Jump to content

Japan Sumo Association

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Sumo Prime Time)
Japan Sumo Association
日本相撲協会
Nihon Sumō Kyōkai
PredecessorEdo-sumo Kaisho
FormationDecember 28, 1925; 98 years ago (1925-12-28)[1][2]
Merger ofOsaka Sumo Association
TypeNonprofit
Legal statusPublic Interest Incorporated Foundation
PurposeOrganization of sumo tournaments and promotion of sumo culture.
Maintenance and operation of sumo training schools, Ryōgoku Kokugikan and Sumo Museum.
HeadquartersRyōgoku Kokugikan
Location
Coordinates35°41′49″N 139°47′36″E / 35.69694°N 139.79338°E / 35.69694; 139.79338
Region served
 Japan
Membership
c. 1,000[3]
Official language
Japanese
Chairman
Hakkaku Nobuyoshi
See below
Key people
Kasugano Kiyotaka (current Operations director)
Takadagawa Katsumi (current Judging department chairman)
Yamauchi Masayuki [ja] (current Chairman of the Yokozuna Deliberation Council)
Parent organization
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
SubsidiariesKokugikan Service Company, Sumo Museum
SecessionsTakasago Kaisei-Gumi (1873 – 1878)
All Japan Kansai Sumo Association (1932 – 1937)
AffiliationsYokozuna Deliberation Council (advisory body)
Revenue (2023)
¥13 billion[4]
Websitehttps://www.sumo.or.jp/En/
(in English)
https://www.sumo.or.jp/
(in Japanese)
Formerly called
All Japan Sumo Association (大日本相撲協会)

The Japan Sumo Association (Japanese: 日本相撲協会, Hepburn: Nihon Sumō Kyōkai), officially the Public Interest Incorporated Foundation Japan Sumo Association (公益財団法人日本相撲協会, Kōeki zaidanhōjin Nihon Sumō Kyōkai); sometimes abbreviated JSA or NSK, and more usually called Sumo Kyōkai,[5] is the governing body that operates and controls professional sumo wrestling, called ōzumō (大相撲), in Japan under the jurisdiction of the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT).

Concretely, the association maintains and develops sumo traditions and integrity by holding tournaments and tours. The purposes of the association are also to develop the means dedicated to the sport and maintain, manage and operate the facilities necessary for these activities. Therefore, the JSA operates subsidiaries such as the Kokugikan Service Company to organize its economic aspects, the Sumo School to organize training and instruction or the Sumo Museum to preserve and utilize sumo wrestling records and artefacts.

Though professionals, such as active wrestlers, referees, hairdressers and ushers, are all on the association's payroll, leadership positions are restricted to retired wrestlers. The organization has its headquarters in the Ryōgoku Kokugikan arena, in Sumida, Tokyo.[6]

The association's culture is based on respect for the law and continuity of sumo's traditions, deeply rooted in Japan's history and Shinto religion.[7] It has a reputation for secrecy.[8][9] In response to a number of scandals, the association has implemented numerous reforms in recent decades.

History

[edit]

Beginnings of organizations

[edit]

The association has its origins in a Shinto ritual (or festival) that has been held since ancient times to pray for a bountiful harvest. This primary form of sumo was called shinji-zumō (神事相撲). During the Sengoku period, Oda Nobunaga made sumo a popular sport, aided by the emergence of large cities (like Edo, Osaka, Sendai and Nagoya), which soon began to compete with Kyoto's cultural monopoly, as it was Japan's only metropolis at the time.[10][11] These new cultural centres saw the emergence of wrestling groups, from both the commoners and the warrior classes, who took part in festivities at shrines.[11] During the Edo period, sumo bouts, called kanjin-sumo (勧進相撲), were often held to raise funds to develop provinces (new construction or repair of bridges, temples, shrines and other public buildings) or for entertainment purposes.[12]

The premises of the Ekō-in temple in Edo, during a kanjin-sumo tournament (1842)

After the Sengoku period, during the period of peace established under the Tokugawa shogunate, Japan experienced an unprecedented period of vagrancy for many samurai who had lost their social standing (called rōnin).[13][14] These masterless samurai, began to be organized in two extremes that coexisted side by side. On the one hand, certain powerful clans formed suites of wrestlers organized into veritable royal households called geisha-gumi (芸者組, lit.'geisha troupe'), and elevated them to the status of vassals.[15] On the other hand, a number of rōnin had no choice but to put their martial skills to good use in street sumo tournaments, called tsuji zumō (辻相撲, tsuji-sumo, lit.'street-corner wrestling'), for the entertainment of passers-by.[16] Similarly, a number of street entertainment wrestling groups formed and began touring, sometimes with the support of shrines that occasionally recruited them as part of religious festivities and to help priests raising money for the construction of buildings.[17] Eventually, this mix of professional wrestlers and disgraced rōnins, along with the commoners who took part in the contests of strength of the street tournaments, created conflicts over money.[10][18] Tense brawls, even deaths, sometimes occurred.[18] Public order became so disturbed that in 1648 the Edo authorities issued an edict banning street sumo and matches organized to raise funds during festivities.[19] Over the next two decades or so, the wrestlers, now without any income, decided to petition the authorities to lift the bans, forming informal associations that resembled coalitions of interests to protect themselves from any violent repression of their movement.[20] In 1684, these movements bore fruit and a rōnin by the name of Ikazuchi Gondaiyū (雷 権太夫) obtained permission to hold a tournament after proposing a new etiquette associated with tournaments.[20][21] The organization of tournaments began to depend more on groups following new standards designed to satisfy the authorities of the towns hosting them.[22] These associations gradually came to depend on the influence of retired former wrestlers who began to organize tournaments.[23]

At that time, the Edo-based association (although composed of elders as today) was organized in such a way as to be dominated by a duo of executives, the fudegashira (筆頭), the director, and the fudewake (筆別), his second.[24] The composition of the banzuke and its hierarchy was primarily their decision, and conflicts of interest were common.[25] In addition, the profits from the tournaments were first divided among them before a portion was given to the other elders, who in turn distributed the money to their disciples.[25] Because of the filtering of high-ranking managers, little money reached the bottom of the ladder, and this system was only tolerated because the patronage of local lords also added extra salaries for high-ranking wrestlers.[25]

The foundations of the current association

[edit]

Wrestlers who took part in these authorised tournaments without the patronage of lords did not yet have samurai status or a salary and their finances depended largely on donations they could receive from the organisers of charity tournaments or admirers.[26][27] The organisers also ensured that they were fed and housed for the duration of the tournament.[26][28] In those days the promotion system was decided by the tournament organisers, who then distributed the profits to the elders who then redistributed funds to their wrestlers, with the wrestlers under the protection of the lords receiving bonuses and having financial security and the others being kept in a situation of poverty.[27] In 1757, during the Hōreki era, the beginnings of the Japan Sumo Associations were formally established as Edo Sumō kaisho (江戸相撲会所, Edo Sumo Club), later called Tokyo-zumō kaisho.[29] In 1869, the Ōsaka Sumō Kyōkai (大坂相撲協会, Osaka Sumo Association) was founded.[30] Each associations had their own history and changes. For example, from 1888 to 1895 the Kōkaku-gumi (廣角組), led by wrestlers Ōnaruto and Shingari, broke off from Osaka-sumo.[31] In 1897, these movements led to reforms in the Osaka-based association, which became the Ōsaka Sumō Kyōkai (大阪角力協会, Osaka Wrestling Association).[a][1]

The first Ryōgoku Kokugikan in 1920.

From 1789, the Edo-based association began to incorporate religious practices into the sport, under the guidance of the House of Yoshida Tsukasa and the status of yokozuna was created in Edo.[32] In the 1870s, the first wrestlers' revolt was organized by Takasago Uragorō asking for better treatment for the wrestlers (without initial success) and created a split from the Tokyo-based association before merging again.[33] The Meiji Restoration was a period of semi-censorship of sumo, with the adoption of Western ideology leading to the perception of sumo as unworthy of the new era, as the matches were seen as barbaric and the semi-nudity of the wrestlers shocking.[25] With the disappearance of government protection, the association found it difficult to keep up the number of wrestlers.[34] At the same time, political circles were organized to preserve some of Japan's indigenous traditions, saving on behalf of the association the privilege of wrestlers to wear samurai chonmage (topknot) in 1871.[25] The nobility introduced changes to the way tournaments were organised, reforming the way winnings were distributed and creating the status of association director.[35] In an effort to change its image, the Tokyo-zumō kaisho changed its name to Tokyo Ōzumō Kyōkai (東京大相撲協会, Tokyo Grand Sumo Association) in 1889.[36][37] The internal reforms carried out at the time included the election of directors, the creation of a fixed income for wrestlers and a change in refereeing decisions from gyōji to shimpan.[36] During the same year, the Tokyo Ōzumō began to think about a project to install an arena at Hibiya Park to hold its bouts indoors, but the project was abandoned for lack of funds.[38] In 1909, the association founded its first arena by inaugurating the first Ryōgoku Kokugikan, in order to avoid having to depend on the weather for tournaments held at the Ekō-in temple.[38][39] Social movements in sumo did not cease, however, and in 1911 a strike called the Shinbashi Club Incident [ja] organized by low-ranking wrestlers asked for a new wage reform, securing a bonus (made up of payment in cash and a deposit in a pension fund) distributed to all wrestlers who were not ōzeki or yokozuna.[40][41] In 1923, another strike known as the Mikawajima Incident [ja] demanded better pensions for wrestlers and was led by Yokozuna Ōnishiki, without success.[42] In the same year, the first Kokugikan was ravaged by fire following the Great Kantō earthquake and most of the association's archives were lost.[43]

Gradually, the Tokyo-based sumo association became dominant.[23][44] In April 1925, Prince-Regent Hirohito invited the Tokyo Sumo Association to hold a tournament at the Imperial Palace,[45] with the implied aim of also featuring wrestlers from the Osaka-based association.[46] During the tournament, the Emperor's Cup (then the Prince-Regent's Cup) was awarded for the first time.[45][46] Under the impetus of this tournament, a joint competition plan with a common banzuke was proposed, concluding talks that had been taking place since the early 1920s to merge the two rival associations.[46] To establish a ranking according to the wrestlers' skills, qualifying tournaments were organized in November 1925 and in March and October 1926.[46] The March 1926 tournament was officially recognised as the first modern honbasho (professional sumo championship tournament).[47] During the same period, on 28 December 1925,[1][48] the Tokyo Ōzumō Kyōkai became the Dai-Nihon Sumō Kyōkai (大日本相撲協会, All Japan Sumo Association),[49][50] an organization now recognised as the first incarnation of today's association.[2][49][51][52]

