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Tamanoshima Arata

Tamanoshima Arata (born September 15, 1977, as Arata Okabe) is a former sumo wrestler from Izumizaki, Fukushima, Japan.

Tamanoshima Arata

Tamanoshima Arata
玉乃島 新
Personal information
BornArata Okabe (1977-09-15) September 15, 1977Fukushima, Japan
Height1.88 m (6 ft 2 in)
Weight158 kg (348 lb; 24.9 st)
Career
StableKataonami
Record557–583–4
DebutMarch, 1998
Highest rankSekiwake (January, 2004)
RetiredNovember, 2011
Elder nameHanaregoma
Championships1 (Jūryō)
Special PrizesFighting Spirit (5)Technique (1)
Gold Stars2 (Musashimaru, Asashōryū)

Last updated: Nov 2011

Tamanoshima Arata (born September 15, 1977, as Arata Okabe) is a former sumo wrestler from Izumizaki, Fukushima, Japan. A former amateur champion, he made his professional debut in 1998, reaching the top makuuchi division at the end of 2000. He was twice runner-up in a tournament, and earned six special prizes and two gold stars during his career. His highest rank was sekiwake. He wrestled for Kataonami stable. He retired in November 2011 to become an elder of the Japan Sumo Association and is now known as Hanaregoma Oyakata. In December 2021 he became head coach of Hanaregoma stable.

Career

Tamanoshima was a college champion at Toyo University and so was given makushita tsukedashi status and allowed to make his professional debut in the makushita division.[1] He was only twenty years of age, as he left the university in his second year, making him the youngest former amateur to join professional sumo in this way.[2]

Initially competing under the shikona or ring name of Tamanonada, he reached the second highest jūryō division in September 1999 and the top makuuchi division for the first time in November 2000. In March 2001, upon his second promotion to the top division, he adopted the Tamanoshima name, which had previously been used by a former yokozuna from his stable, Tamanoumi.

Tamanoshima in May 2009.

Tamanoshima was twice runner-up in a tournament, in July 2001 and March 2005, and he earned five Fighting Spirit prizes. In July 2003 he earned his first kinboshi for defeating yokozunaAsashōryū. The highest rank he has achieved is sekiwake, which he reached after scoring ten wins (including another yokozuna upset, over Musashimaru) at maegashira 3 in November 2003. He could only manage five wins in his sekiwake debut, but returned to the sanyaku ranks in July 2004 and January 2006. He was ever present in the top division from March 2001 to January 2008, but a poor 3–12 record in January 2008 meant he was demoted to the second division for the March 2008 tournament. He produced a 10–5 score there which was enough to return him immediately to the top division for May 2008, where he scored a creditable nine wins. However he narrowly failed to secure kachi-koshi in his next three tournaments. He fell to maegashira 15 in January 2009 but held his makuuchi position comfortably with an 11–4 record. He remained in the division until May 2010 when he was once again demoted after scoring only five wins at the bottom maegashira rank.

Retirement

In November 2011, after losing his first eight matches at the rank of jūryō 12 and facing certain demotion to the makushita division, Tamanoshima announced his retirement from active competition. He has stayed in sumo as a coach, initially under the toshiyori or elder name of Nishiiwa Oyakata. In May 2013 he changed elder names to Hanaregoma, and in November 2014 moved to the Nishonoseki stable. In December 2021 he became head coach there, and the stable was renamed Hanaregoma stable.[3]

Fighting style

A bout between Tamanoshima and Toyonoshima

Tamanoshima's favoured techniques are listed at the Sumo Association as hidari-yotsu/yori, meaning he preferred a hold on his opponent's mawashi with his right hand outside and left hand inside his opponent's arms. His most common winning kimarite was yori-kiri or force out, which accounted for roughly a third of his wins, followed by oshi-dashi or push out.

