January 2024 Grand Sumo Tournament, Day 4 (Wednesday 17 January 2024)

(Looking for a different day? Try the master list!)

Compiled from: JSA's postings for makuuchi, juryo, makushita, sandanme, jonidan and jonokuchi; JSA's absence list, JSA's tournament leader list, JSA's tournament champions list and JSA's Day 4 program in Japanese.

There are 157 bouts listed on the schedule today. It's an even-numbered day which means the west side is first to get called.

1 of today's 157 bouts are fusensho or fusenpai because of kyujo rikishi. This may change over the course of the day!

Check the appendices at the end of the schedule for more useful information!

What our fave toriteki are doing today

If you want a toriteki (non-salaried rikishi from divisions 3 to 6) added to this watch list, get in touch!

Appearing on day 4: Agora, Amakaze, Asonoyama, Chikureisen, Dainichido, Dewanojo, Hakuoho, Hokuyozan, Ikazuchido, Ito, Kaiseijo, Kazeyuki, Kiryuko, Kitadaichi, Koki, Kokiryu, Kokuryunami, Kotokuzan, Kototebakari, Kyokutaisei, Maikeru, Mineyaiba, Miyagi, Nabatame, Nikko, Obara, Onokatsu, Sazanami, Shoketsu, Shoran, Souga, Takerufuji, Tanji, Tatsuosho, Tsukubayama, Urutora, Wakaikari, Yago, Yukiamami

Having a rest on day 4: Akenonami, Aonishiki, Arise, Asakiryu, Asanowaka, Asasorai, Baraki, Fujiseiun, Furanshisu, Hagane, Hananoumi, Hayashiryu, Hogasho, Itadaki, Kamito, Kanzaki, Kawamura, Kazeeidai, Kazekeno, Kazuto, Kenho, Kirimaru, Kitanosho, Mogamizakura, Moriurara, Najima, Nakashima, Otani, Raiho, Rinko, Satonofuji, Satsumao, Sawayaka, Shunkaku, Shunrai, Suyama, Taiga, Takeuchi, Taranami, Terutsuyoshi, Toshunryu, Tsushimanada, Wakatakakage, Wakatakamoto, Yamato, Yoshii, Yuki

Kyujo on day 4: Chiyooga, Enho, Kaihiryu, Kiho, Rao, Tochimaru

Note: Each division also has its own mini-report for who's on the schedule and who's kyujo!

Kyujo rikishi

The following rikishi are kyujo on day 4: Amao, Aoifuji, Chiyooga, Daiyusho, Dewataikai, Enho, Hatooka, Hayatefuji, Higohikari, Ienoshima, Kaihiryu, Kiho, Kiyonoyama, Kosei, Kyokushori, Makotofuji, Masuminato, Minorufuji, Mishima, Miyakogawa, Nishikikuni, Oginohama, Okuyama, Rao, Ryuo, Ryutsukasa, Sadanojo, Sadanokuni, Shinzan, Shosei, Takakeisho, Takakento, Takayasu, Tochimaru, Tsuyasato, Wakaikki, Wakayamanaka, Yamadaumi, Yurikisho

Salary promotions and demotions

These gyoji were promoted at the end of December: Tategyoji Shikimori Inosuke (41st) promoted to Kimura Shonosuke (38th); Kimura Hisanosuke (up to san'yaku); Kimura Seiichiro (to makushita); Kimura Sakuranosuke (to makushita); Shikimori Komei (to jonidan); Shikimori Tomokimi (to jonidan). Congratulations to them all!

Retirements

Azumaryu ("Squidward") announced his retirement in December after the release of the banzuke.

Retirees after the November tournament include Chiyoshishi, Kototakuya, Daijo, Tamanowaka, Itoga, Kirizakura and Raikisho. Best of luck to them all! (Collected from JSA's retirements page, Japanese language)

Second top ranked gyoji Kimura Tamajiro retired suddenly in September 2023, making that his final tournament. Shikimori Shiho has also disappeared from the listing of gyoji on the website in time for January 2024.

Absences

Takayasu went absent from day 3 with a back injury. (Source: Sponichi.) Takakeisho went absent from day 4 with a neck injury.

Ringside judge Sadogatake is absent and will be replaced by Fujishima. Ringside judge Ajigawa is also absent and will be replaced by Onogawa. (Source: tachiai's Twitter.)

