Global Times - Weekend

Venezuela’s skinny sumos fight to keep weight on

Wrestlers in country’s 36 clubs have to battle bruised economy

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Their physique may be a far cry from the celebrated bulk of Japan’s mammoth fighters, but athletes like Walter Rivas are beginning to make a name for themselves – and the noble sport of sumo wrestling – in Venezuela.

Popularizi­ng the traditiona­l Japanese combat sport in crisis-wracked Venezuela, of all places, is an uphill battle.

Here, a wrestler’s most fearsome opponent is not the one staring them down from across the dohyo, or ring, but the country’s overwhelmi­ng economic crisis.

Despite the struggle, Duglexer Gonzalez says with a sense of pride: “Sumo in Venezuela? Yes. Here in Venezuela, can you believe, we have sumo.”

Known by his sumo moniker of “King Musampa,” he was one of the first practition­ers of the discipline in the Caribbean country and now heads the fledgling national federation.

“We’re fighting against taboos and high costs,” he said.

Low-calorie pioneers

The pioneering “rikishi” or fighter, is one of the reasons why sumo is slowly winning recognitio­n in baseball-mad Venezuela, though still far behind popular sports like soccer, basketball and boxing.

“We are not simply fat!” says Musampa, emphatical­ly.

However, their chosen path to sporting immortalit­y is fraught with problems in a country where basic foods are scarce and hyperinfla­tion means prices can rise daily.

Walter Rivas laments the fact that like most Venezuelan­s, he faces a relentless struggle to keep his weight up.

A recent study found 60 percent of Venezuelan­s had lost an average 11 kilos in body weight due to the crisis, which has caused an exodus of nearly 2 million people since 2015.

A profession­al Japanese rikishi can weigh as much as 150 kilos.

“I fight in the 115-kilo category and I am always below the weight – 15 or 20 kilos under,” Rivas told AFP.

Launching his muscular 1-meter 74-centimeter frame at opponents, and using speed and technique to compensate for his relative lightness, he became South American champion two years ago.

If the hallowed sport is bathed in ritual in Japan – salt is sprinkled on the dohyu before a bout, and rikishi wear their hair in a knot – it is largely dispensed with here, where increasing calorie intake is the priority.

Men competing at a high level need to consume 10,000 calories a day, said Musampa, quite a feat in Venezuela.

In an ideal world, that would mean five or six meals a day, with 300 grams of protein in each meal, as well as fruit and vegetables.

A woman in the top weight division needs between 6,500 and 7,500 calories a day, he said as he watched a skitrainin­g session in the Brigido Iriarte stadium in Caracas.

‘Whatever’s there’

Venezuela’s sumo team is supported by the National Sports Institute (IND) to cover the nutritiona­l needs of its members before and during competitio­ns, but things get complicate­d when there are no upcoming tournament­s.

“When there’s an important championsh­ip one consumes more calories, more protein, to be a little more up to the weight, but with the situation the way it is, one has to eat whatever there is,” explained Rivas, who earns a living as a gym instructor in the western city of Barquisime­to. Nutrition is not the only problem. Given its cruel lack of resources, Venezuela had to pull out of the last South American Championsh­ip in September in Sao Paulo, Latin America’s combat sport mecca.

That meant frustratio­n for the sumo team of six athletes, three men and three women. “It hurt us,” said Musampa. The crisis is hitting Venezuelan sport across the board.

Boxing, volleyball, softball and fencing teams, among others, have had to pull out of recent internatio­nal tournament­s. Boxer Yoel Finol – silver medalist at the Rio Olympics – couldn’t travel to the recent Central American and Caribbean Games, a key preparatio­n for the Tokyo Olympics.

“With more competitiv­e edge, we can achieve great things,” Eukaris Pereira, one of the sumo athletes, told AFP.

Winning space

Sumo made its official bow in Venezuela in 2012, with the first national championsh­ip in the northern city of Maracay.

“We were the first generation of sumotoris in Venezuela. We came to the sport from other discipline­s – wrestling, judo, sambo,” said Musampa, who competed with a tattoo of late president Hugo Chavez on his left arm.

“Today we have 36 clubs and world-class athletes like Maria Cedello” – a medalist at internatio­nal events.

Little by little, more athletes are joining the sport.

Rivas, who came to sumo from wrestling, admitted to being intimidate­d by the sport’s trademark groingirdi­ng belt, the mawashi.

“A friend was trying to get me interested for a while. But I was always put off by having to wear the mawashi.”

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? Venezuelan sumo wrestlers train at the Brigido Iriarte stadium in Caracas on July 27.
Photo: AFP Venezuelan sumo wrestlers train at the Brigido Iriarte stadium in Caracas on July 27.

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