Draft:January 2018 Basho

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The January 2018 Grand Sumo Tournament was the first honbasho of 2018. It was held at the Ryōgoku Kokugikan from January 14 to January 28. The tournament was won by Tochinoshin, the first wrestler from the maegashira ranks to win a top division championship in nearly six years.[1] He became the third wrestler from Europe to win a championship after Kotooshu and Baruto. He was also the wrestler from Kasugano stable to win in 46 years.[2] The tournament was the first in a three basho run of 37 wins for Tochinoshin which saw him promoted to ōzeki after the May 2018 tournament. It was to be the only tournament championship won by Tochinoshin before his eventual retirement in 2023.

Banzuke[edit]

The banzuke for the tournament was released on December 25, 2017. It saw Takakeisho make his debut at komusubi, and Abi and Ryūden make their top division debuts. Ryūden is the first top division wrestler from Yamanashi Prefecture since Onohana 30 years previously. Yutakayama is promoted to makuuchi for the third time having twice been demoted down to juryo.

East rank West
Hakuhō yokozuna 1 Kisenosato
Kakuryū yokozuna 2
Gōeidō ōzeki Takayasu
Mitakeumi sekiwake Tamawashi
Takakeishō komusubi Ōnoshō
Hokutōfuji maegashira 1 Ichinojō
Yoshikaze maegashira 2 Kotoshōgiku
Chiyotairyū maegashira 3 Tochinoshin
Shōdai maegashira 4 Arawashi
Okinoumi maegashira 5 Endō
Takarafuji maegashira 6 Ikioi
Chiyoshōma maegashira 7 Chiyonokuni
Tochiōzan maegashira 8 Kaisei
Shōhōzan maegashira 9 Chiyomaru
Terunofuji maegashira 10 Aminishiki
Kotoyūki maegashira 11 Daishōmaru
Sōkokurai maegashira 12 Kagayaki
Takekaze maegashira 13 Daieishō
Abi maegashira 14 Yutakayama
Ishiura maegashira 15 Nishikigi
Ryūden maegashira 16 Asanoyama
Daimami maegashira 17

Day-by-day[edit]

Day 1[edit]

Day 2[edit]

Day 3[edit]

Day 4[edit]

Day 5[edit]

Day 6[edit]

Day 7[edit]

  • Tochinoshin loses to Kakuryū (for the 21st time in their 22 meetings). This proves to be his only loss in the tournament.

Day 8[edit]

Day 9[edit]

Day 10[edit]

Day 11[edit]

Day 12[edit]

  • Tochinoshin moves into the sole lead for the first time, after Kakuryu loses his second straight match.[3]

Day 13[edit]

  • Tochinoshin defeats Ichinojō, leaving him one win away from clinching the championship. Kakuryū is defeated for the third straight day, by Mitakeumi.[4]

Day 14[edit]

  • Tochinoshin wins his first championship by defeating Shōhōzan to move to a 13–1 record. Georgian Prime Minister Giorgi Kvirikashvili tweets his congratulations.[5] The former wrestler Kyokutenhō, who was the last man to win the championship as a maegashira in 2012, remarked than the manner of Tochinoshin's victories were more impressive than his own.[6]

Day 15[edit]

  • Tochinoshin finishes the tournament with a 14–1 record. Presented with the Emperor's Cup, he tells reporters afterwards, "it was so heavy."[7]

Results[edit]

Final Standings[edit]

2018 Hatsu basho results - Makuuchi Division
Result East Rank West Result
2 - 3 - 10 ø Mongolia Hakuho Y ø Japan Kisenosato 1 - 5 - 9
11 - 4 - 0 Mongolia Kakuryu Y 0 - 0 - 0
8 - 7 - 0 Japan Goeido O Japan Takayasu 12 - 3 - 0
8 - 7 - 0 Japan Mitakeumi S Mongolia Tamawashi 6 - 9 - 0
5 - 10 - 0 Japan Takekeisho K ø Japan Onosho 4 - 6 - 5
4 - 11 - 0 Japan Hokutofuji M1 Mongolia Ichinojo 10 - 5 - 0
4 - 11 - 0 Japan Yoshikaze M2 Japan Kotoshogiku 7 - 8 - 0
8 - 7 - 0 Japan Chiyotairyu M3 Georgia (country) Tochinoshin 14 - 1 - 0
7 - 8 - 0 Japan Shodai M4 Mongolia Arawashi 8 - 7 - 0
5 - 10 - 0 Japan Okinoumi M5 Japan Endo 9 - 6 - 0
8 - 7 - 0 Japan Takarafuji M6 Japan Ikioi 4 - 11 - 0
6 - 9 - 0 Mongolia Chiyoshoma M7 Japan Chiyonokuni 6 - 9 - 0
6 - 6 - 3 ø Japan Tochiozan M8 Brazil Kaisei 8 - 7 - 0
9 - 6 - 0 Japan Shohozan M9 Japan Chiyomaru 9 - 6 - 0
0 - 7 - 8 Mongolia Terunofuji↓ M10 Japan Aminishiki↓ 3 - 9 - 3
7 - 8 - 0 Japan Kotoyuki M11 Japan Daishomaru 7 - 8 - 0
6 - 9 - 0 China Sokokurai M12 Japan Kagayaki 9 - 6 - 0
5 - 10 - 0 Japan Takekaze↓ M13 Japan Daieisho 9 - 6 - 0
10 - 5 - 0 Japan Abi M14 Japan Yutakayama 9 - 6 - 0
9 - 6 - 0 Japan Ishiura M15 Japan Nishikigi 8 - 7 - 0
10 - 5 - 0 Japan Ryuden M16 Japan Asanoyama 9 - 6 - 0
8 - 7 - 0 Japan Daiamami M17 ø 0 - 0 - 0
ø - Indicates a pull-out or absent rank
winning record in bold
Yusho Winner
Demoted from makuuchi

Awards[edit]

  • Fighting Spirit (Kanto-sho): Ryūden (1st), Abi (1st, awarded on the condition that he win his final match)

Reaction[edit]

Speaking to reporters the day after the tournament, Tochinoshin remarked that the Emperor's Cup was "so heavy... I will never forget it." He mentioned that he had spoken to his wife who was back home in Georgia with their newborn daughter, but that "she was crying too much to speak."[8]

Attendence[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Tochinoshin clinches New Year Basho title for first career tournament triumph". Japan Times. 27 January 2018. Retrieved 23 February 2018.
  2. ^ "Tochinoshin reflects on unlikely New Year Basho victory". Japan Times. 29 January 2018. Retrieved 23 February 2018.
  3. ^ "Tochinoshin grabs sole lead as Kakuryu loses again". Japan Times. 25 January 2018. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
  4. ^ "Sumo: Tochinoshin 1 win away from 1st championship". Kyodo News. 26 January 2018. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  5. ^ "Georgian Tochinoshin wins maiden grand sumo tournament". Yahoo Sports/Reuters. 27 January 2018. Retrieved 6 September 2018.
  6. ^ "Sumo: Tochinoshin wins New Year tourney to earn 1st championship". Kyodo News. 27 January 2018. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  7. ^ "SUMO/ "It was so heavy," says Emperor's Cup winner Tochinoshin". Asahi Shimbun. 29 January 2018. Archived from the original on 30 January 2018.
  8. ^ "SUMO/ 'It was so heavy,' says Emperor's Cup winner Tochinoshin". Asahi Shimbun. 29 January 2018. Retrieved 2 April 2019.