Start at 9:25AM

Maezumo 前相撲

Maezumo is for unranked rikishi who are debuting in sumo or have been absent so long they've fallen off the banzuke. Maezumo involves a series of lightning quick matches over a few days. The results of these matches are used to determine their starter ranks for the next tournament.

Maezumo competitors are not listed on the program.

Jonokuchi 序ノ口 (Division 6)

Official JSA fixtures, results and winning techniques for jonokuchi

Shimpan are Onaruto (ozeki Dejima) facing us left, Edagawa (maegashira #1 Aogiyama) facing us right, Asahiyama* (sekiwake Kotonishiki) right of dohyo, Tanigawa (sekiwake Hokutoriki) facing away on mic, Naruto* (ozeki Kotooshu) left of dohyo

Yobidashi is Akitaka (Ajigawa stable); Gyoji is Shikimori Kazenosuke (Oshiogawa stable)

Jonidan 序二段 (Division 5)

Official JSA fixtures, results and winning techniques for jonidan

Coming up: Chikureisen, Ito, Kokiryu, Kokuryunami, Shoketsu, Souga, Tsukubayama, Urutora, Yukiamami

Gyoji is Shikimori Kisaburo (Tokitsukaze stable)

Gyoji is Shikimori Komei (Naruto stable)

Gyoji is Kimura Shunta (Shikoroyama stable)

Shimpan shift change

Shimpan are Kataonami* (sekiwake Tamakasuga) facing us left, Tamagaki (komusubi Tomonohana) facing us right, Azumazeki (komusubi Takamisakari) right of dohyo, Tokitsukaze* (maegashira #1 Tosayutaka) facing away on mic, Ikazuchi* (komusubi Kakizoe) left of dohyo

Gyoji is Kimura Ryunosuke (Kokonoe stable)

Gyoji is Kimura Keitaro (Musashigawa stable)

Gyoji is Kimura Katsunosuke (Oshima stable)

Sandanme 三段目 (Division 4)

Official JSA fixtures, results and winning techniques for sandanme

Coming up: Agora, Dainichido, Dewanojo, Hokuyozan, Ikazuchido, Kazeyuki, Koki, Maikeru, Nikko, Shoran, Tanji, Tatsuosho

Gyoji is Kimura Narimasa (Irumagawa)

Shimpan shift change

Shimpan are Tatekawa (sekiwake Tosanoumi) facing us left, Hanaregoma* (sekiwake Tamanoshima) facing us right, Futagoyama* (ozeki Miyabiyama) right of dohyo, Onogawa (maegashira #2 Kitataiki) facing away on mic, Hidenoyama (ozeki Kotoshogiku) left of dohyo

Gyoji is Shikimori Kainosuke (Isenoumi stable)

Gyoji is Shikimori Tatsunosuke (Takadagawa stable)

Gyoji is Kimura Sakuranosuke (Shikihide stable)

Gyoji is Shikimori Seiichiro (Isegahama stable)

Gyoji is Kimura Kintaro (Nishikido stable)

Gyoji is Kimura Kazuma (Nishiiwa stable)

Shimpan shift change

Shimpan are Urakaze (maegashira #1 Shikishima) facing us left, Takenawa (sekiwake Tochinonada) facing us right, Oshima* (sekiwake Kyokutenho) right of dohyo, Takasago* (sekiwake Asasekiryu) facing away on mic, Nishonoseki* (the 72nd yokozuna Kisenosato) left of dohyo

Gyoji is Shikimori Kinosuke (Sadogatake stable)

Makushita 幕下 (Division 3)

Official JSA fixtures, results and winning techniques for makushita

Coming up: Amakaze, Asonoyama, Kaiseijo, Kyokutaisei, Mineyaiba, Miyagi, Nabatame, Obara, Sazanami, Wakaikari

Gyoji is Shikimori Tomokazu (Oshima stable)

Gyoji is Kimura Ennosuke (Nishonoseki stable)

Gyoji is Kimura Satoshi (Takasago stable)

Yobidashi is Soichi (Yamahibiki stable)

Yobidashi is Yohei (Dewanoumi stable); Gyoji is Shikimori Kazuki (Arashio stable)

Yobidashi is Keisuke (Shibatayama stable)

Yobidashi is Fujio (Isegahama stable); Gyoji is Kimura Hideaki (Tokiwayama stable)

Yobidashi is Shigetaro (Kokonoe stable)

Yobidashi is Tasuke (Yamahibiki stable); Gyoji is Kimura Kozaburo (Hakkaku stable)

