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Hakuho vows to grow sumo globally after exiting local sports body
Hakuho vows to grow sumo globally after exiting local sports body

Japan Times

time09-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Japan Times

Hakuho vows to grow sumo globally after exiting local sports body

Former yokozuna Hakuho, who assumed the name Miyagino when he took over the stable of the same name and became a sumo elder, left the Japan Sumo Association Monday, saying later in the day that his distrust for the body led him to quit and start a new international project aimed at amateur sumo wrestlers. The impetus for the decision, Hakuho said, was the failure of the JSA to provide a clear timeline about the restoration of Miyagino stable, which was shut down in late March 2024 amid a bullying scandal involving one of its wrestlers. 'April marked a full year after the stable shut down, but there was no specific date (on when the stable will resume) which was a big reason for me to quit,' said Hakuho, who returned to Japan from Mongolia, his home country, on Saturday. In a statement last week , the JSA said there had been discussions with Hakuho and other board members about restoring the stable after the next November Basho, trying to persuade him to stay on but without success. Isegahama oyakata, better known as former yokozuna Asahifuji, was quoted as saying in the statement that Hakuho seemed to be 'less passionate' in training junior wrestlers, apparently because his mind was elsewhere, with him considering his resignation. 'I had wavered, and it may have shown in my words and actions since March,' Hakuho said. The Miyagino stable shut down after one of its wrestlers, Hokuseiho, was found to have been regularly beating two junior wrestlers in the stable. In February 2024, Hakuho was demoted two ranks and received a pay cut for failing to prevent the abuse. When Miyagino stable was closed, its wrestlers joined Isegahama stable with the hope that the JSA would restore their original home in the future. Media reports said the Isegahama stable's decision to allow former yokozuna Terunofuji, Hakuho's junior, to become its oyakata was the final nail in the coffin for the former sumo great. Hakuho denied those reports, saying, 'I have no bad feelings about being under Terunofuji.' Hakuho also received proposals for him and his wrestlers to join Asakayama stable during the last phase of the Summer Basho, which ran for two weeks through May 25, but nothing was certain, he said. The JSA's rigid rules, such as allowing only one foreign sumo wrestler per stable, also led Hakuho to seek a different, more flexible platform to spread sumo around the world. 'There are many young sumo wrestlers (overseas) who want to join stables in Japan,' he said. 'I want to support them.' What Hakuho has in mind is to host international amateur sumo matches based on his experience of hosting the Hakuho Cup for junior wrestlers for the past 15 years. 'An annual international sumo match has wrestlers from around 25 to 30 countries participating,' he said. 'There are also yokozuna in 150 countries. So there's already a base. 'I will do my best to develop sumo from outside of the JSA,' Hakuho said. The project has already attracted at least one prospective major sponsor — Toyota, with Toyota Motor Chairman Akio Toyoda expressing interest, he said. Details of the plan will be revealed at a later date. Born as Davaajargal Monkhbatyn, Hakuho became the 69th yokozuna in 2007 at the age of 22. He became a naturalized citizen of Japan in 2019 and retired as a wrestler in 2021 . 'The past 25 years were years I've loved sumo and have been loved by sumo,' he said. 'I have no regrets.' But in his last words before he wrapped up the news conference, Hakuho appeared to show a painful reluctance to leave the young wrestlers he took under his wing. 'I wanted to see my wrestlers become yokozuna and ōzeki,' he said. 'I'll cheer them on from outside once Miyagino stable resumes.'

