Ōnomatsu stable

Ōnomatsu stable (阿武松部屋, Ōnomatsu-beya) is a stable of sumo wrestlers, one of the Nishonoseki ichimon or group of stables. It was founded in its modern form on 1 October 1994 by Masurao Hiroo, who branched off from the now defunct Oshiogawa stable. As of January 2023, the stable had 13 wrestlers.

The stable first wrestler to reach the top makuuchi division was Katayama in 2005. The now retired Wakakōyū reached komusubi in 2012, as did Ōnoshō in 2017. The stable's most successful foreign recruit has been the Russian former maegashira Amūru, who retired in 2018.
In January 2010 the stable, along with the Takanohana, Ōtake and Magaki stable, was forced to leave the Nishonoseki ichimon after former yokozuna Takanohana declared his intention to run as an unofficial candidate in the elections to the Sumo Association's board of directors. The ejected stables formed their own group, which gained ichimon status of its own in 2014.[1][2] This was dissolved in 2018, with the Ōnomatsu, Ōtake and Chiganoura stables briefly forming Ōnomatsu ichimon before aligning themselves once again with the Nishonoseki group. Masurao resigned from the Japan Sumo Association for health reasons on 26 September 2019 and was replaced by the former maegashira Daidō.

On 26 December, the Japan Sumo Association announced the stable recruited Batjargal Choijirsuren, a Mongolian-born Student Yokozuna, and allowed him to use the makushita tsukedashi system and enter his first official tournament at the rank of makushita 15.[3]

Owner

Notable active wrestlers

Ōnoshō is the most senior wrestler in Ōnomatsu stable as of 2018.
  • Ōnoshō (best rank komusubi)
  • Keitenkai (best rank jūryō)
  • Yūma (best rank jūryō)

Coach

Notable former members

Usher

  • Jin (jonokuchi yobidashi, real name Jin Sekimoto)

Hairdresser

  • Tokotaka (1st class tokoyama)
  • Tokoyū (4th class tokoyama)

Location and access

Chiba prefecture, Narashino city, Saginuma 5-5-14
10 minutes from Makuharihongō Station on Sōbu Main Line and Keisei Chiba Line

See also

References

  1. "Takanohana speaks out after six supporters kicked out of sumo faction". Mainichi Daily News. 20 January 2010. Archived from the original on 24 January 2010. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  2. "Takanohana group certified as ichimon". Nikkan Sports. 24 May 2014. Retrieved 12 March 2015.
  3. "Student yokozuna Choijirsuren joins Ōnomatsu stable: Makushita 15 title approved at special board meeting". Sports Nippon (in Japanese). 26 December 2022. Retrieved 26 December 2022.

35.6705°N 140.0348°E / 35.6705; 140.0348

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