Yobidashi is Satoru (Hanaregoma stable); Gyoji is Kimura Zennosuke (Kasugano stable)

Juryo dohyo-iri at 2:15PM

Makushita Joi 幕下上位 (Division 3)

Official JSA fixtures, results and winning techniques for makushita

Coming up: Hakuoho, Kiryuko, Kitadaichi, Kotokuzan, Kototebakari, Onokatsu, Yago

Shimpan are Fujishima* (ozeki Musoyama) facing away on mic, Kataonami* (sekiwake Tamakasuga), Tamagaki (komusubi Tomonohana), Tokitsukaze* (maegashira #1 Tosayutaka), Ikazuchi* (komusubi Kakizoe)

Yobidashi is Masao (Nishiiwa stable); Gyoji is Kimura Chishu (Dewanoumi stable)

Yobidashi is Rokuro (Nishonoseki stable); Gyoji is Kimura KANKURO (Yamahibiki stable)

Juryo 十両 (Division 2)

Official JSA fixtures, results and winning techniques for juryo

Coming up: Takerufuji

Yobidashi is Hiroyuki (Nishiiwa stable); Gyoji is Kimura Kichijiro (Shibatayama stable)

Yobidashi is Matsuo (Hanaregoma stable); Gyoji is Shikimori Shinnosuke (Hanaregoma stable)

Yobidashi is Kunio (Takasago stable); Gyoji is Kimura Yukihiro (Tamanoi stable)

Yobidashi is Mitsuaki (Tagonoura stable); Gyoji is Kimura Mitsunosuke (Takadagawa stable)

Yobidashi is Rikinojo (Takasago stable); Gyoji is Kimura Takao (Tagonoura stable)

Yobidashi is Koji (Asakayama stable); Gyoji is Kimura Asanosuke (Takasago stable)

Yobidashi is Teruki (Isegahama stable); Gyoji is Shikimori Kiichiro (Oitekaze stable)

Intermission at 3:40PM: Makuuchi dohyo-iri and yokozuna dohyo-iri.

Makuuchi 幕内 (Division 1)

Official JSA fixtures, results and winning techniques for makuuchi

Shimpan are Asakayama* (ozeki Kaio) facing away on mic, Tatekawa (sekiwake Tosanoumi), Hanaregoma* (sekiwake Tamanoshima), Onogawa (maegashira #2 Kitataiki), Hidenoyama (ozeki Kotoshogiku)

Yobidashi is Daikichi (Hakkaku stable); Gyoji is ❤️ Kimura Yonosuke ❤️ (Hakkaku stable)

Yobidashi is Kotoyoshi (Sadogatake stable); Gyoji is Kimura Ginjiro (Shibatayama stable)

Yobidashi is Kotozo (Sadogatake stable); Gyoji is Shikimori Kindayu (Hanaregoma stable)

Yobidashi is Ryuji (Miyagino stable); Gyoji is Kimura Akijiro (Kasugano stable)

Yobidashi is Akira (Oshima stable); Gyoji is Kimura Motoki (Minato stable)

Yobidashi is Kokichi (Oshima stable); Gyoji is Shikimori Kandayu (Miyagino stable)

Shimpan shift change

Shimpan are Kumegawa (komusubi Kotoinazuma) facing away on mic, Urakaze (maegashira #1 Shikishima), Takenawa (sekiwake Tochinonada), Takasago* (sekiwake Asasekiryu), Nishonoseki* (the 72nd yokozuna Kisenosato)

Yobidashi is Goro (Otake stable); Gyoji is Kimura Hisanosuke (Oshima stable)

Yobidashi is Shigeo (Kokonoe stable); Gyoji is Kimura Konosuke (Kokonoe stable)

Yobidashi is Shiro (Otake stable); Gyoji is Kimura Shotaro (Kasugano stable)

Takakeisho is kyujo! Ura picks up the fusensho

Yobidashi is Katsuyuki (Shibatayama stable); Gyoji is Kimura Yodo (Kokonoe stable)

Yobidashi is Jiro (Kasugano stable); Gyoji is Kimura Shonosuke (Takadagawa stable)

Bow-twirling with Satonofuji

Appendices

General knowledge

Wikipedia has a list of winning techniques like oshidashi, yorikiri, etc and a sumo glossary, the heaviest grand sumo competitors ever, and an English-language page for just about every sekitori there is or was.

SumoDB has the entire banzuke in both Japanese and English. SumoDB also contains information about historical results and head to head matchups.

Nihon Sumo Kyokai (Japan Sumo Association) links: current rankings Japanese/English; yobidashi (ushers & attendants) Japanese/English; gyoji (referees) Japanese/English; oyakata (coaches) Japanese/English; heya (training stables) Japanese/English. NSK homepage in English; retirees - Japanese only but only requires hiragana knowledge

Fred Pinkerton's promotion/demotion charts show who's moving where in top division.

News sources and blogs: Tachi-Ai sumo blog (in English); Japan Times sumo coverage (in English); Nikkan Sports sumo articles (in Japanese); Sponichi sumo articles (in Japanese); Chunichi sumo articles (in Japanese). Hochi.news sumo articles (in Japanese). Useful Japanese terms to search in the highlights page for: 休場 (kyujo, absence); コロナ (korona, COVID).

Japanese language resources: DeepL for translating entire articles; Jisho for looking up specific words and kanji; the 10ten extension for Firefox lets you mouse over particular Japanese text of interest on websites.

Curiosities: that time half a stable went AWOL because the stablemaster's wife was being too harsh on them; interview with a yobidashi

Videos

Miscellaneous

A comprehensive gallery featuring head shots and bios of rikishi, oyakata, gyoji, yobidashi and more (correct to the beginning of 2023). Pre-bout rituals explained; What do the gyoji say?

Sumo match announcements

  1. Yobidashi sings the names of the rikishi about to bout in turn, then rikishi ascend the dohyo
  2. Once rikishi are on the dohyo, gyoji hollers their names in turn while gesturing their way
  3. Announcer clearly announces each rikishi's starting side (nishi/higashi-gata rikishi), name, place of origin (-shusshin) and training stable (-beya) as they perform shikiri and throw salt
  4. Once timekeeper judge says to begin, gyoji commands rikishi into position, then officiates the match
  5. (optional) If the outcome is unclear or in dispute by a judge, a mono-ii is called and head judge reports on their findings; gyoji announces a rematch if that's what the judges want
  6. Gyoji announces winner's name turning to them and possibly giving them envelopes full of sponsor cash.
  7. Once winner is decided, announcer says who won and what the kimarite (deciding technique) was (technique de rikishi name no kachi) - this can be delayed by up to a few matches if the technique is hard to determine!

Understanding the judges' reports

Mono-ii reports are very formulaic! They're usually a couple of long run-on sentences that go something like this:

  1. Now we're going to explain our conference. Tadaima wa kyogi ni tsuite setsumei itashimasu or similar
  2. The gyoji pointed (one way or another), but.. Gyoji gunbai wa higashigata/nishigata/(rikishi name) arimashita ga..
  3. We had a conference about (something that affects the outcome of the match), the result of that conference was.. (???) mono-ii ga tsuki, kyougi shita kekka..
  4. (The findings of that discussion) (???)-te ori/orazu
  5. (The outcome of that discussion and the rightful winner of the bout if one was determined.)

Matters for discussion and findings may include a touchout (te ga dete ori/orazu..), a simultaneous landing for both rikishi (doutai or ryousha), or even a disqualification (hansoku).

Helpful words to listen out for to get the gist of the report:

Body parts

Actions and other stuff

Verdicts

The outcome can go three ways:

Who's that shimpan (ringside judge)?

Click the name of the shimpan to see what they look like. (You may need to middle-click it to open the link in a new window.) Thanks to the maintainer of this page for providing these images!

Shimpan groups

No new ringside judges to report this month!

Stablemasters have * after their name; everyone else is a coach.

Senior shimpan

Members of this senior group join up with other shimpan groups to act as head shimpan after the juryo ring entrance ceremony & intermission.

Substitute shimpan

Expect to see one or more of these folks subbing in if someone doesn't make their shift: Hatachiyama (komusubi Tochinohana), Minato* (maegashira 2 Minatofuji), Shiranui (komusubi Wakakoyu), Takadagawa (sekiwake Akinoshima)

Who's that off-schedule yobidashi

The official program only lists sekitori yobidashi from Soichi onwards. Even after their match-calling shifts, these youngsters work throughout the day as attendants.

There's a slightly outdated gallery of yobidashi headshots with bios at Heyaaz - it's missing Kumajiro because he debuted during 2023.

To help spot them, here's links to screencaps of the non-sekitori yobidashi in their order of appearance, including onscreen bios in Japanese: