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Asashoryu Akinori

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<tr><td>Record</td><td>473-128-17</td></tr> <tr><td>Debut</td><td>January, 1999</td></tr> <tr><td>Highest rank</td><td>Yokozuna (March, 2003)</td></tr> <tr><td>Yushos</td><td>19 (Makuuchi)
1 (Makushita)
1 (Sandanme)
1 (Jonidan)</td></tr>
朝青龍 明徳
Asashoryu Akinori
<tr><td colspan="2" align="center">200px</td></tr>
Personal information
Real nameDolgorsuren Dagvadorj
Date of birthSeptember 27, 1980
Place of birthMongolia<tr><td>Height</td><td>184.0cm (6'0.5")</td></tr><tr><td>Weight</td><td>148.0kg (326lb)</td></tr>
Career*
HeyaTakasago
RankYokozuna

* Career information is correct as of September 2006.


Asashoryu Akinori (朝青龍 明徳 Asashōryū Akinori?), born as Dolgorsuren Dagvadorj (Долгорсүрэн Дагвадорж) on September 27, 1980 in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, is the first sumo wrestler (rikishi) from Mongolia to reach the rank of yokozuna, the highest sumo rank. He is also currently (as of 2006) the only active yokozuna.

Unlike his Hawaiian predecessors Akebono and Musashimaru, Asashoryu was relatively lightweight at 129 kg in 2001, he began bulking up to 131 kg in 2002, 140 kg by 2004, and is now about 148 kg (326 pounds), right on average. He has successfully relied on speed and technique to compete against his, often much heavier, opponents, though lately he has begun confronting those opponents head on with the intention of out-muscling them. His lightning speed has suffered somewhat with the extra weight though he is still a lot faster than most of his opponents. He famously dumped the 158 kg Kotomitsuki with a "lifting body slam" (tsuriotoshi), a feat of tremendous strength, normally accomplished on much smaller and weaker opponents. After his debut in 1999, it took Asashoryu only 24 tournaments to win his first top division championship, the quickest achievement of this since the sport adopted its current format of six championships a year in 1958.

Since Asashoryu is known to occasionally injure other wrestlers during practice, some other high-profile wrestlers avoid training with him to avoid injury. Takamisakari (shoulder) and Kotooshu have both suffered notable injuries at the hands of some intense practice (keiko) with Asashoryu. In training, he is reported to do multiple repetitions of biceps curls with 30 kg dumb-bells.

On January 30, 2003 Asashoryu was granted the title of yokozuna, the highest rank in sumo. While his first championship as yokozuna ended in a disappointing 10-5 record, he has since won a total of seventeen tournaments. Combined with his two yusho as an Ozeki, he has nineteen career championships.

The highlights of his career to date include two consecutive perfect 15-0 wins (zensho yusho) in January and March of 2004 with a streak of 35 unbeaten bouts in total (nobody had won 15-0 since 1996). On November 27, 2004, Asashoryu became the first wrestler to win five tournaments in a year since Chiyonofuji achieved the feat 18 years ago, and won his ninth Emperor's Cup. It has been speculated that one reason for Asashoryu's relatively disappointing performance in the Autumn basho of 2004, the only one he did not win, was his marriage to his Mongolian fiancée for which the official ceremony was later held in August 2004 (although he actually married her in December 2002). The hectic social round that inevitably follows Japanese weddings may well have affected his pre-tournament preparations.

He continued to dominate Sumo in 2005, winning all six honbasho (sumo tournaments) and losing only six bouts all year (0-1-0-2-2-1). One of those rare losses came on September 11, 2005 at the start of the Aki Basho when he dropped his first Shonichi (Day 1) bout during his tenure as Yokozuna. On November 26, 2005 a visibly emotional Asashoryu wept after winning his eighty-third bout of the year (a new record) and clinching the tournament at the same time. The six victories of 2005 combined with his victory from the final tournament of 2004 has set a new record run of seven consecutive tournament victories, including two more 15-0 wins in January and May of 2005. The great Yokozuna Taihō Koki achieved the feat of six consecutive tournament victories twice, but never in a calendar year. Asashoryu now stands alone with seven, cementing his place as one of the best ever.

Some are calling the Kyushu November 2005 Basho the "Triple Crown" of sumo, for the three records set.

  • Seven straight tournaments entered, seven tournaments won.
  • 90 regulation bouts contested in one year, 84 won.
  • Grand Slam - winning all six tournaments in a calendar year.

Asashoryu's consecutive basho streak came to an end in January 2006, when Ozeki Tochiazuma took the first tournament championship of the year. Asashoryu's performance in January was a surprisingly poor 11-4 but he successfully rebounded by winning the March tournament. However, his six losses in those tournaments matched his loss total for all of 2005. In the May tournament he sustained an injury to the ligaments in his elbow on the second day falling off of the dohyo in a surprising loss to Wakanosato and was visibly slow to rise from the ground. He was absent from the tournament the next day and later released a statement confirming he was withdrawing from the tournament. Doctors told him he would not be able to compete for two months, which meant he would miss the July tournament as well [1]. However, Asashoryu was ready by the start of the July tournament and won with a 14-1 record. In the following tournament, Asashoryu won his eighteenth career title along with his 400th career bout in the upper-division. He also won the final tournament of 2006 for his nineteenth career title, the fifth he has won with a perfect 15-0 record.

Asashoryu has been criticized for infractions of the strict code of conduct expected of top sumo wrestlers. The most severe of his transgressions was his disqualification in the July tournament in 2003. He pulled on Kyokushuzan's mage (traditional Japanese top knot) during their bout on Day 5 of the tournament, resulting in an immediate hansoku-make, or disqualification. This caused a furor among Japanese fans, who already had a distaste for the foreign yokozuna. Some irate fans even called him a cheat ("hansoku") during the weeks and months following this act. His other divergences from the norm include being photographed in a suit (instead of a traditional Japanese costume), complaining to judges after losing a decision, and refusing to adopt Japanese citizenship. He has also been accused of breaking the mirror of a rival's car. [2]

Asashoryu's brothers are also active in combat sports: Dolgorsuren Sumiyabazar is a mixed martial arts fighter, and Dolgorsuren Serjbudee, a professional wrestler, competes in New Japan Pro Wrestling under the name Blue Wolf (after the Mongolian Blue Wolf legend). All Dolgorsuren brothers have strong backgrounds in Mongolian wrestling.

[edit] External websites

et:Asashōryū fr:Akinori Asashoryu it:Asashoryu ja:朝青龍明徳 sv:Asashoryu zh:朝青龍明德

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