The Standard (St. Catharines)

Ancient sport of sumo needs some brighter days

- JIM ARMSTRONG

TOKYO — The most damage inflicted in sumo in recent times has been to the image of Japan’s tradition-steeped national sport.

An alcohol-fuelled restaurant brawl that left a Mongolian wrestler with a fractured skull and a sexual assault scandal involving the sport’s highest-ranked referee have rocked the sport in recent months. Those episodes followed a match-fixing investigat­ion in 2011 and the death of a teenage wrestler in training in 2007 that have tainted sumo over the last decade.

Organizers are hoping to restore its battered reputation when the Spring Grand Sumo tournament starts on the weekend.

Takanoiwa, who fractured his skull in an altercatio­n with former Grand Champion Harumafuji in a restaurant last October, is hoping to make a comeback at the Osaka event.

“I’m just focusing on doing my best,” the 28-year-old Takanoiwa told reporters last week during a training session for the tournament. “It will take a bit more time to be ready.”

A healthy Takanoiwa wouldn’t solve all sumo’s problems but would be a big step in the road to recovery.

He was hurt after a group of Mongolian wrestlers had assembled at a restaurant during a regional tour.

Harumafuji was reported to have become aggravated when Takanoiwa repeatedly checked his mobile phone while the two were conversing.

In addition to Harumafuji, who was forced to retire last November in the wake of the incident, Grand champion Hakuho was also present and had to defend his inability to intervene before the situation got out of control.

The altercatio­n dominated news programs and headlines for weeks. Adding to the bad publicity, the sport’s top-ranked referee was forced to resign earlier this year over a sexual harassment scandal.

In the wake of the scandal, though, Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko didn’t attend January’s new year tournament for the first time in four years.

Weeks after that, Egyptian wrestler Osunaarash­i was caught driving without a licence after a vehicle collision and was ordered to pay a $4,700 fine.

The recent incidents are just the latest scandals to rock the sumo world. In 2011, the JSA decided to cancel the Spring tournament after revelation­s that 14 wrestlers were involved with match-fixing.

In 2010, grand champion Asashoryu announced his retirement following reports that he injured a man while intoxicate­d.

In the most troubling case in 2007, the 17-year-old wrestler Takashi Saito died when he was beaten over the head with a beer bottle at the direction of his trainer.

Saito’s stable master Junichi Yamamoto and three wrestlers were subsequent­ly arrested and charged with manslaught­er. Yamamoto was sentenced to six years in prison.

The incident brought substantia­l political pressure to the governance of the sport in Japan.

In response to the latest scandals this year, the Japan Sumo Associatio­n announced that a third-party committee has been convened and will question every member of the JSA. About 900 people, including active wrestlers and elders, will be included in the inquiry.

“Our goal is the preservati­on of sumo,” committee chair Keiichi Tadaki, a former prosecutor general, said.

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