Azumafuji Kin'ichi
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| Personal information | ||
|---|---|---|
| Birth name | 井上 謹一 (Kinichi Inoue) | |
| Date of birth | October 28, 1921 | |
| Place of birth | Tokyo, Japan | |
| Date of death | July 31, 1973 (aged 51) | |
| Height | 1.79 m (5 ft 101⁄2 in) | |
| Weight | 178 kg (390 lb/28.0 st) | |
| Career* | ||
| Heya | Takasago | |
| Record | 335-137-54-1draws-1hold | |
| Debut | January 1936 | |
| Highest rank | Yokozuna (October 1948) | |
| Retired | September, 1954 | |
| Yusho | 6 (Makuuchi) 1 (Juryo) 1 (Makushita) |
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* Career information is correct as of October 2007. |
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Azumafuji Kin'ichi (東富士 欽壹? October 28, 1921 - July 31, 1973) was a sumo wrestler from Taitō, Tokyo, Japan. He was the sport's 40th Yokozuna, and later a professional wrestler.
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[edit] Sumo career
He made professional debut in January 1936, joining Takasago stable. He was promoted to the top makuuchi division in May 1943. On the sixth day of the November 1944 tournament, he defeated yokozuna Futabayama Sadaji, the last wrestler ever to do so as Futabayama pulled out of the tournament the next day and only fought one more bout before his retirement. Azumafuji was promoted to ozeki in June 1945 on the strength of two runner-up performances. He won his first top division championship in May 1948, and was promoted to the top yokozuna rank in October of that year after finishing as runner-up. Unusually, he managed to win his debut yokozuna tournament, in January 1949.
On the 12th day of the September 1951 tournament, he recorded a azukari, or hold, a rare result. On that day, he had come down with acute pneumonia but he forced himself to continue in the tournament as he had only one loss. Azumafuji fought with then ozeki Yoshibayama twice, but the outcome still could not be determined. After the second bout, Azumafuji couldn't stand up any more and conceded defeat, but the gentlemanly Yoshibayama insisted that the fairest result was to declare a hold, which was confirmed by the officials. Azumafuji went on to win the tournament, his fourth championship.
Azumafuji won his sixth and final championship in September 1953, and struggled with injuries after that. In September 1954, ozeki Tochinishiki seemed certain to win his second consecutive championship. Azumafuji suddenly announced his retirement at that tournament, not wishing to hinder Tochinshiki's promotion to yokozuna.[1] Had he remained, Tochinishiki would have had to become a fifth active yokozuna, an unprecedented situtation. Tochinishiki reportedly asked Azumafuji to reconsider his decision, but to no avail.[1]
[edit] Professional wrestling career
He was the first yokozuna to turn to Western-style professional wrestling, in 1955. This occurred after a dispute in the Japan Sumo Association between two other elders, Takasago and Tatsunami, which he wished to escape.[1] In April 1955 he won the Hawaiian Tag Team title in Honolulu alongside another former sumo wrestler turned professional wrestler, Rikidozan. In 1956 he defeated Toshio Yamaguchi to win the Japanese Heavyweight tournament.[2]
[edit] Top division record
*Two tables represent a change in the tournament system over the years
| New Year | Summer | Autumn | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1943 | x | East Maegashira #8 (10-5) | no tournament held |
| 1944 | West Maegashira #1 (7-4-4) | East Maegashira #2 (6-4) | West Sekiwake (9-1) |
| 1945 | no tournament held | East Sekiwake (6-1) | East Ōzeki (9-1) |
| 1946 | no tournament held | no tournament held | East Ōzeki (7-6) |
| 1947 | no tournament held | West Ōzeki (9-1) | West Ōzeki (6-5) |
| 1948 | no tournament held | West Ōzeki (10-1) | West Ōzeki (10-1) |
| 1949 | West Yokozuna (10-2-1draw) | East Yokozuna (8-7) | West Yokozuna (10-5) |
| 1950 | West Yokozuna (6-6-3) | West Yokozuna (14-1) | East Yokozuna (11-4) |
| 1951 | West Yokozuna (10-5) | East Yokozuna (12-3) | West Yokozuna (13-1-1hold) |
| 1952 | East Yokozuna (7-4-4) | West Yokozuna (13-2) | East Yokozuna (7-7-1) |
| New Year | March | May | September | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1953 | West Yokozuna (2-5-8) | West Yokozuna (12-3) | East Yokozuna (11-4) | West Yokozuna (14-1) |
| 1954 | East Yokozuna (3-7-5) | West Yokozuna (5-3-7) | Sat out | Retired |
- The wrestler's East/West designation, rank, and win/loss record are listed for each tournament.[3]
- A third figure in win-loss records represents matches sat-out during the tournament (usually due to injury)
- an X signifies the wrestler had yet to reach the top division at that point in his career
| Green Box=Tournament Championship |
[edit] References
- ^ a b c Kuroda, Joe (October 2007). Tochinishiki Kiyotaka (1925-1990) the 44th Yokozuna Part 2. Sumo Fan Magazine. Retrieved on 2008-05-01.
- ^ History of Puroresu : The Rikidozan Era
- ^ Azumafuji Kinichi Rikishi Information. Sumo Reference. Retrieved on 2008-06-06.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
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