Merger and final recognition

[edit]

As a result of the qualifying tournaments, the Osaka-based association lost many top-ranked wrestlers who found themselves demoted in the rankings, although Yokozuna Miyagiyama (the top ranked wrestler in Osaka) was able to retain his position.[46] During tournaments, Osaka's wrestlers were regularly outclassed by their Tokyo counterparts, with some wrestlers ranked as ōzeki or yokozuna in Osaka even struggling against Tokyo's komusubi or sekiwake.[53] Later in 1925, the first chairman of the association, Lieutenant-General Hirose Seitoku [ja], was named.[54]

In January 1927, the Osaka-based sumo association officialy merged with the All Japan Sumo Association after a long decline.[46][49] It saved face in the first tournament after the merger of the two associations, as the championship was won by Miyagiyama.[46] The association formally acquired the status of nonprofit organization,[55] and was placed under the supervision of the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture, since in Japan this type of organization requires registration with a government institution.[56]

In 1932, the last major wrestlers' strike broke out with the Shunjuen Incident, calling for fundamental reform of the Sumo Association and leading to a mass resignation of wrestlers the likes of which professional sumo had never seen before.[57] From 1933 to 1937, the All Japan Sumo Association briefly experienced a secession leading to the foundation of the Dai-Nihon Kansai Sumō Kyōkai (大日本関西角力協会, All Japan Kansai Sumo Association) by members of the Dewanoumi ichimon.[58] The secessionist association later dissolved,[59] but never had the association been so close to destruction.[58]

In 1944, the first successor from the sumo world was chosen and Dewanoumi (the former Tsunenohana) became chairman of the association. After the war, the association was further modernized, in particular to maintain the sport in the context of the "budo ban" (a ban enforced on the practice of combat training disguised as martial arts gatherings by the authoritarian government) applied by the Allied forces.[60] Thanks to the efforts of Musashigawa (the former Dewanohana) and Kasagiyama Katsuichi (a wrestler who spoke a little English), the association succeeded in convincing the Americans of the tournaments' good faith, and the first honbasho to be held after the war was in November 1945.[60] Since the tournaments were later expropriated from the original Kokugikan for use by soldiers as "Memorial Hall", the association moved its headquarters to the Meiji Shrine in June 1947.[61] In 1950, following a scandal involving the withdrawal from competition of the three yokozuna of the time (Azumafuji, Terukuni and Haguroyama) the association considered demoting the highest-ranking sumo wrestlers in the event of a poor score or consecutive absence from two tournaments, but decided to back down following pressure from traditionalists and purists.[62] Common ground was found and the Yokozuna Deliberation Council was created, definitively detaching the association from the House of Yoshida, and declaring that the appointment of yokozuna would henceforth be based on recommendations from the board of directors and the new committee.[62][63] In 1954, the association moved its headquarters to the Kuramae Kokugikan.[39]

Emperor Shōwa is welcomed by JSA officials and top-ranked wrestlers during his visit of the Kuramae Kokugikan (1956).

The modernizations launched after the war were also notably introduced in response to a scandal highlighting the management of the association's missions and funds. In 1957, a special commission of the National Diet investigated the improper use of money by the association due to the general inability of the public to reserve seats for tournaments, in opposition to its non-profit status.[63][64] In those days, the reservation system was mainly based on private teahouses, which gave patrons privileged access to tournaments.[63] The scandal erupted when it was revealed that the wife and daughter of the then chairman, Dewanoumi, were running two of the biggest houses.[63] The Diet also considered the association's missions, based on the testimonies of former Tenryū Saburō (former leader of the Shunjuen Incident) and Akutsugawa Kōichirō [ja] (former director of the association under the name Sadogatake).[64] The association was further criticized for failing in its duties as a public interest corporation, notably on the subject of sumo teaching, by favoring the pursuit of profit. To sidestep the debate, the association founded the Sumo School to teach its recruits the basics of sumo.[65] Since he was personally blamed for the management problems, Dewanoumi tried to commit suicide by seppuku.[63] He was replaced by Tokitsukaze (former Futabayama) who began a series of reforms.[63][66] Under his chairmanship, the teahouse system was reformed, with 40% of places now reserved for direct purchase, and the system placed under a commercial company directly dependent on the association.[63] In 1958, the association took its definitive name by being renamed "Japan Sumo Association".[39][67]

Modern times

[edit]
The second Ryōgoku Kokugikan in 2013.

In March 1968, the association's statutes were amended to restrict board membership to toshiyori, high-ranking wrestlers and gyōji. The number of directors was also limited to ten elders after negotiations between the five ichimon.[9]

In the 1970's, the association opened up more officially to foreign wrestlers, which led to reflection on the possibility of these wrestlers remaining in the association after retirement.[68] More specifically, the case of Hawaiian wrestler Takamiyama in 1976 provoked a conservative reaction from the association, which declared that sumo being Japan's national sport, it was inconceivable that a foreigner could participate as a trainer.[68] The statement was subsequently severely criticized in the press.[69] This led the association to correct its position in this regard, with the JSA subsequently declaring that Takamiyama and Kaneshiro (a Japanese sumo wrestler of Korean descent) would indeed be eligible to become coaches within the association after their retirements.[70] Takamiyama was the first to retire, becoming a coach under the name Azumazeki, the first foreign-born sumo wrestler to do so.[70][71]

In 1985, the association once again moved its headquarters and inaugurated the second Ryōgoku Kokugikan, acquiring the land by purchasing it from Japan National Railways.[8][39]

In the early 1990s, an internal debate also shook the association over the fact that a foreign wrestler could become yokozuna. In 1992, a member of the Yokozuna Deliberation Council, Kojima Jo, was quoted in the magazine Bungei Shunjū as opposing the appointment of foreigners, who he felt were too far removed from the hinkaku (品格), the 'dignity', needed to become one of professional sumo's top ranked wrestler.[72] However, other members of the council and the association maintained that they would consider a promotion if its conditions were met, regardless of who the wrestler was.[72] Further controversy arose when The Nihon Keizai Shimbun reported that Konishiki, at the time the foreigner closest to promotion, had alleged racial discrimination was the reason for his being denied promotion.[73] The New York Times subsequently quoted Konishiki as saying, "If I were Japanese, I would be yokozuna already". The association demanded an apology and Konishiki held a press conference during which he tearfully denied making the remarks. He insisted that The Nihon Keizai Shimbun had misinterpreted his remark, and that he had not spoken to The New York Times, and instead a Hawaiian apprentice Koryū had impersonated him on the telephone.[73][74] In 1993, Akebono, a student of Azumazeki (former Takamiyama), became the first foreign-born yokozuna in the history of the sport.[45][75]

Scandals prompting a reform era

[edit]

Between 2007 and 2008, two scandals hit the association (the Tokitsukaze stable hazing scandal and the cannabis use scandal) leading to the resignation of chairman Kitanoumi in September 2008 and the appointment of Musashigawa (the former Mienoumi).[76] In a move to increase transparency, the MEXT (under Vice-minister Kenshiro Matsunami) demanded the opening of the Sumo Association's board of directors to external auditors, introducing non-toshiyori personalities into the decision-making system for the first time in 63 years.[77][78] At the time, the association's statutes clearly stated that only former wrestlers could sit on the board of directors but Vice-minister Matsunami insisted that the scandal was "the biggest disgrace in the history of sumo".[9] Some internal voices argued that new blood was needed, opposing the appointment of then-chairman of the Yokozuna Deliberation Council, Ebisawa Katsuji [ja].[79] The new members of the Board were three auditors: Itō Shigeru (Professor Emeritus at the University of Tokyo), Murayama Hiroyoshi [ja] (lawyer and former Prosecutor General of the Tokyo Prosecutors' Office) and Jun Yoshino (former Police Commissioner).[78] Although the internal organization was changed following the scandal, the external auditors are not given voting rights on the board and their position is only part-time.[78]

During the 2010s, the association was also marked by the revelation of numerous scandals linked to its opaque organization. These scandals included wrestlers' links with organised crime and gambling, which is illegal in Japan. The violent nature of training and the legitimacy of violence within the traditional hierarchy of wrestlers was also called into question. Between 2010 and 2011, the association had to deal with the ties of several wrestlers in all divisions to organized crime.[80][81] The scandal came to light in January when Ōzeki Kotomitsuki was reported in a Shūkan Shinchō article on 19 January as having participated in gambling circles run by yakuza.[80] Although initially denied, the link between the yakuza and several members of the association was established over the course of the year.[80] The scandal triggered a public outcry that flooded the association's switchboard with complaints and protests, and demonstrations were organized in front of the association's headquarters at the Ryōgoku Kokugikan.[82] In order to satisfy requests for internal investigations and changes, the association dissolved its Life Guidance Committee, appointing a new committee made up of young elders between 30 and 45 years of age, headed by Michinoku (the former Kirishima).[83] Chairman Musashigawa also resigned from his position in July, and was succeeded at the head of the association by Murayama Hiroyoshi, a lawyer who had previously been appointed auditor of the association in 2008, and who held the position of acting chairman until the beginning of August.[84] At one point, the revelation of collusion between wrestlers and yakuza was such that MEXT threatened to dissolve the association's public non-profit institution act and confiscate the JSA's properties, including the Ryōgoku Kokugikan.[81] In this context, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano also declared that negotiations between the association and the ministry on acquiring Public Interest Incorporated Foundation [ja] status could fail, threatening the association with colossal financial losses, since other foundation statutes in Japan do not offer tax benefits.[81] At the time, the association was involved in negotiations with the ministry to bring its statutes into line with the requirements of a law on public establishments passed in 2008, initially with the aim of achieving this status by the end of November 2013.[85] The crisis, described as the most serious in sumo history, was such that several comments emerged on the fact that the damage could well threaten sumo's recognized position as Japan's national sport.[81]

Chairman Musashigawa had to resign, and Hanaregoma (the former Kaiketsu) was appointed in his place with his presidency being tarnished by a match-fixing scandal that broke in February 2011.[85] Under his impetus, the association initially reacted swiftly by cancelling the Haru basho in Osaka outright.[85] However, the association's handling of the scandal soon came under criticism, particularly Hanaregoma's statement that there had never been match-fixing in sumo before.[86] Despite the scandal, Hanaregoma succeeded in bringing negotiations on the status of the Public Interest Incorporated Foundation to a successful conclusion.[87] Having reached the age limit of 65, Hanaregoma promptly resigned his post and Kitanoumi was elected for a second time to the head of the association, becoming the first chairman to return to this level of responsibility in the association's history.[88] Despite the criticism, Hanaregoma's commitment during the crisis was hailed for running the association as a man of integrity, respected under the nickname "Clean Kaiketsu" (クリーン魁傑).[89]

In January 2014, the association shifted to a Public Interest Incorporated Foundation and officially changed its name to Public Interest Incorporated Foundation Japan Sumo Association (公益財団法人日本相撲協会, Kōeki zaidanhōjin Nihon Sumō Kyōkai).[37][90][91][92] The change, effectively implemented from March to coincide with new board of directors elections, had been delayed for a year following complicated negotiations over the status of toshiyori and the composition of the board.[91][93] In order to bring the statutes of the association into line with the stipulations of the incorporated foundations was introduced the hyōgi-in (評議員, counselor committee), responsible for monitoring the shared interests of the ministry and the association.[91] That council is made up equally of three retired oyakata (elders with no san'yo re-employment) elected within the association and four personalities appointed by the ministry. Their rank equals that of a director to the association's board. Elders on the committee are not allowed to concurrently serve as oyakata because of the committee authority that allows them to have a say in the appointment and dismissal of directors. Each counselor serves a term of four years.[91] Also incorporated were bans on the purchase of toshiyori names and the widespread expulsion of employees who failed to comply with the association's rules.[91]

In November 2015, the chairman of the association, Kitanoumi, passed away and an official funeral was held at the Ryōgoku Kokugikan by the JSA in December under the chairmanship of Hakkaku (former Hokutoumi), with around 2,500 people attending.[94] During the same month, the board of directors appointed Hakkaku as chairman of the association, a position he had already held on an interim basis since Kitanoumi's death.[95] Kitanoumi's sudden death launched an election in March 2016, described as "fierce" by the press.[96] After negotiations for the positions of director and chairman, Hakkaku was elected head of the association, ahead of his main rival Takanohana.[96]

In November 2017, the issue of violence scandals resurfaced within the association with Sports Nippon's revelations about Maegashira Takanoiwa's assault by Yokozuna Harumafuji.[97] The incident generated intense media coverage, prompted by the previous scandals and the change in the association's nature to an incorporated non-profit foundation.[98] The association's reaction was also heavily criticized, with some newspapers condemning a discourse that made excuses for the aggressor.[98] In April 2018, the association's conduct was also criticized after women tried to come to the assistance of the mayor of Maizuru (Ryoto Tatami), who had collapsed in the ring. Since women are considered impure and are not allowed enter the ring, a gyōji (referee) ordered them to leave it despite the medical emergency.[99] The incident triggered criticism from the public and from the Minister in charge of Women's Empowerment, Seiko Noda, forcing the association to publicly apologize.[100]

2020s

[edit]

The COVID-19 pandemic in Japan forced the March 2020 tournament in Osaka to be held behind closed doors.[101] The last time this occurred was in the June 1945 tournament, when only injured Pacific War veterans were invited to attend.[102] This was followed by the cancellation of the May tournament.[103] As a result, the association in 2021 had a deficit of 6.3 billion yen, the biggest in its history.[104] The association's finances recovered by March 2024, with a surplus of 300 million yen.[4]

Also in 2020, the association, along with Nippon Professional Baseball and the Professional Golfers' Association of Japan [ja], withdrew from the Japan Professional Sports Association [ja]. This occurred after the Cabinet Office issued a recommendation urging the Japan Professional Sports Association to reform its internal organization, which was inadequate to supervise other public interest incorporated foundations.[105]

In 2022, for the first time in its history, the association signed a partnership agreement with a local government, Sumida Ward, to revitalize the district by encouraging sumo wrestlers to visit schools, and promote sport and tourism.[106]

In December 2023, the Labor Standards Inspection Office [ja] sent the association a rare demand letter for unpaid overtime owed to its administrative staff. Between June and October 2023, the association had also been the subject of five investigations, a rare number for a public interest incorporated foundation.[107] In addition, the association was criticized for managerial problems, which led to moral harassment[clarification needed] and the suspension of three administrative executives in September, without the situation changing according to the daily Nikkan Sports.[107]

Organization

[edit]

The Japan Sumo Association is a Public Interest Incorporated Foundation since 2014. Therefore, its functioning is of a non-profit organization and its activities are regulated through a top-down system of government supervision, as well as adherence to strict establishment conditions in exchange of preferential treatments under the Japanese tax system.[108] In practice, this means that the association is exempt from taxes, with the exception of consumption, business and property taxes.[109] Although the association is a foundation, it has borrowed particularities from the statutes of corporations.[7] The association's operations are authorized and defined by the administrative agency of the Act on Authorization of Public Interest Incorporated Associations and Public Interest Incorporated Foundation (Act No. 49 of 2006).[110]

Professor Mark D. West defined the organization of the Association as a "complex" balance of legal rules and informal social norms, referring to both the respect for the law as well as the rules nominally approved by the Ministry of Education, as sumo's supervising agency; and the traditional constraints not enforceable by law, inherited from the long history of sumo as a sport and the history of the association.[48] The association's choice to apply rules or to defect to norms is based on efficiency.[111] In addition to this balance, the association maintains a culture of discretion and secrecy in its management of professional sumo. According to West, the reasons for this secrecy are mainly to control the flow of information, whether negative (scandal) or positive (promotion of a popular wrestler).[8] Such control maintains the positive image of the sport and the mystical culture built up by sumo, linked to its religious roots.[8]

The toshiyori kabu system

[edit]

The Japan Sumo Association relations between its members are primarily shaped by rules and norms related to the ownership and transfer of "elder stocks", or shares, held by the association elders.[7] Of all the employees of the association only them can manage the organization.[112] Each share is associated with a particular name, and in the sumo world the former wrestler will be known by that name, usually with the suffix -oyakata. The members are also often called elders in English.[113]

Former wrestlers gain the right to participate in the management of the association by inheriting a share (called a kabu), of which there are 105.[7][114] The value of these shares was extremely high and rules only permits former sumo wrestlers who either reached at least a san'yaku rank (komusubi or higher) or been ranked for a significant number of tournaments as a sekitori to inherit them.[115] Japanese citizenship is also a prerequisite.[116] Retired wrestlers may own several shares at the same time and exchange or loan them, often in order to inherit a name that affiliates them with a particular stable or tradition.[117] The association delegates the selection of the wrestlers who can inherits these shares to former shareholders who, by tradition, retain the power to choose their successors.[48] It however have a say in the transmission, mainly to ensure that eligibility requirements are met, ensuring that only the best wrestlers can in turn become coaches.[118] The association also manages the shares of deceased or definitively-retired former members that have not been reallocated after a five-year period.[119]

Before the association became a Public Interest Incorporated Foundation, the elder shares were to be purchased and there was a highly speculative market, which prevented many wrestlers from remaining in the association because the price of a share was too high.[119] At the end of the 90s, this value was around 100 to 400 million yen.[120] Since the introduction of the Japan Sumo Association as a Public Interest Incorporated Foundation, the shares are technically no longer purchasable, but rather managed by the Association.[121] Normally, if money is exchanged as part of the inheritance of a share, the appointment of the new holder may be invalidated and the offender subjected to disciplinary measures, up to and including expulsion from the association.[122] However, the monetization of the shares' inheritance still seems to be tolerated by the association.[123]

JSA chairman Musashigawa (former Mienoumi) addresses the public at the beginning of the last day of the 2008 September tournament.

An exception to the normal acquisition is made for the most successful rikishi, with era-defining yokozuna being offered a "single generation" or "lifetime" elder stock, called ichidai toshiyori (一代年寄).[114][119] This process allows the wrestler to stay as an elder without having to use a traditional share in the association, and enter his retirement duties with his ring name.[119][124] This exception system has been offered to three former wrestlers : Taihō, Kitanoumi and Takanohana.[125][126][127] A fourth, Chiyonofuji, was offered this status but preferred a normal share and became known as Kokonoe.[127][128] These four all achieved more than twenty tournament championships in their active careers.[125] In October 2021, Yokozuna Hakuhō, the Emperor's Cup number record holder, was however denied the ichidai toshiyori kabu and Masayuki Yamauchi (a Yokozuna Deliberation Council member) declared to a press conference that "no such system exists" under the new Public Interest Incorporated Foundation statutes of the association, implying that the system would no longer be used.[127][129]

The elders of the Association receive a salary that depends on their rank within the association.[130] They are expected to assist in the running of both their stable, called heya in Japanese (but changed to -beya as a suffix) and the association. They do this by performing a diversity of tasks, from selling tickets and security work at the most junior level, to taking charge of one of the Association departments as a director.[125][131]

These members are also the only persons given the authority to train new sumo wrestlers.[132] They do this by opening or taking over stable, which will take the same name as the founder's elder name.[133] Thus someone known as Dewanoumi is the owner of Dewanoumi stable. A few coaches have their own stable, while the rest are required to be affiliated with one and assist the principal owner.[134] It is common for the most senior members of the Association to concentrate on their Association responsibilities and pass the day-to-day management of a stable to another. If a senior coach wishes to do this, the two may elect to swap names so that the stable can keep the more prestigious name. Examples include, when the Association's chairman Dewanoumi (former yokozuna Sadanoyama), swapped names with Sakaigawa (former sekiwake Washūyama) who took over the running of Dewanoumi stable in 1996,[135] or the transfer of the elder share "Kokonoe" from former yokozuna Kitanofuji to former yokozuna Chiyonofuji in exchange for the title "Jinmaku", allowing Chiyonofuji to inherit Kokonoe stable in 1992.[136]

