Edmonton Journal

SUMO-SIZED SCANDAL

Two wrestlers walk into a bar. The brawl they had there is rocking Japan

- ANNA FIFIELD The Washington Post

The world of sumo has been turned upside down like, well, like a wrestler pushed from the ring.

In a case that has enthralled Japan and dominated the headlines for three weeks, a 33-year-old grand sumo champion, a Mongolian called Harumafuji, is accused of assaulting a younger wrestler, a 27-year-old Mongolian called Takanoiwa, with items possibly including a beer bottle, an ice pick, an ashtray, a microphone and a karaoke remote control.

Harumafuji, who holds the top rank of yokozuna, says he used only his bare hands, and a contentiou­s investigat­ion is now going on. Still, he’s expected to be forced out.

But the case is about so much more than a drunken brawl. It goes to the very heart of the punishing, clan-like sumo system, one that is already reeling from accusation­s of bullying and match-fixing, and is facing waning public interest. Here’s how it started.

The two Mongolians in question — Mongolians have become prominent in the sport in recent years — were at a bar in Tottori prefecture late last month.

Hakuho, another yokozuna and, yes, another Mongolian, was lecturing the young Takanoiwa about his bad attitude, when the youngster picked up his cellphone and started playing with it, Nikkan Sports reported.

Others have reported that it was Harumafuji who was remonstrat­ing with the errant junior.

Takanoiwa’s original act of rebellion, according to reports, was telling the older wrestlers that they were over the hill. “Your era is over,” he’s said to have taunted.

Things quickly took a turn for the worse. Enraged, Harumafuji picked up a beer bottle and began beating Takanoiwa on the head with it, according to local accounts. “Why are you doing that when the grand yokozuna is talking to you?” Harumafuji reportedly yelled.

Someone at the bar told the sports newspaper Hochi: “We heard a large sound that went ‘Bong!’ and Harumafuji kept on hitting him 20 or 30 times. Takanoiwa was covering his head with his hands but kept on being hit.”

Another sumo wrestler said he heard that Harumafuji threatened Takanoiwa with an ice pick, but someone else said it was the younger wrestler who was wielding the pick.

Takanoiwa was taken to the hospital, concussed, and has a suspected skull fracture and a cerebrospi­nal fluid leak.

He had to bow out of the Grand Sumo Tournament in Kyushu, which began Nov. 12. Harumafuji also withdrew, apologizin­g for the disruption caused by the incident.

But this is where the story takes the twist that is causing ructions in the sumo world. The head of Takanoiwa’s stable — where wrestlers eat, sleep and train — didn’t keep the matter in the sumo world.

Instead of reporting it to the Japan Sumo Associatio­n, he went to the police and filed a complaint.

Then he waited two weeks to tell the sumo associatio­n he’d gone to the authoritie­s, prompting accusation­s he’d been deliberate­ly evasive.

This is widely being seen as an attempt to undermine the sumo associatio­n, which was apparently livid at the stable master’s actions.

The associatio­n has put a crisis management panel on the case.

“We will put every effort into clarifying the facts as soon as possible.

“We will mobilize all our resources and implement measures to prevent this kind of incident from occurring,” Nobuyoshi Hakkaku, chairman of the Japan Sumo Associatio­n, said.

The conservati­ve Yomiuri Shimbun, Japan’s biggest newspaper, said Harumafuji’s violence was “inexcusabl­e” and below the dignity of a yokozuna, the grand champions who are held to the highest standards.

“His primary duty to fulfil as a yokozuna is to act as a sparring partner for junior wrestlers in the sumo ring and display his strength, thereby inspiring them to work harder,” the paper wrote in an editorial.

The incident comes just as sumo was recovering its popularity after years of waning ticket sales. The sumo associatio­n has to act quickly and resolutely to make sure new sumo enthusiast­s don’t lose interest, the Yomiuri wrote.

The whole incident speaks to a much broader problem in sumo, said John Gunning, a former amateur wrestler turned commentato­r.

It shows the true nature of the sport, where wannabe wrestlers are often forced to endure a “secretive and violent Darwinian world” where they are forced to sit all night in stress positions and clean toilets at 4 a.m., he wrote in the Japan Times.

Compoundin­g the problem is a lifetime of repetitive brain trauma that is causing the kind of concussion­s that are now being tackled in football, but which have yet to become a subject for discussion in sumo.

So it’s hardly a surprise, Gunning wrote, when these “modern-day gladiators” fail to stop the aggression they are trained day and night to develop “from spilling over into their lives outside the ring.”

Stay tuned; this case isn’t over yet.

 ?? JIJI PRESS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Sumo wrestler Kisenosato is thrown out of the ring by Mongolia’s Harumafuji at the Spring Grand Sumo Tournament in Osaka in March of this year. Harumafuji is accused of assaulting a younger wrestler at a bar in Tottori, Japan.
JIJI PRESS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Sumo wrestler Kisenosato is thrown out of the ring by Mongolia’s Harumafuji at the Spring Grand Sumo Tournament in Osaka in March of this year. Harumafuji is accused of assaulting a younger wrestler at a bar in Tottori, Japan.
 ?? KEITH TSUJI/GETTY IMAGES ?? Sumo grand champion Harumafuji performs Dohyo-iri, a ring purificati­on ritual, during a Dezuiri ceremony in Tokyo.
KEITH TSUJI/GETTY IMAGES Sumo grand champion Harumafuji performs Dohyo-iri, a ring purificati­on ritual, during a Dezuiri ceremony in Tokyo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada