Injury-plagued grand champion Kisenosato retires
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[January 16, 2019]
By Jack Tarrant
TOKYO (Reuters) - Sumo wrestling grand
champion Kisenosato retired on Wednesday following a third
successive loss at the New Year Grand Sumo Tournament.
The 32-year-old was the only Japanese-born wrestler to currently
hold the top rank of yokozuna.
Kisenosato entered the 15-day tournament in Tokyo with his career
already in jeopardy following a miserable run of injuries and form
and after losing all three of his bouts decided to retire.
"I have no regrets in my life as a sumo wrestler," Kisenosato said
at an emotional news conference on Wednesday.
"(After my injury), I have worked very hard," he added before
breaking into tears.
Kisenosato's decision comes after he posted eight successive losses
since September, the worst run for a grand champion since the
current competition format started in 1949.
"I was delighted when he became yokozuna but when you see him
closely, you can tell that he was struggling a lot. These two years
went like a flash," his stable master Tagonoura Oyakata said earlier
on Wednesday.
On his yokozuna debut, he won a second successive championship but
then injuries kicked in to hamper further progress.
Between May 2017 and July 2018, Kisenosato missed eight consecutive
tournaments due to injury, the worst record of any grand champion.
Despite his struggles, Kisenosato proved a popular yokozuna in a
sport in desperate need of a home-grown champion.
Japan's top government spokesman Yoshihide Suga was one of a number
to pay homage throughout the day on Wednesday.
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Japanese grand sumo champion Yokozuna Kisenosato performs the New
Year's ring-entering rite at the annual celebration for the New Year
at Meiji Shrine in Tokyo, Japan January 9, 2018. REUTERS/Toru Hanai
"I would like to give honor to what he has achieved and to send
hearty cheers to Kisenosato," he said during his daily briefing.
Tributes also flooded social media.
"Being injured for the last year, I think he was under a lot of
pressure as the only Japanese yokozuna," wrote one fan on Twitter.
"It must have taken him a lot of courage to make this decision. Now
you are released."
"It was the right decision to retire but we truly miss him," sumo
journalist Taro Arai told Reuters.
"I feel there is a big hole in the ring, such a huge loss."
"His records as yokozuna were not remarkable at all, but his
presence was big, not much less than other yokozunas in the past."
There are now only two active yokozuna; Mongolian-born pair Hakuho
Sho and Kakuryu Rikisaburo.
(additional reporting by Mayuko Ono and Ami Miyazaki; editing by
Greg Stutchbury/Amlan Chakraborty)
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