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Kyokutenhō : ウィキペディア英語版
Kyokutenhō Masaru

in Nalaikh, Ulan Bator, Mongolia is a former professional sumo wrestler. He made his debut in March 1992 out of Ōshima stable, with the first group of Mongolians ever to join the sport in Japan, reaching the top ''makuuchi'' division in January 1998. In his exceptionally long career he received seven special prizes for Fighting Spirit, and won one ''yūshō'' (or tournament), in May 2012 from the ''maegashira'' ranks, which made him at 37 the oldest first–time ''yūshō'' winner in sumo history, and he was runner-up in one other tournament. His highest rank was ''sekiwake'', which he held on three occasions. He was the first wrestler since the 1950s to be ranked in the top division after the age of 40. He has made more appearances in the top division than any other wrestler at 1470, and only Ōshio has fought more than his 1870 career bouts. He announced his retirement in July 2015 and declared his intention to stay in sumo as an elder, having acquired Japanese citizenship in 2005. He is now known as Ōshima-''oyakata''.
==Career==
In 1991, Tsevegnyam came to Japan with five other Mongolian wrestlers, including Kyokushūzan, joining Ōshima stable. They were the first Mongolians to join professional sumo. In Mongolia he had had little experience of wrestling or judo, concentrating on basketball in junior high school. Six months after they came to Japan, due to cultural difference, language problems, and the extremely harsh training methods used in sumo, Kyokutenhō, Kyokushuzan and three others ran away and sought refuge in the Mongolian embassy, but he was persuaded by Kyokutenzan to return to his stable.
In March 1996, he was promoted to the second highest ''jūryō'' division, achieving ''sekitori'' status for the first time. After temporarily dropping down to ''makushita,'' he slowly climbed the ''jūryō'' division and first won promotion to the top ''makuuchi'' division in January 1998. However, he did not establish himself in the division until May 1999. He won his first ''sanshō'' or special prize in January 2000. He first achieved a ''san'yaku'' rank in January 2002 when he was promoted to ''komusubi''. He has earned two ''kinboshi'' or gold stars for ''yokozuna'' upsets at ''maegashira'' rank, defeating Takanohana in the latter's comeback tournament in September 2002 and fellow Mongolian Asashōryū in his first tournament as a ''yokozuna'' in March 2003. He also defeated Asashōryū and Musashimaru whilst ranked in ''san'yaku''. He made his ''sekiwake'' debut in July 2003 but didn't achieve a ''kachi-koshi'' or winning score in his three attempts at the rank.
On 28 April 2007 he caused a car accident in Tokyo. He was punished for defying the Japan Sumo Association's ban on wrestlers driving cars by being forced to sit out the May tournament, resulting in demotion to the ''jūryō'' division. This broke a string of over 700 consecutive top division bouts dating from his re-entry into ''makuuchi'' in May 1999, the longest streak among active wrestlers. However, he won immediate promotion back to the top division with a 12-3 record in July. On his return to the top division in September he was runner-up to ''yokozuna'' Hakuhō, his first ever runner-up score in ''makuuchi''. He was awarded his fifth Fighting Spirit prize. In March 2009 he was promoted to ''komusubi'' for the first time in 17 tournaments, and became the first former ''san'yaku'' wrestler since Mitoizumi in 1988 to drop to the ''jūryō'' division and make a return to the ''san'yaku'' ranks. He made ''komusubi'' once again in July 2009.
Following the retirement of Kaiō in July 2011 Kyokutenhō became the longest serving member of the top division. He continued wrestling despite his mentor Ōshima oyakata retiring in April 2012, and transferred along with his colleagues to Tomozuna stable.
In May 2012, in his first tournament for his new stable, he won his first Emperor's Cup by beating Tochiōzan in a playoff after both finished with 12-3 records. In this tournament, Kyokutenhō had been in professional sumo just over twenty years, and at 37 years and 8 months was the oldest wrestler ever to take a top division championship in modern sumo history. He was also the first ''maegashira'' ranked wrestler to win a tournament since Kotomitsuki in 2001.〔 Also, as Kyokutenhō had acquired Japanese citizenship, he was technically the first Japanese to win the championship since Tochiazuma in January 2006, although he will still be regarded as a 'foreign' champion in the Sumo Association's record book. His ''yūshō'' was the 50th won by a Mongolian born wrestler.〔
Despite his tournament victory Kyokutenhō did not return to the ''san'yaku'' ranks for the July tournament, instead being ranked at ''maegashira'' 1. He is the first ''maegashira'' to win the ''yūshō'' and not achieve ''san'yaku'' promotion since Sadanoyama in 1961. Kyokutenhō scored only 2–13 in this tournament, losing his first 13 bouts – the worst performance by a defending ''yūshō'' champion since Takatōriki also scored 2–13 in May 2000. In September 2014 he became the first 40-year-old to be ranked in makuuchi since the six tournament a year system began in 1958, and he also drew level with Terao on 1795 career appearances, behind only Ōshio's 1891. In the May 2015 he surpassed Kaiō's record with his 1445th appearance in the top division.〔
Kyokutenhō left the ring in tears after losing his twelfth bout of the July 2015 tournament, a result which meant his demotion to the second division was certain. He announced his retirement the following day, stating "I have run out of strength and don’t have the spirit anymore." Hakuhō has promised him a ride in the ''yokozunas victory parade.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Kyokutenhō Masaru」の詳細全文を読む



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