Sumo great Hakuho plans to promote sport from outside ruling body
Sumo great Hakuho plans to promote sport from outside ruling body

The Mainichi

time09-06-2025

  • Sport
  • The Mainichi

Sumo great Hakuho plans to promote sport from outside ruling body

TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Former yokozuna Hakuho plans to remain involved with sumo despite severing ties with the sport's ruling body, the winner of a record 45 elite-level tournaments said Monday. The Mongolian-born ex-wrestler's retirement from the Japan Sumo Association was formalized the same day. His exit comes little more than a year after the indefinite closure of the Miyagino stable that he had overseen as stablemaster, following revelations that one of his proteges, top-division competitor Hokuseiho, had physically abused younger wrestlers. At a press conference in Tokyo, the 40-year-old said he wanted to promote sumo from outside the association. "I want to develop sumo from an outside perspective," he said. "I will focus on projects to spread sumo around the world." Hakuho, who retired from competition in September 2021, said he agonized about his decision to quit as a sumo elder, considering the potential impact on the wrestlers he had been training. "I really struggled with it," he said. "My charges were competing in the Summer tournament (in May), so I told them after it finished." Hakuho was demoted two ranks as an elder to take responsibility for the scandal at the Miyagino stable, whose members transferred to the Isegahama stable. With the future of the Miyagino stable in limbo, Hakuho had grown increasingly dissatisfied with his treatment by the sumo authorities. The end of his competitive career was marked by criticism about what was seen as his brash manner in the ring and sometimes overly rough wrestling, prompting the sumo association to make him sign a pledge to abide by its rules before allowing him to become an elder. Despite his split with the sumo hierarchy, Hakuho will be remembered as an all-time great for a dominant career in which he won 1,187 matches, more than any other wrestler in the sport's long history.

Retired great Hakuho says leaving sumo after bullying scandal
Retired great Hakuho says leaving sumo after bullying scandal

The Sun

time09-06-2025

  • Sport
  • The Sun

Retired great Hakuho says leaving sumo after bullying scandal

RETIRED sumo great Hakuho said Monday he was quitting the ancient sport in Japan after his wrestling stable was closed because of a bullying scandal involving his protege. 'It has been 25 years of being loved by sumo and loving sumo,' the Mongolian-born Hakuho told reporters, confirming he was 'leaving the Japan Sumo Association'. 'I have no regrets,' he said, adding that his family supported his decision. Hakuho won a record 45 tournaments before retiring from competition in 2021 to coach wrestlers, but his stable was indefinitely shut in April last year. The 40-year-old was handed an embarrassing demotion for failing to control the behaviour of his protege Hokuseiho, who allegedly punched his lower-ranked stablemates and stole money from them. Sumo has been dogged by multiple scandals in the past including allegations of bullying, illegal betting and links to organised crime. Hakuho, who returned to Tokyo from Mongolia for the press conference, said he had 'cried a lot'. Having no clear indication of when the stable could resume operations was the main reason for his decision to walk away, he said. Japanese media said last week that the sumo association, which declined to comment at the time, had accepted Hakuho's resignation. Hakuho said Monday he was 'moving on to a new dream' and that in the future 'I intend to focus on projects to expand sumo to the world'. 'I believe that... sumo can bring hope to resolve the discrimination, prejudice and roughness in the world today,' he said. An adviser to the company Hakuho is setting up to promote sumo said that the new project called 'World Sumo Grand Slam' targets amateur wrestlers. Hakuho was born Munkhbat Davaajargal and was the son of a champion Mongolian wrestler who won his country's first Olympic medal at the 1968 Games. Hakuho moved to Japan aged 15. He was turned away by most stables because no one wanted someone 'as pale and skinny as me', according to his 2016 autobiography. But he managed to persuade a trainer to take him on and made his sumo debut in 2001. Hakuho won his first top-division title in 2006 and went on to fight at the sport's highest rank of yokozuna more times than anyone in history. He took Japanese citizenship in 2019, a requirement to run his own stable. Six of the last seven sumo grand champions, including Hakuho, were born in Mongolia.

