
Onosato speaks at a press conference after a ceremony to notify him of his promotion to ozeki in Ami, Ibaraki Prefecture, on Wednesday.
11:41 JST, September 26, 2024
AMI, Ibaraki (Jiji Press) — The board of the Japan Sumo Association on Wednesday unanimously decided to promote sekiwake Onosato to the second-highest rank of ozeki.
The 24-year-old native of the central Japan prefecture of Ishikawa, whose real name is Daiki Nakamura, won the September grand tournament that ended on Sunday for his second grand tournament victory in the makuuchi top division of professional sumo.
After being notified of the promotion by association envoys sent to the Nishonoseki stable in the town of Ami in Ibaraki Prefecture, Onosato said, “Determined not to dishonor the rank of ozeki, I will pursue ‘sumodo’ [the way of sumo] with a goal of becoming a one-of-a-kind sumo wrestler.”
Onosato made his professional sumo debut in last year’s summer grand tournament at the No. 10 rank in the makushita third-highest division.
It has taken only nine grand tournaments from his debut for Onosato to become an ozeki, the fastest ascent up the sumo ladder since the start of the country’s Showa era (1926-1989).
Onosato is still sporting a “chonmage” topknot, because his hair is not long enough for the characteristic “oicho” hairstyle of makuuchi and second-tier juryo wrestlers. According to the association, an ozeki without the oicho hairstyle is unknown.
He will be the first ozeki among sumo wrestlers trained by stablemaster Nishonoseki, former yokozuna grand champion Kisenosato.
"Sports" POPULAR ARTICLE
-
Aonishiki Caps Chaos in Kyushu Grand Sumo Tournament with Playoff Win over Hoshoryu
-
Yoshinobu Yamamoto Cheered by Los Angeles Lakers Fans at NBA Game
-
Tokyo 2025 Deaflympics Kick Off, Record Number of Athletes Set to Participate
-
Aonishiki Stuns Hoshoryu to Keep Kyushu Title Hopes Alive
-
Ukrainian Sumo Wrestler Sekiwake Aonishiki to be Promoted to Ozeki
JN ACCESS RANKING
-
Govt Plans to Urge Municipalities to Help Residents Cope with Rising Prices
-
Japan Resumes Scallop Exports to China
-
Japan Prime Minister Takaichi Vows to Have Country Exit Deflation, Closely Monitor Economic Indicators
-
Japan to Charge Foreigners More for Residence Permits, Looking to Align with Western Countries
-
Japan GDP Down Annualized 1.8% in July-Sept.

