Tsushimanada Yakichi Explained

Native Name:對馬洋 弥吉
Tsushimanada Yakichi
Birth Name:Yakichi Kawakami
Birth Date:19 August 1887
Birth Place:Tsushima, Nagasaki Prefecture
Japan
Death Place:Tsushima Island, Japan
Weight:105kg (231lb)
Heya:Dewanoumi
Debut:January 1910
Highestrank:Ōzeki (May 1919)
Retireddate:May 1922
Yushos:1 (Sandanme)
1 (Jonokuchi)
Update:October 6, 2022

was a Japanese professional sumo wrestler from Tsushima in the Nagasaki Prefecture.[1] As of May 1962, he is one of six wrestlers in that prefecture to have reached or surpassed the rank of ōzeki,[2] and the first to have achieved this feat since the fourth Tamagaki Gakunosuke, 107 years earlier.[3]

History

Yakichi Kawakami enlisted in the Tsushima Fortress Artillery Battalion, at the age of 20, for military service. However, the division commander at the time recommended that he become a sumo wrestler because of his good physique, so he was discharged and joined the Dewanoumi stable in 1908.[4] Yakichi chose Tsushimanada as his ring name, or shikona, to pay homage to his home island. In his stable, he became the protege of yokozuna Hitachiyama. His first tournament was delayed until 1910 as he suffered from thiamine deficiency. At the age of 25, he was promoted from makushita to jūryō. In 1915, he entered the top division, where he was the tallest wrestler at the time. During his makuuchi years, he disclocated his shoulder after a bout against yokozuna Ōtori. He was however promoted to ōzeki the following tournament, at the age of 31. At the time of his promotion, a banquet was held at the invitation of, a famous writer from Tsushima.[4] Tsushimanada, however, did not kept his rank after he injured his left arm during training. He retired in 1922, at the age of 34, and did not remained in his stable as an elder.
Upon coming back to Tsushima, he became the mayor of his village.[5]

In 2017, Sakaigawa stable wrestler Masamitsu Umeno, whose family is from Tsushima, was given the Tsushimanada shikona, or ring name, because he comes from a family originally from the island of Tsushima, and being himself from Nagasaki Prefecture.[6]

In 2018, his 1919's keshō-mawashi was retrieved in the Nagasaki Prefectural Tsushima High School as part of the city's survey of cultural assets. The keshō-mawashi was decorated with light blue waves and golden rocky mountains, portraying a classical Tsushima landscape. The lining is decorated with red brocade such as dragons and phoenixes.[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tsushimanada Yakichi Rikishi Information. Sumo Reference . 2022-10-06.
  2. Along with Tamagaki III, Tamagaki IV, Itsutsushima and Sadanoyama
  3. Web site: SumoDB . Wrestlers from Nagasaki Prefecture by rank. 13 August 2023.
  4. Web site: 対馬初!大相撲の大関に昇りつめた男 - 對馬洋 弥吉 (1887 - 1933). Tsushima city bulletin . ja. 4 November 2011. 28 February 2023.
  5. Web site: 対馬出身力士の化粧まわし見つかる 大正時代の大関「對馬洋(つしまなだ)」. Nagasaki Shimbun . ja. 2018-01-21. 2022-10-06.
  6. Web site: 対馬洋、新十両に喜び「結果だけドキドキしながら待っていました」ケガ乗り越え昇進、師匠に感謝. 28 September 2022. Nikkan Sports. ja. 6 October 2022.