All members are required to retire when they reach the age of sixty-five (with a possible five-year extension if approved by the board of directors), after which they can pass their name to another, provided that person meets the association's eligibility requirements.[137] In the case of a lifetime share mentioned above, the name merely lapses.[113]

Other personnel

[edit]

The association employs a certain number of other personnel, mainly to assist in the running of tournaments. Therefore, auxiliary personnel such as gyōji (referees), yobidashi (ushers) and tokoyama (hairdressers) are all employees of the association.[138] In contrast to wrestlers, all members employed in these roles may generally stay in the association until retirement age. The association provides their training, usually conducted by seniors in their field of activity, and ranks them. Before the association's transition to the Public Interest Incorporated Foundation, the two highest-ranking gyōji (called tate-gyōji) were on the association's board along with the toshiyori.[112]

In addition, a limited number of positions do exist for retired wrestlers who did not fulfill the requirements for inheriting a kabu, and would otherwise have to leave the sumo world upon their retirement from active competition. These former wrestlers are kept within the association as contract employees, customarily retaining their old shikona as their professional name, and are employed to handle various tasks. They are separated into two distinct roles:

  • Up to eight wakaimonogashira (若者頭), or "youth leaders", serving as officials of the association. They typically work at their former stables or within the associated ichimon. Wakaimonogashira are tasked with arranging maezumō matches and supervising young sumo wrestlers from makushita and below. They also appear in public next to the dohyō during the honbasho closing ceremony, receiving the trophies given to the tournament winner to return them backstage.[115]
  • Up to thirteen sewanin (世話人), or "caretakers", work as transportation and storage managers, handling association equipment used for tournaments and regional tours. In addition they deal with miscellaneous, primarily physical tasks, as instructed by the master of the stable they belong to, or other association members (including wakaimonogashira).[115]

Missions

[edit]
The sumo school's enseign at the Ryōgoku Kokugikan.

The JSA is more than just a sports organization. Its status as an Incorporated Foundation makes it an organization of cultural purpose.[98] However, the complex structure of the association means that it carries out its missions as both a company involved in promoting sport, in particular by selling tickets for tournaments, and as a cultural entity due to its historical links with the Shinto religion and its links with the imperial family, which is also responsible for training its young students.[139]

In order to maintain and develop the traditions and order of Sumo, the association is mainly responsible for holding competitive tournaments (called honbasho) in January, March, May, July, September and November. The association also holds regional tours (called jungyō).[140] The Japan Sumo Association holds these tournaments each year with different purposes for each kind. Main tournaments are televised and help to maintain the interest of sumo as a sport by broadcasting the competitions.[141] The jungyō meanwhile are important for the popularity of wrestlers and allow fans to meet them in the form of meet and greet events.[142]

The association is also responsible for the recruitment, instruction and training of wrestlers via the heya system or the Sumo School.[142] Although not all wrestlers are salaried (only sekitori ranked wrestlers are), the association provides a small allowance to all of them.[143] Depending on the wrestler's performance during tournaments, the association is also responsible of the wrestlers ranking. As wrestlers are not the only employees of the association, it also oversees the recruitment of yobidashi, tokoyama and gyōji to maintain the traditional settings of Sumo. Non-traditional occupations are also the responsibility of the association, in particular to maintain the operation of businesses linked to the association (such as the Kokugikan sales department, the restaurant or the yakitori skewer factory).

Bearing the responsibility of the sport's long history, the association oversees the preservation and utilization of sumo archives.[142] It also collects various types of objects linked to sumo wrestlers (such as keshō-mawashi, tachi or tsuna belts) which are stored and exhibited in the Sumo Museum.

Departments

[edit]

Association organization

[edit]

The association is ruled by a series of departments and committees into which the oyakata are divided when they enter their new career as coaches.[144] The association's departments are organised as follows:[142]

Department Role Notes
Sumo School An institution that educates and train new apprentices for 6 months (1 year for foreign wrestlers).
Guidance Promotion Department A department that aims to hand down the techniques and traditions of sumo through training, sumo classes, and the publication of works. Even though it is called a department, all the toshiyori below the "committee member" rank (iin) belong to it.
Life Guidance Committee An ethics committee tasked to prevent polemics to emerge from the wrestlers' attitude. In addition to the directors, deputy directors, and special executives, all the masters in the association belong to it, therefore each stables must comply to what has been decided by the committee. Also provides second career support for former sumo wrestlers.
Compliance Department Established in 2018 "to eradicate violence in the sumo world" by creating a network of whistleblowers. Each of the five ichimon (clans) have an appointed oyakata in charge of compliance.[145] If a problem arises, the board of directors is removed from the case and the information is passed on to the counselor committee, which appoints an investigation committee made up of lawyers.[122]
Operations Department Department responsible for the implementation and operation of the honbasho in Tokyo.
Judging Department Department that coordinates the shimpan, judges the honbasho outcomes and prepares the matches. The number of committee members is limited to 20. Appointment to this committee is considered prestigious.[146]
Regional Honbasho Department Department responsible for the implementation and operation of local tournaments in Osaka, Nagoya and Fukuoka.
Jungyō Department Department responsible for the implementation and operation of local tours.
Public Relations Department Performs public relations work both domestically and internationally. In addition, the department in charge of filming, production and management of videos.
Competition Supervision Committee A department whose purpose is to prevent, monitor, and punish intentionally lethargic techniques and match-fixing during tournaments. Members are elected and appointed by the board of directors from among the oyakata.
Museum Steering Committee Operates the Sumo Museum and maintains, stores and exhibits historical materials related to sumo. The Sumo Museum is also in charge of publishing researchs. Directors are appointed for a three-year term. Most of them are former yokozuna who have retired from the association. Several directors participates to the running of the museum.
Sumo Association Clinic The center mainly provides consultations for association members. There are departments of internal medicine, surgery, orthopedics, and physical therapy, and they are located in the Kokugikan. Injured wrestlers are treated here after their bouts.

Advisory body

[edit]

To this organization adds an advisory body called the Yokozuna Deliberation Council.

Department Role
Yokozuna Deliberation Council An organization composed of experts outside the association and mainly recommending rikishi for promotion to yokozuna.

Elections

[edit]

The possession of a toshiyori kabu is essential for the functioning of association as elders, assembled in a board of trustees called hyōgiin-kai (評議員会), votes for the board of the association.[112] Elections are held in even-numbered years or every two years, usually in January or February.[147]

The election process is heavily influenced by the stables regroupments to which coaches are distributed in.[112] Each stable belong to an ichimon, or clan. There are currently five ichimon, each bearing the name of its leading stable: Dewanoumi, Isegahama, Nishonoseki, Takasago and Tokitsukaze.[148] The ichimon serves as quasi-political groupings, each clan nominating candidates for the ten positions or so that are available on the association's board each election cycle. Each vote is normally along the interests of the ichimon, which explain why the bigger clans more often holds the association's chairmanship.[147] Former wrestler popularity however plays a role in the credit given to an application. For example, former yokozuna Takanohana won four straight election bids to become director before his demotion in 2018, despite being the leader of a (now dissolved) small ichimon.[149]

Stables aren't equally divided among the ichimon. As of July 2024, Nishonoseki has the most stables with 17, but Dewanoumi has the most affiliated oyakata (elders) with 37.[b]

As in the political world intrigue, subterfuge, splits and new coalitions are ordinary. The oyakata have a lot of leeway and can decide many things on their own. In fact, some elders change stables, move their stable to different ichimon or break off from their clan. For example, the Kokonoe stable was founded in 1967 after Yokozuna Chiyonoyama failed to gain control of the Dewanoumi stable. The break off that ensued saw the stable leaving the Dewanoumi ichimon to join the Takasago ichimon.[136] Also, in 2010, Takanohana stable (run under the "lifetime share" system by the eponymous yokozuna) broke off from the Nishonoseki ichimon (with Ōnomatsu stable, Ōtake stable and Magaki stable) as he wanted to present himself to the board's election and his clan would not permit it. He became the leader of its own group, which was then formally recognized as an ichimon (called Takanohana ichimon) in 2014.[151] The ichimon was however short lived and was disbanded in 2018 after the Takanoiwa affair.[152] Until 2018, there have been non-aligned stables, or loose coalitions that weren't formal ichimon, but in 2018 the association ruled that all stables had to belong to one of the current ichimon.[148][153]

Board of the Association

[edit]

The Japan Sumo Association's board is composed of a board of directors, under which several deputy directors and special executives operate, namely three vice-directors and a yakuin taigū iin (役員待遇委員, executive treatment committee).[154]

The board of directors elects a chairman, called rijichō,[155] from among themselves.[156] Directors other than the chairman serve as department heads. Among them, the role of Operations director is considered to be the association's number 2.[154][157] Each board member serves a two-year term.[156]

Directors, called riji,[158] are elected by a single anonymous vote by all the elders, assembled in a board of trustees called hyōgiin-kai (評議員会), from candidates selected among the toshiyori. Since 1968, the number of directors on the board has been limited to ten elders.[9][138] Prior to 2014, four active sumo wrestlers serving as representatives and both the tate-gyōji had the right to sit on the board and vote, but with the transition to a public interest incorporated foundation both wrestlers and referees lost their right to be on the board.

In the wake of scandals, reforms were undertaken to better supervise the decisions of the Board of Directors, introducing two entities into the management of the association. In September 2008, three external directors were appointed at the Ministry of Education's insistence.[159] One of the three, Murayama Hiroyoshi [ja], also served as acting chairman for the July 2010 tournament while the then head, Musashigawa (former Mienoumi), was suspended.[160]

A counselor committee was introduced in 2014 to facilitate dialogue between the ministry and the association. This committee, called hyōgi-in (評議員), is made up equally of retired wrestlers (with no san'yo re-employment) elected within the association and personalities appointed by the ministry. Their rank equals that of a director to the association's board. Elders on the committee are not allowed to concurrently serve as oyakata because of the committee authority that allows them to have a say in the appointment and dismissal of directors.[122] Each counselor serves a term of four years. Having the task of "overseeing the execution of duties by the directors", auditors may attend meetings of the board of directors and the Board of Trustees, but have no voting rights. Former association-elected members who decide to return to the association after their term on the hyōgi-in may do so after being auditioned by a reviewing committee.[122]

The current Board of Directors is composed as follows (as of March 2024):[161]

Position Name[c] Ichimon and occupation[161]
Chairman
Rijichō
理事長
Hakkaku Nobuyoshi Takasago
Director
Riji
理事
Operations director Kasugano Kiyotaka Dewanoumi
Museum Steering Committee
Jungyō director Sakaigawa Hideaki Dewanoumi
Regional basho director (Nagoya) Dewanoumi Akikazu Dewanoumi
Sumo School director Shibatayama Yasushi Nishonoseki
Regional basho director (Osaka) Isenoumi Hayato Tokitsukaze
Public Relations director Sadogatake Mitsumune Nishonoseki
Responsible for general planning
Museum Steering Committee
Crisis Management director Katsunoura Toshirō Tokitsukaze
Compliance Department director
In charge of new apprentice inspection
Museum Steering Committee
Judging Department chairman Takadagawa Katsumi Nishonoseki
Guidance Promotion director
Life Guidance director
Museum Steering Committee
In charge of new apprentice inspection
Regional basho director (Fukuoka) Asakayama Hiroyuki Isegahama
External Directors
Gaiburiji
外部理事
Yamaguchi Toshikazu President of the Yomiuri Shimbun Tokyo Head Office
Takano Toshio Attorney. Head of Takano Law Firm, Former Superintendent Public Prosecutor of Nagoya High Public Prosecutors' Office
Imai Tamaki Managing Director at NHK Enterprises Inc
Auditors
Kanji
監事
Kajiki Hisashi Public prosecutor. Former Superintending Prosecutor of Takamatsu High Public Prosecutors Office. Member of Japanese Supreme Court (Supreme Court Administrative Appeal Review Committee)
Fukui Ryōji Former Vice Minister (Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications, MIC)
Kozu Kanna Writer. First woman appointed to the Japan Sumo Association board.

List of rijichō

[edit]
Name[c] Year(s) Notes
Hirose Seitoku [ja] 1925-1928

Lieutenant-General in charge of army budget. First Chairman of the Japan Sumo Association.[9][54] He gradually gave way to General Ono, while remaining a board director and held that position until his death. During the last years of his term, he helped to resolve the Shunjuen Incident.[162] After his death, the association was managed by two other officers (Shizutaro Nishioka and Tetsuro Shirato), but they do not appear in the list of former chairmen, being mentioned simply as directors.[9][162]

Fukuda Masatarō [ja]
acting chairman
1928-1930 Appointed director of the association at the same time as Hirose Seitoku, the two soldiers then sharing responsibilities. Hirose was however recognized as the association's first chairman.[163] Fukuda was later appointed chairman of the association.[164] Patrons of martial arts. It was not uncommon for an organization or a corporation to have a military officer, retired politician or high-ranking bureaucrat as its chairman.

Although these officers ran the Association,[147] their position as chairman is often considered unofficial.[162]

Ono Minobu [ja]
acting chairman
1930-1939 Appointed chairman of the association between 1930 and 1939.[165] Participated in the erection of the chikara-zuka, a memorial to past wrestlers at the Ekō-in temple, with his name signing the dedication on the back of the monument.[166]
Isamu Takeshita
acting chairman
1939–1945 Appointed chairman in May 1939.[167][168] He held the position until November 1945.[169]
Fujishima Hidemitsu / Dewanoumi Hidemitsu 1945–1957 First chairman from the ranks of wrestlers. Founded the Kuramae Kokugikan.[170] Changed kabu in 1949, in middle of his term. Attempted to commit suicide by seppuku and gas in May 1957 after internal conflicts within the association prompted a reaction from the National Diet. Rescued, he stood down of the chairmanship but stayed the head of his stable.[63]
Tokitsukaze Sadaji 1957–1968 Started a series of radical reforms.[138] Remained in charge of the association until his death from hepatitis in 1968.[70]
Musashigawa Yoshihide 1968–1974 Pursued the efforts for modernizing sumo.[70]
Kasugano Kiyotaka 1974–1988 Longest serving chairman to date. Founded the current Ryōgoku Kokugikan.
Futagoyama Kanji 1988–1992
Dewanoumi Tomotaka / Sakaigawa Shō 1992–1998 Pursued the efforts for modernizing sumo. Changed kabu in 1996, in middle of his term. Resigned in the middle of his fourth term in 1998 after the association's board became mostly occupied by a rival faction.
Tokitsukaze Katsuo 1998–2002 Before being chairman of the association, elected as a director at the age of 32 years old (the youngest ever for a director of the Japan Sumo Association). First ōzeki elected to the position.
Kitanoumi Toshimitsu 2002–2008 First chairman under the age of 50 in half a century. His first term was marked with scandal such as the 2007 hazing scandal and cannabis use by wrestlers. Resigned his post in 2008.
Musashigawa Akihide 2008–2010 Suspended in 2010 after a series of scandals involving wrestlers gambling and associating with organised crime members. He announced his resignation the month following his suspension.
Murayama Hiroyoshi [ja]
acting chairman
2010 Former Chief Public Prosecutor.

Appointed acting chairman of the Japan Sumo Association following the baseball gambling scandal in 2010.[147] It was the first time in 66 years that a non-professional sumo wrestler was appointed to the top of the Japan Sumo Association since Takeshita Isamu.

Hanaregoma Teruyuki 2010–2012 Entangled in a match-fixing scandal in 2011, he announced an independent investigation and drew criticism from sumo commentators. Stood down from the chairmanship in 2012 as he was close to the mandatory retirement age of 65.
Kitanoumi Toshimitsu 2012–2015 Became the first person to head the association twice. Died in office in 2015 due to hydronephrosis and anemia.
Hakkaku Nobuyoshi
current
since 2015 Appointed in 2015 after Kitanoumi's death to serve as acting chairman until the end of the terms. Officially elected in 2016 after defeating Takanohana in a contested ballot.

Controversies

[edit]

In the decade from 2007 to 2017, the association had to deal with a number of affairs like the Tokitsukaze stable disciple assault death case (2007), the case of foreign sumo wrestlers possessing and smoking cannabis (2008), the baseball gambling and match-fixing scandal (2010-2011), Yokozuna Harumafuji's assault incident (2017) and the ban on women. While the association had always benefited from leniency on a certain number of its practices, the evolutions of Japanese society and the ever more frequent media coverage of the scandals surrounding the association contributed to the reaction of the latter and to the establishment of reforms in this world yet governed by immutable rules.

[edit]

In 2010, the Japan Sumo Association announced its decision to dismiss Ōzeki Kotomitsuki and Ōtake (former Takatōriki), for betting on baseball games in a gambling ring run by the yakuza.[171] At the same time, two stable masters were demoted and an unprecedented 18 wrestlers banned from the July 2010 tournament.[172] Sumo Association chairman Hanaregoma declared in August 2010 that "violent groups or antisocial forces" were being banned from accessing tournament venues, training stables and other facilities.[173] The association issued a statement on the matter, stating "the Japan Sumo Association are aware of their social responsibility and declare that they will work to eliminate anti-social forces such as organized crime groups".[174] Since then, members of organized crime groups are not allowed in sumo venues (such as the Ryōgoku Kokugikan), stables, supporters' associations and celebrations.[174]

Unequal treatments and accusation of racism

[edit]

As the association have the mission to perpetuate sumo traditions, a certain number of its practices and comments are often seen as dated. The treatment of injured wrestlers is often pointed out as unfair. In recent times, both yokozuna Hakuhō and Kakuryū drove criticism from the Yokozuna Deliberation Council for extended periods where they sat out tournaments due to injury. However, in the meantime, injured Japanese yokozuna Kisenosato did not get any critics and rather had encouragement from the council. The difference of treatment prompted criticism on the supposed preferential treatment.[175]

The inequality of treatment between wrestlers also drove suspicion of racism within the institution. The controversy arose when The Nihon Keizai Shimbun reported that Samoan-born ōzeki Konishiki had alleged racial discrimination was the reason for him being denied promotion to sumo's top rank of yokozuna.[73] The New York Times subsequently quoted Konishiki as saying, "If I were Japanese, I would be yokozuna already."[176] The Japan Sumo Association demanded an apology. Konishiki held a press conference during which he made his apology and tearfully denied making the remarks.

More recently, during the retirement of era defining Hakuhō , the "Experts' Meeting on the Succession and Development of Grand Sumo" (directed by Yamauchi Masayuki, a member of the Yokozuna Deliberation Council), which the Japan Sumo Association consulted on how sumo should be in response to the new era, suddenly came up with a proposal for "the abolition of the ichidai toshiyori kabu." The reason mentioned was that "there is no provision in the articles of incorporation of the association that serves as a basis."[177] The association faced severe criticism in particular on the basis of previous suspicions of racism.[178] However it is assumed the decision was taken to prevent the rise of another Takanohana controversy by giving a wrestler too much prestige.[177]

Violence and hazing

[edit]

Sumo stables were well known for their systematic hazing and physical punishment of young disciples in order to "toughen them up".[179] Stablemasters have often been proud to show to the media how they frequently use a shinai to beat those who fall out of line, and elder wrestlers are often put in charge of bullying younger ones to keep them in line, for instance, by making them hold heavy objects for long periods of time. Also, the strict sumo hierarchy where senior and high-ranking wrestlers take responsibility to train their juniors often led to violence as in sumo the rank is a symbol of status.

