Yokozuna Hakuho Celebrates 1045 Career Victory |
Hakuho reached yet another milestone
by tying late yokozuna Chiyonofuji at 1,045 career victories after
beating fourth-ranked maegashira Kagayaki at the Nagoya Grand Sumo
Tournament on Monday.
Yokozuna Hakuho remained peerless at the
15-day tournament, improving to a perfect 9-0 with an easy win over
Kagayaki, whom he slammed to the dirt in their first career meeting.
The victory put him on equal footing with one of sumo’s
legends in Chiyonofuji, who passed away in July of 2016. The 32-year-old
Hakuho, now the winningest yokozuna ever, is three years younger than
Chiyonofuji was at the time of his final victory.
Hakuho also
moved within two wins of former ozeki Kaio’s all-time record, which,
barring injury or some unforeseen event, will almost certainly be
rewritten by the end of the current basho.
Hakuho will face No. 5 maegashira Chiyoshoma (4-5) on Tuesday. Chiyoshoma defeated ozeki Goeido (5-4) on Monday.
“I’m
really happy about this,” said Hakuho, who was given a bouquet of
flowers and waved to the crowd at Aichi Prefectural Gymnasium on his way
back to the dressing rooms.
The Miyagino stable wrestler is one
win ahead of No. 8 Aoiyama in the title race here and two ahead of a
pack of four, including new ozeki Takayasu.
Aoiyama rebounded from
his first defeat of the tourney a day earlier, but cut it close as the
judges had to convene over his win against No. 11 Chiyonokuni (3-6).
Chiyonokuni,
bloodied after taking a hard slap to the face, appeared to have sent
Aoiyama tumbling to his second loss. But the judges caught Chiyonokuni
stepping out of the ring before his opponent hit the ground, and
declared Aoiyama the winner.
“I was sure I saw his foot go out
first, so I’m glad that was confirmed and I was able to win,” Aoiyama
said. “The big thing is to stay focused and wrestle well, and keep doing
that each and every day.”
Takayasu, who had won seven straight
after losing on the first day, failed to put up much of a fight against
komusubi Yoshikaze (5-4). After locking horns at the tachiai, Yoshikaze
got a firm grip on the belt and simply pushed Takayasu out with minimal
resistance from the ozeki.
The other yokozuna in the field,
Harumafuji (6-3), was stunned by fourth-ranked Ura (6-3), who earned his
first career victory over a yokozuna.