Haguroiwa Tomomi Explained

Native Name:羽黒岩 盟海
Haguroiwa Tomomi
Birth Name:Tomojiro Toda
Birth Date:1946 6, df=yes
Birth Place:Nobeoka, Miyazaki, Japan
Weight:128kg (282lb)
Heya:Tatsunami
Record:626-624-42
Debut:May, 1961
Highestrank:Komusubi (May, 1973)
Retireddate:January, 1978
Eldername:Ikazuchi
Prizes:Fighting Spirit (1)
Goldstars:2 (Taihō, Kashiwado)
Update:June 2020

Tomojiro Toda (30 June 1946 – 23 October 2016), known as Haguroiwa Tomomi, was a sumo wrestler from Nobeoka, Miyazaki, Japan. He made his professional debut in May 1961, and reached the top division in January 1967. His highest rank was komusubi. He withdrew from active competition in January 1978 and remained in the Japan Sumo Association as an elder under the name Ikazuchi. He reached the mandatory retirement age of 65, and left the Sumo Association in June 2011.

Career

He left junior high school and joined Tatsunami stable in May 1961 at the age of 14. He made his debut alongside future sekiwake Fujinokawa, and future maegashira Tochifuji and Wakanoumi. He reached the second highest juryo division in November 1965, and in January 1967 he became the first wrestler from Miyazaki Prefecture to reach the top division for 116 years, the previous being Tomozuna Ryosuke in 1851. He won his first (and only) special prize in the January 1969 tournament, for Fighting Spirit.

Haguroiwa is best remembered for his feat in the March tournament of 1969 when (still competing under his family name of Toda) he ended the 45 bout winning streak of yokozuna Taihō, which was a postwar record at the time. This was the first kinboshi of his career. However, it caused controversy because the bout had initially been awarded to Taihō by the referee before the judges intervened and reversed his decision, but photographs published in newspapers the next day suggested that Toda had stepped out first and Taihō should have been given the victory after all. This embarrassment was called the "Error of the Century", and it led to the Sumo Association introducing instant replay to assist judges in future decisions.[1]

He had one other victory over a yokozuna, defeating Kashiwado in May 1969. He switched to the Haguroiwa shikona in January 1971. In May 1973 he reached his highest rank of komusubi, but scored only two wins against thirteen losses. He never reached the sanyaku ranks again. He had an excellent record against Takanohana Kenshi, beating him nine times and losing just three times, and even after Takanohana became an ozeki he beat him three times out of four. He suffered a neck injury in a match against Masudayama in July 1977 which led to him dropping to the juryo division, and he announced his retirement in January 1978. He had fought in the top division for 55 tournaments, with a record of 385 wins, 427 losses and 13 absences.

Retirement from sumo

Following his retirement he became an elder in the Japan Sumo Association under the name Ikazuchi Oyakata. He worked as a coach at Tatsunami stable and was also a member of the judging committee.[2] He reached the mandatory retirement age of 65 in June 2011.

Tomomi died of kidney failure on 23 October 2016 at the age of 70.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sharnoff, Lora . Natsu Basho Preview: Lone Yokozuna Asashoryu poised to become one of sumo's all-time greats. Weekender Online . March 2004. 2 October 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070927212330/http://www.weekender.co.jp/new/040506/sports-sumo.html . 2007-09-27.
  2. Web site: Sumo: Former komusubi Haguroiwa dies at 70. October 25, 2016. The Mainichi. 26 October 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161026080934/http://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20161025/p2g/00m/0sp/026000c. 26 October 2016. dead.
  3. Web site: Kyodo News+ | Japan's leading news agency. 24 October 2016. 24 October 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161024214537/http://kyodonews.net/news/2016/10/24/85156. dead.