
Ex-yokozuna Hakuho set to retire from Japan Sumo Association: source
KYODO NEWS - 12 hours ago - 22:29 | Sports, All, Japan
Former yokozuna Hakuho plans to retire from the Japan Sumo Association amid uncertainty about the future of his scandal-hit Miyagino stable, a source with knowledge of the matter said Friday.
The Mongolian-born winner of a record 45 elite-level championships was serving as the Miyagino stablemaster when it was closed in April 2024 after then top-division grappler Hokuseiho was found to have physically abused two junior wrestlers.
Wrestlers and elders from the Miyagino stable transferred to the Isegahama stable indefinitely after the closure.
More than a year later, the future of the Miyagino stable has yet to be seriously discussed by the association's board of directors, largely due to a belief that its reopening will not be feasible, according to a source.
The status of the stable is expected to be discussed at an extraordinary board meeting on Monday. If the retirement of the 40-year-old former grand champion, now known as elder Miyagino, is made official, he is likely to hold a press conference a week later.
Hakuho retired from competition in September 2021 and became a stablemaster the following July. He was found responsible and punished over the violent behavior of the Mongolian-born, Hokkaido-raised Hokuseiho, who retired from sumo over the scandal.
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News from Japan Sports Jun 2, 2025 16:12 (JST) Tokyo, June 2 (Jiji Press)--Former yokozuna professional sumo grand champion Hakuho, now stablemaster Miyagino, will retire from the Japan Sumo Association, it was learned Monday. The move comes as there is no prospect that the Miyagino stable of the 40-year-old, the most successful sumo wrestler ever with 45 grand tournament victories, would be reopened. The former Hakuho, who was born in Mongolia and acquired Japanese citizenship in 2019, was demoted by two ranks from "iin" to "toshiyori" in the association in February last year, in the wake of a scandal involving violence by Hokuseiho, a wrestler who belonged to the stable at the time. The Miyagino stable halted operations after last year's spring grand tournament in March. END [Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.] Jiji Press