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Kotomitsuki Keiji : ウィキペディア英語版
Kotomitsuki Keiji

Kotomitsuki Keiji (born April 11, 1976 as Keiji Tamiya) is a former sumo wrestler from Okazaki City, Aichi Prefecture, Japan. A former amateur champion, he turned professional in 1999. He reached the top ''makuuchi'' division in November 2000 and won one ''yūshō'' or tournament championship, in September 2001. He was a runner-up in eight other tournaments, and earned thirteen ''sanshō'' or special prizes. He is one of five wrestlers in the history of sumo to receive all three ''sanshō'' in the same tournament, accomplishing the feat in the November 2000 ''honbasho''. After a record 22 tournaments at ''sekiwake'', he achieved promotion to sumo's second highest rank of ''ōzeki'' in July 2007 upon winning 35 out of 45 bouts in three consecutive tournaments. This made him at 31 the oldest man to reach ''ōzeki'' in the modern era. He wrestled for Sadogatake stable. On July 4, 2010, he was expelled from professional sumo by the Japan Sumo Association for his involvement in an illegal gambling ring.
==Early career==
Kotomitsuki had an extremely successful college sumo career, winning a record 27 amateur national titles while at Nihon University. He made his professional debut in March 1999. Because of his achievements as an amateur, he was given ''makushita tsukedashi'' status and allowed to leapfrog the lower divisions. Initially fighting under the ''shikona'' of Kototamiya, adapted from his own surname, he adopted the name of Kotomitsuki upon reaching the ''jūryō'' division in November 1999. He was promoted to the top ''makuuchi'' division in May 2000 but missed the entire tournament through injury. On his proper debut three tournaments later, he was runner-up to ''yokozuna'' Akebono with an outstanding 13-2 record.
He was awarded all three special prizes on offer; a rare achievement. He was immediately promoted to ''sekiwake''.
Kotomitsuki took his only top division ''yūshō'' or championship in September 2001, whilst ranked as a ''maegashira''. He won with a 13-2 record in a tournament that saw only one ''ōzeki'' and one ''yokozuna'' complete all 15 days. He finished in third place with a strong 12-3 score in January 2002 but suffered a broken jaw on the 14th day of the Osaka tournament in March, which required surgery and forced him to miss the following tournament in May. Due to his stablemaster not submitting the paperwork in time, he failed to get public injury status and fell back to the ''maegashira'' ranks. He recovered to produce another runner-up performance in September 2002, and was also runner-up in September 2003 and January 2004, each time from a ''maegashira'' position.
Kotomitsuki holds the record for most tournaments spent at ''sekiwake'' in the modern era. Although he could only manage four wins at his first attempt at ''sekiwake'', he was ranked there for 22 tournaments in total, including eleven in a row from November 2005 to July 2007. For much of that time he was consistent rather than spectacular, posting a succession of 8-7 scores in 2006.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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