Sumo great Hakuho plans to promote sport from outside ruling body
Sumo great Hakuho plans to promote sport from outside ruling body

Kyodo News

time09-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Kyodo News

Sumo great Hakuho plans to promote sport from outside ruling body

KYODO NEWS - 2 hours ago - 14:08 | Sports, All Former yokozuna Hakuho plans to remain involved with sumo despite severing ties with the sport's ruling body, the winner of a record 45 elite-level tournaments said Monday. The Mongolian-born ex-wrestler's retirement from the Japan Sumo Association was formalized the same day. His exit comes little more than a year after the indefinite closure of the Miyagino stable that he had overseen as stablemaster, following revelations that one of his proteges, top-division competitor Hokuseiho, had physically abused younger wrestlers. At a press conference in Tokyo, the 40-year-old said he wanted to promote sumo from outside the association. "I want to develop sumo from an outside perspective," he said. "I will focus on projects to spread sumo around the world." Hakuho, who retired from competition in September 2021, said he agonized about his decision to quit as a sumo elder, considering the potential impact on the wrestlers he had been training. "I really struggled with it," he said. "My charges were competing in the Summer tournament (in May), so I told them after it finished." Hakuho was demoted two ranks as an elder to take responsibility for the scandal at the Miyagino stable, whose members transferred to the Isegahama stable. With the future of the Miyagino stable in limbo, Hakuho had grown increasingly dissatisfied with his treatment by the sumo authorities. The end of his competitive career was marked by criticism about what was seen as his brash manner in the ring and sometimes overly rough wrestling, prompting the sumo association to make him sign a pledge to abide by its rules before allowing him to become an elder. Despite his split with the sumo hierarchy, Hakuho will be remembered as an all-time great for a dominant career in which he won 1,187 matches, more than any other wrestler in the sport's long history. Related coverage: Sumo: Despite unhappy exit, Hakuho's all-time great status remains Sumo: Newly built IG Arena readying for big opening with Nagoya meet

Retired great Hakuho says leaving sumo after bullying scandal
Retired great Hakuho says leaving sumo after bullying scandal

Yahoo

time09-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Retired great Hakuho says leaving sumo after bullying scandal

Mongolian-born former yokozuna Hakuho leaves after a press conference to announce his retirement from the sport (Kazuhiro NOGI) Retired sumo great Hakuho said Monday he was quitting the ancient sport in Japan after his wrestling stable was closed because of a bullying scandal involving his protege. "It has been 25 years of being loved by sumo and loving sumo," the Mongolian-born Hakuho told reporters, confirming he was "leaving the Japan Sumo Association". Advertisement "I have no regrets," he said, adding that his family supported his decision. Hakuho won a record 45 tournaments before retiring from competition in 2021 to coach wrestlers, but his stable was indefinitely shut in April last year. The 40-year-old was handed an embarrassing demotion for failing to control the behaviour of his protege Hokuseiho, who allegedly punched his lower-ranked stablemates and stole money from them. Sumo has been dogged by multiple scandals in the past including allegations of bullying, illegal betting and links to organised crime. Hakuho, who returned to Tokyo from Mongolia for the press conference, said he had "cried a lot". Advertisement Having no clear indication of when the stable could resume operations was the main reason for his decision to walk away, he said. Japanese media said last week that the sumo association, which declined to comment at the time, had accepted Hakuho's resignation. Hakuho said Monday he was "moving on to a new dream" and that in the future "I intend to focus on projects to expand sumo to the world". "I believe that... sumo can bring hope to resolve the discrimination, prejudice and roughness in the world today," he said. An adviser to the company Hakuho is setting up to promote sumo said that the new project called "World Sumo Grand Slam" targets amateur wrestlers. Advertisement Hakuho was born Munkhbat Davaajargal and was the son of a champion Mongolian wrestler who won his country's first Olympic medal at the 1968 Games. Hakuho moved to Japan aged 15. He was turned away by most stables because no one wanted someone "as pale and skinny as me", according to his 2016 autobiography. But he managed to persuade a trainer to take him on and made his sumo debut in 2001. Hakuho won his first top-division title in 2006 and went on to fight at the sport's highest rank of yokozuna more times than anyone in history. He took Japanese citizenship in 2019, a requirement to run his own stable. Six of the last seven sumo grand champions, including Hakuho, were born in Mongolia. nf/kaf/pst

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