The system of hazing was widely criticized in late 2007. A hazing scandal was exposed in which a Tokitsukaze stable's 17-year-old sumo trainee died after a serious bullying incident involving his stablemaster Jun'ichi Yamamoto hitting him on the head with a large beer bottle and fellow rikishi being subsequently ordered to physically abuse him further. The stablemaster and three other wrestlers who were involved were arrested in February 2008, after which Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda demanded the JSA take steps to ensure such an incident never happens again.[180] In May 2009, Yamamoto was sentenced to six years in jail.[181]

Violence affairs also came up to light in 2017, when Japanese newspaper Sports Nippon reported that Yokozuna Harumafuji had assaulted fellow Mongolian wrestler Takanoiwa during a regional sumo tour in Tottori in late October. According to the report and other sources, Harumafuji was drinking with other sumo wrestlers (including Hakuhō, Kakuryū and Terunofuji)[182] and was admonishing Takanoiwa over his behavior. Angered that Takanoiwa was looking at his cell phone at the time, Harumafuji struck him in the head with a beer bottle and punched him 20 to 30 times.[183] Harumafuji was then questioned by the Sumo Association's crisis management panel, where he admitted to assaulting Takanoiwa.[184]

On October 25, 2018, the association issued a statement introducing external experts involved in training, operation of procedures, and other measures to prevent the recurrence of violence.[185] However, this did not stop the violence scandals, and, on December 26, 2022, Isegahama announced his resignation as director after a case of violence, where two junior wrestlers in his stable acted violently against younger wrestlers, with the victims beaten with wooden beams and burned with chankonabe hot water poured on their backs.[186] In May 2023, Michinoku stable's senior wrestler, Kirinofuji, assaulted another young wrestler, Yasunishi, who had to take the matter to the press to trigger a response. Stablemaster Michinoku was accused of having covered these facts of violence by contributing directly to the fact that the aggressor can remain within the stable then letting him retire with dignity and without any charges brought against him. Hanakago, the director of the Compliance Department, is also criticized for having let the aggressor go unpunished, despite having been informed late and by the victim.[187]

In March 2023 a former lower-ranked wrestler in Sadogatake stable, Daisuke Yanagihara, sued the Japan Sumo Association and his former stablemaster (ex-Kotonowaka) on allegations that he was forced to quit the sport. Yanagihara claimed that his human rights were violated and that, during the COVID-19 pandemic when the Sumo Association instituted health protocols, he was denied his request to sit out of the January 2021 tournament over fears of contracting the virus following cardiac surgery. In the lawsuit, Yanagihara also alleged mistreatment of lower-ranked wrestlers in his former stable, such as being served meals containing meat that was years beyond its expiration date. As of July 2023 the Sumo Association has not commented on the allegations.[188]

General communication

[edit]
[edit]
The cherry blossom shaped logo of the Association

The Japan Sumo Association, like most institutions, owns a mon. The design is based on cherry blossom,[189] which is the national flower of Japan. Around the flower, two stylized characters for 'big' or 'great' (), extracted from the kanjis of professional sumo, called ōzumo (大相撲), can be seen. The logo was created in 1909 for the opening of the first Ryōgoku Kokugikan.[190]

This symbol can be found in various places when the association holds celebration. It can be mainly seen on the tsuriyane's (suspended roof above the dohyō) curtains, called mizuhiki (水引).[191][192] The wrestler who performs the yumitori-shiki (bow-twirling ceremony) also wears a keshō-mawashi decorated with this emblem.[193]

Sumo's boost in popularity

[edit]

In the early 2020s, professional sumo experienced a popularity boost, launched, according to Nishiiwa (former Wakanosato), by Yokozuna Hakuhō's period of dominance and the rise in visibility of foreign fans and su-jo (スー女), female fans commonly known as oshikatsu (推し活), displaying their passion for sumo and wrestlers on social networks.[194] After the period of scandal, the association also set about restoring a positive public image by launching various measures. These included strengthening the JSA's presence on social networks and developing merchandising. To develop the international market, the association also undertook to translate all its publications into English. Finally, the JSA created an official fan club in order to develop its fan base, offering them in return easier access to tournament tickets and inviting them to various festivals held at the Kokugikan.[194]

Ukiyo-e

[edit]

In 1985, the Japan Sumo Association created a partnership with nishiki-e artist Kinoshita Daimon [ja] in the hope of reviving old sumo ukiyo-e works.[195] He collaborated on the official ebanzuke. His portraits of wrestlers are sold at the Ryōgoku Kokugikan.[196]

Mascots

[edit]
Hiyonoyama, the chicken mascot of the Japan Sumo Association

In August 2009, the Japan Sumo Association unveiled a group of official mascots under the title Hakkiyoi! Sekitori-kun (ハッキヨイ!せきトリくん). Designed to get more children interested in the sport, the characters are chickens (, which can be read as とり, tori in Japanese) as chicken are considered good luck in sumo. A chicken walks on two legs, not four; similarly, a sumo wrestler loses the match if he is knocked off his feet and touches the ground with his hands or any part of his body.[197] The characters compete in sumo and are centered around main character Hiyonoyama (ひよの山), a pun on hiyo (ぴよ) meaning chick, and his rival Akawashi (赤鷲).[198] Mascot development included manga publishing and the installation of sticker dispensers at the Kokugikan. Plush toys were also created to popularize the mascots.[199][200]

Online presence

[edit]

YouTube channels

[edit]

The Japan Sumo Association launched its first YouTube channel in November 2018, with content all in Japanese language. The channel offers light-hearted and humoristic videos, such as a golf competition between former yokozuna Hakuhō, Kisenosato and Kakuryū or chankonabe receipes with small skits featuring low-ranking wrestlers. It also provides more serious contents with insights on ceremonies held in the Kokugikan, such as the consecration of the dohyō before each tournaments or danpatsu-shiki (hair cutting ceremony). Old tournaments are also regularly reruned on the channel.

In August 2022, the association launched an English-language YouTube channel called Sumo Prime Time in hopes of drawing a larger international audience to the sport.[201] This new channel, presented by former NHK sumo sportscaster Hiroshi Morita,[202] provides basic sumo explanations such as rikishi routine or training and kimarite moves. It also provides exclusive interviews of oyakata and rikishi, generally the winner of the previous tournament. The general tone of the channel is light-hearted.

Smartphone application

[edit]

In 2019, the association launched its official mobile app, named "Ōzumō", in partnership with Dwango. The app broadcasts matches from the sekitori ranks with commentary from celebrities. Viewing changes depending on whether you're a paying member (unlimited content) or accessing free content (limited to one match viewed per day). Rankings and results by tournament day are also available.[203]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The spelling is pronounced "sumo" but the kanji used in the wording (角力) refer to an archaic spelling of the sport with a meaning closer to "having a trial of strength" or "wrestling".
  2. ^ As of October 2024, Nishonoseki have 17 stables, followed by Dewanoumi (14), Isegahama (5), Tokitsukaze (5) and Takasago (4). However Dewanoumi have 37 affiliated oyakata, followed by Nishonoseki (27), Tokitsukaze (16), Isegahama (11) and Takasago (11). Three shares are currently vacant, with two traditionally belonging to the Dewanoumi ichimon and one to the Nishonoseki ichimon.[150]
  3. ^ a b Former wrestlers use their toshiyori kabu (elder title) during their terms.

