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Daimanazuru Kenji : ウィキペディア英語版 | Daimanazuru Kenji
Daimanazuru Kenji (born January 16, 1977 as Kenji Omae) is a former sumo wrestler from Kawakami, Yoshino District, Nara, Japan. He began his professional career in 1992, and spent a total of 19 tournaments in the top two divisions, peaking at ''maegashira'' 16 in 2006. He retired at the end of the January 2010 tournament and has chosen to work outside of the Sumo Association. ==Career== He made his professional debut in May 1992, joining Asahiyama stable, then run by the former wrestler Wakafutase. In 1997 his stablemaster died suddenly and for the remainder of his career he was coached by former ''ozeki'' Daiju. He initially fought under his own surname of Omae, before adopting the ''shikona'' of Futasewaka in 1994. He switched to his familiar name of Daimanazuru at the beginning of 2000. He reached ''sekitori'' status in November 2003, after more than eleven years in the unsalaried divisions, by winning the ''makushita'' tournament championship or ''yusho'' with a perfect 7-0 record. He made his ''jūryō'' debut alongside future ''yokozuna'' Hakuho. After two losing scores in January and March 2004 he slipped back to ''makushita'', but he returned to ''jūryō'' in January 2005. He made steady progress, rising slowly up the ''jūryō'' division with a succession of 8-7 scores, which was enough to earn him promotion to the top ''makuuchi'' division for the July 2006 tournament. It had taken him 85 tournaments to reach ''makuuchi'' from his professional debut, the seventh slowest ever. However, his single tournament there saw him win only two bouts, against veterans Buyuzan and Tochisakae, and he was demoted straight back to ''jūryō''. In September 2007 he suffered an eye injury and had to withdraw on the 4th day, resulting in demotion back to the unsalaried ''makushita'' division. By July 2008 he had fallen to ''Makushita'' 26, the same rung on the ladder as fellow former top division wrestler Takahama. He scored six wins against one loss in that tournament however, and took part in an eight-way playoff for the ''makushita'' championship. He missed out on his third title, eliminated in the semifinal stage by Yamamotoyama. Restricted by a nagging shoulder injury, a series of mediocre performances after that saw him fall to ''Makushita'' 54 for the January 2010 basho, his lowest rank since entering the ''makushita'' division at the end of 1997. Despite recording 4 wins against 3 losses, he announced his retirement after the tournament at the age of 33. He did not fight in enough ''sekitori'' tournaments to qualify for a ''toshiyori'' (elder) position, and will be leaving the sumo world to work in a Tokyo based firm.
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Daimanazuru Kenji」の詳細全文を読む
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