Hōō Umagorō
Hōō Umagorō (鳳凰 馬五郎, September 3, 1866 – May 4, 1907) was a Japanese professional sumo wrestler from Narashino, Shimōsa. He made his debut in May 1887 and wrestled for Miyagino stable. He reached the makuuchi division in January 1893 and reached the rank of ōzeki in 1897. He retired in May, 1903 and died in May, 1907. CareerEarly careerHis real name was Miyokawa Toranosuke (三代川 寅之助) and was known for his large body and strength since he was a boy.[1] He joined Miyagino stable because the then head coach (Miyagino Umagoro) was from Makuhari, Chiba District and made his professional debut in May 1886 under the shikona Kikutayama (菊田山). It is thought that his first shikona was chosen to pay homage to his hometown shrine of Kikuta.[1] He was later given the shikona Araumi (荒海) in May 1887 before changing it to Ōtori (鳳) in January 1891. Upon promotion to juryō, in June 1892, he was given the shikona Hōō (鳳凰). Ōzeki career and yokozuna hopesIn 1898, Hōō scored his best record with seven wins and two draws (this was his fourth tournament in makuuchi), and won a third championship. He was at the peak of his career and was being presented as a future yokozuna.[2] However, due to heavy drinking problems,[3] Hōō was denied the rank after the May, 1898 tournament and dropped back to maegashira in 1902.[2] In 1903, he changed his shikona to Miyagino (宮城野) in order to build a comeback. However it failed and Hōō retired during the 1903's May tournament.[2] Retirement from sumoToshiyori careerHōō Umagorō became a coach in 1894. During that period he took the name of his former master, changing his name to Umagoro, and taking his late master's title of Miyagino. He became an active oyakata while still competing in the makuuchi division.[1] After his retirement, he was a popular master who was well received by younger generations, among whom he recruited future yokozuna Ōtori, to whom he bestowed his old shikona. In the Association, he notably served as shimpan but resigned due to his poor health. He later developed spinal cord disease and passed away at the young age of 40, in 1907.[2] TriviaIn 1974, Nishonoseki stable wrestler Hōō Tomomichi took the Hōō shikona. Top division record
*Championships for the best record in a tournament were not recognized or awarded before the 1909 summer tournament and the above championships that are labelled "unofficial" are historically conferred. For more information see yūshō. See alsoWikimedia Commons has media related to Hōō Umagorō. References
|