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "第 153 回常設展示 「国技・相撲」-近代以降の事件と名力士-" (PDF). National Diet Library (in Japanese). Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  2. ^ a b "相撲協会、記念ロゴ発表 25年で財団法人設立100周年". Sankei Sports. 26 September 2024. Retrieved 26 September 2024.
  3. ^ "収入源や組織構成…相撲協会はどんな団体?" (in Japanese). Nippon Television. 29 November 2017. Retrieved 16 August 2024.
  4. ^ a b "日本相撲協会 去年の決算 4年ぶりの黒字 入場制限の撤廃で" (in Japanese). NHK. 25 March 2024. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  5. ^ Buckingham 1994, p. 181.
  6. ^ "Kyokai Information Archived 10 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine." Japan Sumo Association. Retrieved on February 6, 2011. "〒130-0015 東京都墨田区横網1-3-28 財団法人日本相撲協会."
  7. ^ a b c d West 1997, p. 165.
  8. ^ a b c d West 1997, p. 166.
  9. ^ a b c d e f "もう許されない相撲協会"理事鎖国"". Sports Nippon. 9 February 2008. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  10. ^ a b Kakuma 1993, p. 14.
  11. ^ a b Cuyler 1979, p. 52.
  12. ^ "The emergence of kanjin-zumō tournaments (Ōzumō)". Tokyo Metropolitan Library. Retrieved 15 November 2022.
  13. ^ Cuyler 1979, p. 57.
  14. ^ Kakuma 1993, p. 16.
  15. ^ Cuyler 1979, pp. 57–58.
  16. ^ Cuyler 1979, p. 58.
  17. ^ Cuyler 1979, pp. 58–59.
  18. ^ a b Cuyler 1979, p. 59.
  19. ^ Cuyler 1979, p. 60.
  20. ^ a b Cuyler 1979, p. 61.
  21. ^ Cuyler 1979, p. 63.
  22. ^ Cuyler 1979, p. 64.
  23. ^ a b Hall 1997, p. 12.
  24. ^ Cuyler 1979, pp. 95–96.
  25. ^ a b c d e Cuyler 1979, p. 96.
  26. ^ a b Cuyler 1979, p. 76.
  27. ^ a b Cuyler 1979, p. 97.
  28. ^ Cuyler 1979, pp. 75–76.
  29. ^ "相撲文化「南部」が築く - 奈良女子大の木梨講師調査 盛岡藩が中央に先立ち 興行や式法を整備". Komonjokan. Retrieved 15 November 2022.
  30. ^ "過去の展示 - 大阪と相撲". Sumo Museum (in Japanese). Japan Sumo Association. Retrieved 15 November 2022.
  31. ^ "「廣角組」の優勝者". Review of the highest scorers in ancient and modern wrestling (in Japanese). Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  32. ^ Hall 1997, p. 13.
  33. ^ Cuyler 1979, p. 98.
  34. ^ Kakuma 1993, p. 17.
  35. ^ Cuyler 1979, p. 100.
  36. ^ a b Hall 1997, p. 14.
  37. ^ a b Hideki Osako. "日本相撲協会". Chiezo dictionary (in Japanese). Asahi Shimbun Publishing Co., Ltd. Retrieved 5 May 2024 – via Kotobank.
  38. ^ a b Newton & Toff 2000, p. 36.
  39. ^ a b c d Kakuma 1993, p. 29.
  40. ^ Cuyler 1979, p. 108.
  41. ^ Newton & Toff 2000, p. 57.
  42. ^ Cuyler 1979, p. 110.
  43. ^ Newton & Toff 2000, p. 37.
  44. ^ Kenrick 1969, p. 30.
  45. ^ a b c Hall 1997, p. 15.
  46. ^ a b c d e f g Cuyler 1979, p. 111.
  47. ^ Singleton, James (12 January 2018). "How the Media Shaped Sumō's Modern Traditions". Nippon.com. Retrieved 16 August 2024.
  48. ^ a b c West 1997, p. 167.
  49. ^ a b c Buckingham 1994, p. 52.
  50. ^ "日本相撲協会". Shogakukan (in Japanese). Retrieved 31 March 2024 – via Kotobank.
  51. ^ "協会のあゆみ" (in Japanese). Japan Sumo Association. Retrieved 31 March 2024.
  52. ^ "大日本相撲協会". "World Encyclopedia (old edition)" (in Japanese). Heibonsha Co., Ltd. Retrieved 31 March 2024 – via Kotobank.
  53. ^ Newton & Toff 2000, p. 58.
  54. ^ a b "東京朝日新聞" [Tokyo Asahi Shimbun]. The Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese) (8 January 1928): 7.
  55. ^ Cuyler 1979, pp. 111–112.
  56. ^ Cuyler 1979, p. 112.
  57. ^ Cuyler 1979, pp. 112–113.
  58. ^ a b Newton & Toff 2000, p. 59.
  59. ^ "マゲを切って料亭に立てこもる力士32人……90年前の大相撲を騒がせた「春秋園事件」とは?". Bunshun weekly (in Japanese). Retrieved 15 November 2022.
  60. ^ a b Newton & Toff 2000, p. 61.
  61. ^ Newton & Toff 2000, p. 62.
  62. ^ a b Gunning, John (5 September 2018). "Sumo's Yokozuna Deliberation Council plays important role in overseeing sport". The Japan Times. Archived from the original on 7 September 2018. Retrieved 15 May 2024.
  63. ^ a b c d e f g h Cuyler 1979, p. 123.
  64. ^ a b Tetsuji Wakabayashi (11 April 2024). "親方と力士のホンネ「蘇る角言」-「財団法人の責務を果たすことが第一の相撲協会のなす仕事」70年前の国会で第10代佐渡ケ嶽親方が激しく批判". Nikkan Gendai. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  65. ^ Wakabayashi Tetsuji (11 April 2024). "「財団法人の責務を果たすことが第一の相撲協会のなす仕事」70年前の国会で第10代佐渡ケ嶽親方が激しく批判【親方と力士のホンネ「蘇る角言」】". Jiji Press (in Japanese). Retrieved 5 May 2024 – via Livedoor.
  66. ^ Newton & Toff 2000, pp. 63–64.
  67. ^ Buckingham 1994, p. 53.
  68. ^ a b Cuyler 1979, p. 128.
  69. ^ Cuyler 1979, pp. 128–129.
  70. ^ a b c d Cuyler 1979, p. 129.
  71. ^ West 1997, pp. 195–196.
  72. ^ a b Schilling 1994, p. 38.
  73. ^ a b c Delfs, Robert (21 May 1992). "Weighty Problem". Far Eastern Economic Review. pp. 17–18.
  74. ^ Sanger, David (April 24, 1992). "American Sumo Star Denies Accusing the Japanese of Racism". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 26 May 2015. Retrieved 10 August 2016.
  75. ^ Schilling 1994, p. 115.
  76. ^ "Sumo head resigns over drugs row". BBC News. 8 September 2008. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  77. ^ "理事長独自人脈で63年ぶり外部役員登用". Nikkan Sports (in Japanese). 1 October 2008. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  78. ^ a b c "日本相撲協会の外部理事に村山・元東京高検検事長ら". The Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese). 30 September 2008. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  79. ^ "外部から理事&監事に相撲協会規定改正". Nikkan Sports (in Japanese). 16 September 2008. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  80. ^ a b c "大相撲、賭博問題 -「琴光喜が賭博」週刊誌報道". Jiji Press (in Japanese). 6 July 2010. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  81. ^ a b c d "協会解散、国技館没収?「公益法人」剥奪も…". Sports Nippon (in Japanese). 4 February 2011. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  82. ^ "「相撲協会なくせ」苦情、抗議電話が殺到". Nikkan Sports (in Japanese). 18 June 2010. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  83. ^ "やくみつる氏外れ、新メンバーで相撲協会特別委が再開". Sports Nippon (in Japanese). 23 April 2010. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  84. ^ "大麻問題に野球賭博、「不祥事の嵐」の中で相撲協会トップに…元横綱三重ノ海の「相撲と故郷」". Yomiuri Shimbun (in Japanese). 12 December 2023. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  85. ^ a b c "Hanaregoma determined to overcome crisis / JSA decision to cancel Osaka basho had backing of entire board, but will probe find any answers?". Daily Yomiuri Online. Yomiuri Shimbun. 8 February 2011. Archived from the original on 11 February 2011.
  86. ^ "Sumo commentator calls on JSA chairman to retract claims of 'no bout fixing in past'". Mainichi Daily News. 9 March 2011. Archived from the original on 11 March 2011.
  87. ^ "相撲協会の放駒理事長が退任会見/「道筋付けられた」". Shikoku Shimbun (in Japanese). 27 January 2012. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  88. ^ "Kitanoumi returns as JSA chairman". The Japan Time. 31 January 2012. Archived from the original on 22 March 2012.
  89. ^ "拝啓 放駒元理事長 大相撲復活の礎はあなたが作った――。". Number (in Japanese). 20 October 2015. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  90. ^ "相撲協会の公益財団法人移行、8月上旬までに申請". The Nikkei. 24 April 2013. Retrieved 15 November 2022.
  91. ^ a b c d e "相撲協会が公益法人申請 理事長「第一歩」来年のスタート目指す". Sports Nippon (in Japanese). 14 September 2013. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  92. ^ "新相撲協会スタート 北の湖理事長「公益法人の責務果たす」". Sports Nippon (in Japanese). 30 January 2014. Archived from the original on 28 August 2017. Retrieved 24 August 2024.
  93. ^ "新相撲協会スタート 北の湖理事長「公益法人の責務果たす」". Sports Nippon. 30 January 2014. Archived from the original on 18 February 2014. Retrieved 16 May 2024.
  94. ^ "北の湖理事長 写真特集". Jiji Press (in Japanese). 22 December 2015. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
  95. ^ "相撲協会新理事長に八角親方「土俵の充実は絶対」". The Nikkei. 19 December 2015. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
  96. ^ a b "相撲協会理事候補選~土俵外の激闘 ~ 写真特集". Jiji Press (in Japanese). 28 March 2016. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
  97. ^ "Grand champ Harumafuji questioned by sumo panel, admits assault". Kyodo News. 19 November 2017. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
  98. ^ a b c "相撲協会の対応は、なぜこうも非常識なのか 協会に不足しているのは「共感する能力」だ". Toyo Keizai (in Japanese). 8 December 2017. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
  99. ^ "Japanese women ordered from sumo ring during first aid". BBC. 5 April 2018. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
  100. ^ "相撲協会の不適切だったに野田聖子氏「その通りだ」". Nikkan Sports (in Japanese). 6 April 2018. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
  101. ^ "Sumo tourney to be held without spectators". NHK World-Japan. 1 March 2020. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
  102. ^ "Sumo: March tournament to be held behind closed doors due to virus". Kyodo News. 1 March 2020. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
  103. ^ "Sumo grand tournament in May canceled due to virus". Kyodo News. May 4, 2020. Archived from the original on September 24, 2024. Retrieved September 24, 2024.
  104. ^ "相撲協会、過去最大50億円赤字 「3年で資産半分」?". The Asahi Shinbun (in Japanese). 29 March 2021. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
  105. ^ "日本相撲協会が日本プロスポーツ協会から脱退 理事会で決定". Daily Sports (in Japanese). 6 March 2020. Retrieved 24 August 2024.
  106. ^ "日本相撲協会が墨田区と包括連携協定 自治体と結ぶのは初「活性化につなげたい」八角理事長". Nikkan Sports (in Japanese). 23 August 2022. Retrieved 24 August 2024.
  107. ^ a b "日本相撲協会が労基署から是正勧告 異例の事態に専門家「社会の一員である自覚が欠けていた」". Nikkan Sports (in Japanese). 27 December 2023. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
  108. ^ "Different Legal Status of Nonprofit Organizations in Japan". Japan NPO Center. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  109. ^ "日本相撲協会、4年ぶりに3・4億円の黒字 コロナ禍の制限解除で巡業が復活 宮田哲次主事「相撲協会も税金は払っています」". Zakzak (in Japanese). Sankei Digital. 25 March 2024. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  110. ^ "Act on Authorization of Public Interest Incorporated Associations and Public Interest Incorporated Foundations (Act No. 49 of 2006)". 2006. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  111. ^ West 1997, p. 168.