Family

Tamanoshima was born into a sports family. Not only was his father a former professional boxer, but he is the nephew of former ōzekiKiyokuni and his older brother is the former jūryō wrestler Tamamitsukuni, who made his debut in the same tournament as Tamanoshima, also as a makushita tsukedashi entrant, retiring in January 2008. He and his brother had the option to join Isegahama stable, then run by their uncle, but they chose the more successful Kataonami stable instead.[4] They were the first pair of brothers to join sumo as makushita tsukedeshi.[5]

Career record

Tamanoshima Arata[6]
YearJanuaryHatsu basho, TokyoMarchHaru basho, OsakaMayNatsu basho, TokyoJulyNagoya basho, NagoyaSeptemberAki basho, TokyoNovemberKyūshū basho, Fukuoka
1998xMakushita tsukedashi#6052 WestMakushita#4343 WestMakushita#3461 EastMakushita#1352 WestMakushita#634 
1999EastMakushita#1134 EastMakushita#1743 WestMakushita#1152 WestMakushita#452 WestJūryō#13105 WestJūryō#769 
2000WestJūryō#10510 EastMakushita#252 EastJūryō#12114 EastJūryō#478 WestJūryō#5105 WestMaegashira#1478 
2001EastJūryō#1123Champion EastMaegashira#10114FEastMaegashira#3510 WestMaegashira#7123FWestKomusubi#178 WestMaegashira#178 
2002EastMaegashira#2312 EastMaegashira#969 WestMaegashira#11510 WestMaegashira#15114 EastMaegashira#587 WestMaegashira#3510 
2003EastMaegashira#887 WestMaegashira#487 WestMaegashira#378 EastMaegashira#4510WestMaegashira#796 WestMaegashira#3105F
2004WestSekiwake#1510 WestMaegashira#369 WestMaegashira#5123TWestKomusubi#169 WestMaegashira#278 EastMaegashira#487 
2005EastMaegashira#3510 WestMaegashira#7123FEastMaegashira#1510 WestMaegashira#4510 WestMaegashira#8114 EastMaegashira#187 
2006WestKomusubi#178 EastMaegashira#1510 EastMaegashira#669 EastMaegashira#10114FEastMaegashira#2411 EastMaegashira#7294 
2007EastMaegashira#14105 WestMaegashira#8105 WestMaegashira#269 WestMaegashira#569 EastMaegashira#787 EastMaegashira#6411 
2008WestMaegashira#13312 EastJūryō#5105 WestMaegashira#1396 EastMaegashira#1078 EastMaegashira#1278 WestMaegashira#1369 
2009EastMaegashira#15114 EastMaegashira#687 EastMaegashira#3510 WestMaegashira#696 EastMaegashira#3510 EastMaegashira#7411 
2010EastMaegashira#1378 WestMaegashira#1469 WestMaegashira#16510 EastJūryō#569 WestJūryō#678 WestJūryō#896 
2011EastJūryō#696 Tournament Cancelled000WestJūryō#1411 WestJūryō#369 EastJūryō#7510 EastJūryō#12Retired09
Record given as wins–losses–absences    Top division champion Top division runner-up Retired Lower divisions Non-participation

Sanshō key: F=Fighting spirit; O=Outstanding performance; T=Technique     Also shown: =Kinboshi; P=Playoff(s) Divisions: MakuuchiJūryōMakushitaSandanmeJonidanJonokuchi

Makuuchi ranks: YokozunaŌzekiSekiwakeKomusubiMaegashira

See also

  • Official biography of Tamanoshima Arata at the Grand Sumo Homepage
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tamanoshima_Arata&oldid=1316200217"

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Tamanoshima Arata (born September 15, 1977, as Arata Okabe) is a former sumo wrestler from Izumizaki, Fukushima, Japan.

Career

Tamanoshima was a college champion at Toyo University and so was given makushita tsukedashi status and allowed to make his professional debut in the makushita division.

Retirement

In November 2011, after losing his first eight matches at the rank of jūryō 12 and facing certain demotion to the makushita division, Tamanoshima announced his retirement from active competition.

Fighting style

Tamanoshima's favoured techniques are listed at the Sumo Association as hidari-yotsu/yori , meaning he preferred a hold on his opponent's mawashi with his right hand outside and left hand inside his opponent's arms.