashi10_Hiromasa.jpg

And now demonstrates how it should be done.

Yobidashi11_Rikinojo.jpg

Tsurutaro watches Mikio.

Yobidashi12_Tsurutaro_Mikio.jpg

Shuntaro practices his technique. In other news, a fast-moving drum thief is wanted by Tokyo police.

Yobidashi13_Shuntaro.jpg

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These are great. Will these still be accessible on the site at a later date? I hope they keep them up in perpetuity.

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I like how Rikinojo (the teacher) was too lazy to take of his shoes so had to sit clumsily while drumming.

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I like how Rikinojo (the teacher) was too lazy to take of his shoes so had to sit clumsily while drumming.

Or to put it another way, he's so experienced he can do his drumming at any angle....

Orion

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The Kyokai posted a few pictures of yobidashi practising their taiko drumming again in the shitaku-beya. The sound of a taiko drum is heard at the start and end of every honbasho day, with yosedaiko in the morning and hanedaiko in the evening.

Takahiro practising.

Yobidashi01_Takahiro.jpg

Tasuke shows Yuji how it is done. Tasuke is often seen drumming as the furedaiko teams circle the dohyo following the dohyo matsuri.

Yobidashi02_Tasuke_Yuji.jpg

Yuji takes his turn, watched by Hiromasa.

Yobidashi03_Hiromasa_Yuji.jpg

And finally Hiromasa takes his turn, with advice from a sharply-dressed Rikinojo. [2]

Yobidashi04_Hiromasa_Rikinojo.jpg

Yobidashi05_Hiromasa_Rikinojo.jpg

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The first post has now been updated and contains pictures of all of the yobidashi. As with the gyoji thread update, some of the original Kyokai pictures survive here while others have been replaced.

Just as a gyoji may inherit gunbai and costumes from his seniors, a yobidashi may inherit hyoshigi from his. Akinomaki reported on one example here. Another example is sanyaku-ranked Katsuyuki, the current owner of a pair which belonged to former tate yobidashi Kankichi. Made from the wood of a fallen 200-year-old sakura tree, the hyoshigi have been in service since 1955.

46_Katsuyuki.jpg

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Now in Yamahibiki-beya, Tasuke (36) when he announces on the dohyo thinks of his late shisho Kitanoumi, who treated him like a son and he in return constantly attended to him when Kitanoumi was fighting his illness.

He still has tears in his eyes when he recalls being told by him "Hey, did you hear, next basho you rise to juryo." - that was the last basho for Kitanoumi. He is glad the oyakata was able to see him as a full fledged yobidashi on the banzuke and on the dohyo.

He wanted to be a rikishi but was too short, so he entered as yobidashi in June 1995.

http://www.sankei.com/photo/daily/news/160120/dly1601200009-n1.html
dly1601200009-p1.jpg

Edited by Akinomaki
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Because they don't list his stats: would he have been able to enter under today's more relaxed standards?

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I thought about putting this on Sumo Art, but it goes better here. Perhaps some of you have seen it already.

Enjoy.

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In a new book former tate-yobidashi Hideo talks about the difference to the gyoji.

The gyoji outfit changes with their rise in the ranks and all their movements are according to a manual, even in how many steps they have to be in the center of the dohyo - he compares them with office workers. The yobidashi are dressed the same the whole career, have no manuals and act according to the requirements of the moment, they have a touch of gamblers and carousers.

Both live in a strict banzuke determined hierarchical world.

All yobidashi have to learn the 3 jobs of announcing, drumming and dohyo building, but none is really skillful in all 3. Hideo was bad in drumming and hated the hard work of dohyo construction - so he speaks about the thing he was famous for:

For training the melody, it's enka singing. The 7-and-5 syllable meter of the lyrics fits the tone when calling out. Ishikawa Sayuri, Kitajima Saburo, Okawa Eisaku - lately Shimazu Aya is easy to sing and became a favorite. And just being skillful in intonation isn't enough - one is told that it is important to express affection in the calling-out voice, with style and charm. One that becomes an outstanding yobidashi is maybe 1 in 10 years.

Akebono once asked him "What about foreign yobidashi?" - having to teach them all from Japanese (on) seems impossible to him.

http://mainichi.jp/articles/20160315/org/00m/040/025000c

Edited by Akinomaki
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Are all yobidashi recruited from a very young age?

Are there sumotori who become yobidashi or gyoji?

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At last I get to the articles I found interesting during the basho.

The yobidashi like the rikishi live in a rigid world, but traditionally in the sumo world there is a close relation with someone from the same locality, with a kunimon, crossing heya borders. We had the only basho in the Kansai region, and there are 3 yobidashi from Kyoto now: Rokurou (j, 42, Oguruma), Tasuke (j, 37, Yamahibiki) and Yuuto (sd, 29, Tatsunami).

Rokurou was in the sumo-club of Uji high and entered in 1993: "My body was small, so I took of yobidashi or tokoyama what had an open slot." At present he's manager of dohyo construction.

Tasuke is from the Fujinomori middle school sumo club. Since this year he's in control of kensho and is the mediator for the young yobidashi - he's running around all over the venue.

On 20.1.2016 at 14:18, Akinomaki said:

Now in Yamahibiki-beya, Tasuke (36) when he announces on the dohyo thinks of his late shisho Kitanoumi

He still has tears in his eyes when he recalls being told by him "Hey, did you hear, next basho you rise to juryo." - that was the last basho for Kitanoumi. He is glad the oyakata was able to see him as a full fledged yobidashi on the banzuke and on the dohyo.

He wanted to be a rikishi but was too short, so he entered as yobidashi in June 1995.

Yuuto was in the rugby club of Higashiyama high and entered in 2006. The 2 other kunimon gave him advice to cope with the difficulties of learning the trade and customs in this perplexing hierarchical world - and they also went to have a drink together.

http://www.kyoto-np.co.jp/sports/article/20170324000107

Rokurou, Tasuke, Yuuto

20170324171214sumo.jpg

 

 

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Do they actually write the match order on those fans?

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No, the fans are clean. But there is a folded up program showing the next few bouts and as each yobidashi finishes his stint he hands it to the next. I once interviewed a tate-yobidashi and he said that at first he was still looking for the next man to hand it to -- but of course he was now the final caller!

 

Orion

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So I guess the whole use of the fan came about from the Japanese thing of covering an open mouth. Too bad. I thought maybe the names and date for each bout, along with the result after, were written on the fans and given to the winner. Would be a cool keepsake. 

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Yep, I always thought they were reading the name off the fan, and even knowing they are not it still looks like they are! It really surprised me when I saw sumo live and both sides of the fan were pristine white as the yobidashi turned around. I like Rocks' very plausible suggestion that it has the same root as the archetypal giggling Japanese schoolgirl's hand in front of her mouth.

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I thought that the use of a fan was the traditional way of giving an announcement the gravity and importance of an irrevocable dictum.

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Isn't it too obvious? The fan is used to point to the side of the rikishi which he is announcing, right? Makes for better visibility in a big house.

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On 30.3.2016 at 17:59, Akinomaki said:

And just being skillful in intonation isn't enough - one is told that it is important to express affection in the calling-out voice, with style and charm.

I guess the totally tone-deaf yobidashi (forgot the name..) who does the two before musubi bouts (no less..) is there for the affection, then. I don't get how he got this high. So he does it with style and charm, then (not!!).

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