Isegahama stable

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Isegahama stable was a heya or stable of sumo wrestlers, part of the Tatsunami-Isegahama ichimon, or group of stables.


Meeting between Taniuchi Shotaro (head of the Tokyo Detention House, left), Dewanoumi Hidemitsu (former yokozuna Tsunenohana, center), and Isegahama Kandayu (former sekiwake Kiyosegawa, right) of the Great Japan Sumo Association for the cooperation on a constitutional monument erection. Tokyo-Honganzi-Kenseihi-7.jpg
Meeting between Taniuchi Shōtarō (head of the Tokyo Detention House, left), Dewanoumi Hidemitsu (former yokozuna Tsunenohana, center), and Isegahama Kandayu (former sekiwake Kiyosegawa, right) of the Great Japan Sumo Association for the cooperation on a constitutional monument erection.

It was founded in 1859 by former komusubi Arakuma. [1] It was led from 1929 by former sekiwake Kiyosegawa. His daughter married the sixth head, the 38th yokozuna Terukuni Manzō who led the stable from 1961 until his death in 1977. He had already made arrangements to pass control over to former ōzeki Kiyokuni Katsuo before his death. [1] After Kiyokuni's wife and children were killed in the Japan Airlines Flight 123 crash in 1985, the stable began to decline. He remarried and moved the stable's location, but his new wife was not as interested in helping to run the stable, [2] and recruitment suffered. Its last top division wrestler Wakasegawa retired in 1992, and after jūryō division wrestler Kiyonofuji fell to makushita in January 1994, the stable had no more sekitori. By the end only two active wrestlers remained. [2]

After Kiyokuni reached the mandatory retirement age of 65 in November 2006, it was led temporarily by the former Katsuhikari, who wound up the stable on February 1, 2007, moving to Kiriyama stable.

A different incarnation of Isegahama stable was founded as Ajigawa stable in 1979, before being re-named by yokozuna Asahifuji in November 2007. Asahifuji's decision to switch to the Isegahama name can be seen as an attempt to restore his ichimon's reputation (the ichimon was known as Tatsunami-Isegahama for many years before becoming solely Tatsunami; as a result of the success of the renamed stable the ichimon is now solely known as Isegahama).

Notable wrestlers

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References

  1. 1 2 Sharnoff, Lora (1993). Grand Sumo. Weatherhill. ISBN   0-8348-0283-X.
  2. 1 2 Kuroda, Joe (October 2006). "Isegahama Seinosuke – Ozeki Kiyokuni Katsuo". sumofanmag.com. Retrieved February 17, 2007.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Find Rikishi - Isegahama". Sumo Reference. Retrieved 20 February 2017.