  112. ^ a b c d West 1997, p. 175.
  113. ^ a b Buckingham 1994, p. 148.
  114. ^ a b Buckingham 1994, p. 89.
  115. ^ a b c Kitade Koichi (6 July 2021). "特集 - 大相撲の力士をやめたらどうなるの?". NHK (in Japanese). Retrieved 16 December 2023.
  116. ^ Buckingham 1994, p. 66.
  117. ^ West 1997, p. 180.
  118. ^ West 1997, pp. 180–181.
  119. ^ a b c d West 1997, p. 181.
  120. ^ West 1997, pp. 185–186.
  121. ^ "公益法人制度改革の一様相 ― 日本相撲協会定款を題材として" (PDF). House of Councillors (Japanese National Diet). Retrieved 13 November 2022.
  122. ^ a b c d "スポーツ探Q せめぐ改革と伝統 相撲協会の公益法人案、私の見方". The Nikkei (in Japanese). 27 August 2013. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  123. ^ "親方株の売買、認められる? 法律の専門家の腹案とは……". The Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese). 13 June 2023. Retrieved 22 August 2024.
  124. ^ Buckingham 1994, pp. 89–90.
  125. ^ a b c Hall 1997, p. 95.
  126. ^ "Injured Takanohana retires from sumo". The Japan Times. 21 January 2003. Archived from the original on 14 September 2012. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  127. ^ a b c "白鵬が目安クリアの一代年寄、第三者委が問題視". The Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese). 19 April 2021. Retrieved 22 August 2024.
  128. ^ "一代年寄の栄誉、辞退した千代の富士 北の富士さんが明かす舞台裏". The Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese). 26 November 2022. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  129. ^ Yoshiaki Shichino (3 October 2021). "FOCUS: Sumo fights hard to muzzle era-defining former yokozuna Hakuhō". Kyodo News. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
  130. ^ West 1997, pp. 182–183.
  131. ^ Buckingham 1994, p. 149.
  132. ^ Newton & Toff 2000, p. 112.
  133. ^ Gunning, John (18 September 2018). "Sumo 101: Heya (Stables)". The Japan Times. Archived from the original on 7 January 2019. Retrieved 22 August 2024.
  134. ^ Newton & Toff 2000, p. 110.
  135. ^ "元横綱佐田の山 - 写真特集". Jiji Press (in Japanese). Retrieved 23 August 2024.
  136. ^ a b West 1997, pp. 189–192.
  137. ^ West 1997, p. 182.
  138. ^ a b c Hall 1997, p. 96.
  139. ^ West 1997, pp. 165–166.
  140. ^ Newton & Toff 2000, p. 116.
  141. ^ Newton & Toff 2000, p. 129.
  142. ^ a b c d "協会の使命・組織" (in Japanese). Japan Sumo Association. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  143. ^ Cuyler 1979, p. 157.
  144. ^ Cuyler 1979, p. 143.
  145. ^ "親方ら9人で組織 暴力根絶へコンプラ委員会設置". Nikkan Sports. 19 December 2018. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
  146. ^ "元大関豪栄道の武隈親方が新審判「力士の人生が懸かっているので、気を引き締めて」" (in Japanese). Nikkan Sports. 27 March 2024. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  147. ^ a b c d Gunning, John (21 July 2019). "Sumo 101: JSA chairman". The Japan Times. Archived from the original on 22 July 2019. Retrieved 3 May 2024.
  148. ^ a b Gunning, John (12 May 2019). "Sumo 101: Ichimon". The Japan Times. Archived from the original on 21 October 2022. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  149. ^ "Sumo elder Takanohana fails to regain director seat on JSA board". The Japan Times. 2 February 2018. Archived from the original on 2 February 2018. Retrieved 28 October 2022.
  150. ^ "List of elder stocks by occupation and attachment to sumo stables and clans". Sumo Reference. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
  151. ^ "貴乃花グループ「一門」へ"昇格"" (in Japanese). Nikkan Sports. 24 May 2014. Retrieved 12 March 2015.
  152. ^ "日本相撲界再起波瀾 貴乃花親方申請退職" (in Japanese). The Nikkei. 26 September 2018. Retrieved 23 August 2024.
  153. ^ "出羽海一門が元貴乃花一門の立浪親方の加入承認へ" (in Japanese). Nikkan Sports. 18 September 2018. Archived from the original on 19 September 2018.
  154. ^ a b "なぜ陸奥親方が事業部長、九重親方が役員待遇?! 日本相撲協会の親方職務を読み解く". Nikkan Sports (in Japanese). 6 April 2022. Retrieved 20 August 2024.
  155. ^ Buckingham 1994, p. 10.
  156. ^ a b "役員改選は3期連続無投票 日本相撲協会". The Sankei Shimbun (in Japanese). 26 January 2024. Retrieved 24 August 2024.
  157. ^ "春日野親方が協会NO2の事業部長に 新任理事の浅香山親方は九州場所担当部長…新職務分掌発表". Sports Hochi (in Japanese). 27 March 2024. Retrieved 30 March 2024.
  158. ^ Buckingham 1994, p. 4.
  159. ^ "相撲協会、外部役員は「議決権なし」 文科省容認せず". The Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese). 20 July 2008. Retrieved 24 August 2024.
  160. ^ "EDITORIAL - Sumo punishment meted out". The Japan Times. 7 July 2010. Archived from the original on 18 October 2012. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  161. ^ a b "職務分掌 - 理事長および理事". Japan Sumo Association (in Japanese). Retrieved 28 March 2024.
  162. ^ a b c "廣瀬正徳 - 明治・大正・昭和期の陸軍軍人(主計中将)、相撲協会初代理事長". Tama Cemetery (in Japanese). Retrieved 3 May 2024.
  163. ^ "「杉山茂丸伝記抄 - 大相撲近代化事始め". Kichian Museum (in Japanese). Retrieved 4 May 2024.
  164. ^ "福田 雅太郎". Newly revised Encyclopedia of Politicians, Meiji-Showa (in Japanese). Nichigai Associates. 2003. Retrieved 3 May 2024 – via Kotobank.
  165. ^ "尾野実信 - 明治・大正・昭和期の陸軍軍人(大将)". Tama Cemetery (in Japanese). Retrieved 3 May 2024.
  166. ^ Atsuo Tsubota. 回向院 (東京都墨田区)~初回訪問:平成9年1月10日~ [Ekō-in (Sumida, Tokyo) - First visit: January 10, 1997] (in Japanese). Retrieved 3 May 2024.
  167. ^ "竹下 勇". Encyclopedia of 20th Century Japanese (in Japanese). Nichigai Associates. 2004. Retrieved 3 May 2024 – via Kotobank.
  168. ^ "The Japan Times and Mail (Page 3)". Japan Times (in Japanese). 4 May 1939. Archived from the original on 7 January 2009. Retrieved 3 May 2024.
  169. ^ "Nippon Times, Wednesday (Page 3)". Nippon Times (in Japanese). 28 November 1945. Archived from the original on 9 January 2009. Retrieved 3 May 2024.
  170. ^ Cuyler 1979, p. 162.
  171. ^ "Top sumo wrestler fired over illegal gambling". BBC. July 4, 2010. Retrieved August 31, 2010.
  172. ^ Fackler, Martin (July 5, 2010). "Sumo's Ties to Japan Underworld Go Beyond Limits". The New York Times. Retrieved July 6, 2010.
  173. ^ Dickie, Mure (30 August 2010). "Sumo vows to cut ties with yakuza". Financial Times. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
  174. ^ a b "社会的責任 - 暴力団等排除宣言". Japan Sumo Association (in Japanese). Retrieved 23 November 2022.
  175. ^ "大相撲・横綱審議委員こそ制度改革が必要、ファンの怒りを買った「時代遅れな発言」". Japan Prime (in Japanese). 2 October 2020. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  176. ^ "Sumo Star Charges Racism in Japan". The New York Times. 22 April 1992. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  177. ^ a b "白鵬に立ちはだかる「一代年寄」廃止論 落としどころは". Asashi Shimbun (in Japanese). 20 May 2021. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  178. ^ "Sumo fights hard to muzzle era-defining former yokozuna Hakuho". Asashi Shimbun. 3 October 2021. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  179. ^ Buckingham 1994, p. 41.
  180. ^ Jackson, Steve (8 February 2008). "Japan PM angry over Sumo death". BBC. Retrieved 8 February 2008.
  181. ^ "Sumo trainer jailed over killing". BBC News. May 29, 2009. Retrieved June 1, 2009.
  182. ^ "Police probing Harumafuji's alleged assault on fellow sumo wrestler". The Manichi. 15 November 2017. Archived from the original on 15 November 2017. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  183. ^ "Drunken brawl shines light on sumo's hidden underbelly". www.japantimes.co.jp. Kyodo News. 15 November 2017. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  184. ^ "Harumafuji to be referred to prosecutors for assault". Kyodo News. 21 November 2017. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
  185. ^ "社会的責任 - 暴力決別宣言". Japan Sumo Association (in Japanese). Retrieved 23 November 2022.
  186. ^ "伊勢ケ浜親方が理事辞任 幕下以下力士2人が弟弟子に熱湯かけるなどの暴力". Nikkan Sports (in Japanese). 26 December 2022. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  187. ^ "陸奥部屋で暴力行為「協会には言っています。何も隠していません」と親方 加害者は引退". Nikkan Sports (in Japanese). 9 May 2023. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  188. ^ "Former Wrestler Sues Japan Sumo Body For Alleged Mistreatment". barrons.com. Agence France-Presse. 31 July 2023. Retrieved 31 July 2023.
  189. ^ Buckingham 1994, p. 8.
  190. ^ Sasaki Ichiro [@Ichiro_SUMO] (4 September 2015). "日本相撲協会のエンブレムはこれ。正しくは相撲協会徽章(きしょう)。輪郭は土俵ではなく大相撲の「大」を型どったもので、中には桜の花。明治42年6月に国技館が開館した時から使用された。デザインした当時のアートディレクターは不明。" (Tweet) (in Japanese). Retrieved 24 January 2023 – via Twitter.
  191. ^ "大相撲で使われる「紋」についてのお話". Spaia sports magazine (in Japanese). 8 May 2017. Retrieved 11 November 2022.
  192. ^ Newton & Toff 2000, p. 18.
  193. ^ Hall 1997, p. 79.
  194. ^ a b "Xフォロワー40万人以上!相撲協会の広報・西岩親方に聞く、いま大相撲が多様なファン層に愛される理由". Parasapo (in Japanese). 19 July 2022. Retrieved 24 August 2024.
  195. ^ "Sumo inspires artists to express the spirit of Japan". Nikkei Asia. 13 March 2019. Retrieved 18 November 2022.
  196. ^ "Kinoshita Daimon art website" (in Japanese). 8 May 2017. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  197. ^ "Independent Lens - Sumo East and West". PBS. Archived from the original on 2020-11-08. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
  198. ^ "ゆるキャラ界に期待の新弟子 相撲協会が「ひよの山」". The Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese). 2009-08-31. Archived from the original on 2009-09-03. Retrieved 2022-08-04.
  199. ^ "初公式キャラ「せきトリくん」ヨロシクね♪". Sports Nippon (in Japanese). 1 September 2009. Retrieved 24 August 2024.
  200. ^ "相撲協会、キャラクター発表/「ハッキヨイ! せきトリくん」". The Shikoku Shimbun (in Japanese). 31 August 2009. Retrieved 24 August 2024.
  201. ^ "Sumo: JSA targets overseas audience with English YouTube channel". Kyodo News. 2 August 2022. Retrieved 4 August 2022.
  202. ^ Gunning, John (10 August 2022). "JSA taps veteran presenter for new English-language YouTube channel". The Japan Times. Archived from the original on 2 June 2023. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
  203. ^ "日本相撲協会公式スマートフォンアプリ「大相撲」幕内に加えて、ついに幕下上位5番を含む十両の取組も配信開始". Dwango (in Japanese). 11 November 2019. Retrieved 24 August 2024.

Bibliography

[edit]
[edit]