Kotokaze Kōki

Kotokaze Kōki
琴風 豪規
Personal information
Born Koichi Nakayama
(1957-04-26) April 26, 1957
Mie, Japan
Height 1.84 m (6 ft 12 in)
Weight 173 kg (381 lb)
Career
Stable Sadogatake
Record 561-352-102
Debut July, 1971
Highest rank Ōzeki (November, 1981)
Retired November, 1985
Championships 2 (Makuuchi)
1 (Jūryō)
1 (Makushita)
Special Prizes Outstanding Performance (3)
Fighting Spirit (2)
Technique(1)
Gold Stars 6
Kitanoumi (3)
Mienoumi
Wajima
Wakanohana II
* Up to date as of August 2012.

Kotokaze Kōki (born 26 April 1957 as Koichi Nakayama) is a former sumo wrestler from Tsu, Mie, Japan. His highest rank was ōzeki.

Career

Scouted by the 53rd Yokozuna Kotozakura, he joined Sadogatake stable in July 1971. He reached the sekitori level in November 1975 upon promotion to the second highest jūryō division and in January 1977 he made his debut in the top makuuchi division. He got as far as sekiwake before suffering a severe injury to his left knee joint which forced him to miss several tournaments and plunge all the way down to the unsalaried makushita division. He made his way back to the top division in just one year. By March 1981 he had returned to sekiwake and in September 1981 he captured his first tournament championship with a 12-3 record, finishing one win ahead of yokozuna Wakanohana II. He was immediately promoted to sumo's second highest rank of ōzeki. He took his second championship in January 1983 with a 14-1 score, beating Asashio in a playoff. In September 1984 he defeated a newcomer to the division who was in contention for the tournament title, the gigantic Konishiki, in a mammoth two-minute struggle on the final day. Kotokaze later recalled this bout as his most memorable ever. In May 1985 he suffered another serious injury, this time to his right knee, and he decided to retire in November 1985 at the age of twenty eight.

After retirement

Kotokaze became an elder of the Sumo Association under the name Oguruma Oyakata. In 1987 he left Sadogatake to set up his own Oguruma stable. He gives all of his new recruits shikona with the suffix "kaze" (wind), taken from his own fighting name. The first wrestler from the stable to achieve sekitori status was Tomikaze in July 2000. Oguruma stable currently has two wrestlers with top division experience, Takekaze and Yoshikaze. A third, Wakakirin, (who originally came from a different stable) was dismissed from the Sumo Association because of cannabis use in February 2009. Oguruma was demoted from his post in the Association as a result. In September 2010, two men were arresting for attempting to blackmail Kotokaze, sending him a letter threatening to reveal his connections to a "violent criminal gang" (usually a euphemism for yakuza) in his younger years.[1] In April 2011 he was hit with another demotion after a jūryō division wrestler from his stable, Hoshikaze, was forced to retire after a match-fixing scandal.[2] However, in February 2012 he was elected to the Sumo Association board of directors.

Kotokaze is also a regular commentator on NHK's sumo tournament broadcasts.

Fighting style

Kotokaze's most common winning kimarite or technique was overwhelmingly a straightforward yori-kiri or force out, which accounted for over half his wins at sekitori level. He favoured hidari-yotsu, or a right hand outside, left hand inside grip on his opponent's mawashi. He very rarely employed throwing moves.

Top division record

Kotokaze Koki[3]
Year in sumo January
Hatsu basho, Tokyo
March
Haru basho, Osaka
May
Natsu basho, Tokyo
July
Nagoya basho, Nagoya
September
Aki basho, Tokyo
November
Kyūshū basho, Fukuoka
1971 x x x (Maezumo) West Jonokuchi #9
34
 
East Jonidan #97
31
 
1972 West Jonidan #59
12
 
West Jonidan #77

 
West Jonidan #77
21
 
East Jonidan #47

 
East Jonidan #46
12
 
East Jonidan #54

 
1973 East Jonidan #54
30
 
West Jonidan #19
34
 
East Jonidan #32
61
 
East Sandanme #69
43
 
West Sandanme #52
52
 
East Sandanme #24
52
 
1974 East Sandanme #1
34
 
East Sandanme #10
43
 
East Makushita #57
34
 
West Sandanme #8
34
 
East Sandanme #18
52
 
East Makushita #54
52
 
1975 West Makushita #31
43
 
East Makushita #25
61
 
West Makushita #8
52
 
West Makushita #2
43
 
West Makushita #1
52
 
West Jūryō #12
87
 
1976 East Jūryō #9
87
 
West Jūryō #7
96
 
West Jūryō #2
510
 
West Jūryō #7
87
 
East Jūryō #7
96
 
East Jūryō #1
96
 
1977 West Maegashira #11
87
 
East Maegashira #6
96
 
East Maegashira #1
510
 
West Maegashira #7
87
 
West Maegashira #5
87
 
East Maegashira #1
105
O
1978 West Sekiwake #1
510
 
East Maegashira #3
69
West Maegashira #6
123
O
West Sekiwake #1
78
 
West Komusubi #1
78
 
West Maegashira #1
0312
 
1979 East Maegashira #13
3210
 
West Jūryō #7
Sat out due to injury
0015
West Makushita #5
Sat out due to injury
007
West Makushita #30
61
 
West Makushita #8
70P
Champion

 
West Jūryō #11
141
Champion

 
1980 West Maegashira #14
123
F
East Maegashira #1
105
F
West Sekiwake #1
105
O
East Sekiwake #1
645
 
West Maegashira #2
Sat out due to injury
0015
West Maegashira #2
78
1981 West Maegashira #3
105
West Sekiwake #1
96
 
West Komusubi #1
96
 
East Sekiwake #1
105
 
East Sekiwake #1
123
T
East Ōzeki
114
 
1982 East Ōzeki #1
105
 
East Ōzeki #1
96
 
West Ōzeki #1
96
 
West Ōzeki #1
114
 
East Ōzeki #1
96
 
West Ōzeki #1
105
 
1983 West Ōzeki #1
141P
 
East Ōzeki #1
114
 
West Ōzeki #1
114
 
West Ōzeki #2
123
 
East Ōzeki #1
114
 
West Ōzeki #1
114
 
1984 West Ōzeki #1
114
 
West Ōzeki #1
96
 
East Ōzeki #2
96
 
West Ōzeki #2
87
 
West Ōzeki #2
105
 
East Ōzeki #2
105
 
1985 East Ōzeki #2
87
 
West Ōzeki #2
510
 
West Ōzeki #2
348
 
West Sekiwake #2
Sat out due to injury
0015
East Sekiwake #2
Sat out due to injury
0015
East Maegashira #10
Retired
04
Record given as win-loss-absent    Top Division Champion Retired Lower Divisions

Sanshō key: F=Fighting spirit; O=Outstanding performance; T=Technique     Also shown: =Kinboshi(s); P=Playoff(s)
Divisions: Makuuchi Jūryō Makushita Sandanme Jonidan Jonokuchi

Makuuchi ranks: Yokozuna Ōzeki Sekiwake Komusubi Maegashira

See also

References

  1. "尾車親方に「あの時の金返せ」脅迫容疑で男ら逮捕". テレ朝News. Retrieved 2010-09-11.
  2. "Two more wrestlers forced to quit sumo". Japan Times. 12 April 2011. Retrieved 30 January 2012.
  3. "Kotokaze Koki Rikishi Information". Sumo Reference. Retrieved 3 March 2016.

External links

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