Asahisato Kenji - 旭里 憲治 (born November 9, 1965) is a former Japanese professional sumo wrestler from Ikeda, Osaka. He made his debut in March 1981 and last wrestled for Oshima stable. He reached the makuuchi division in March 1990. His highest rank was maegashira 14 and he retired in January 1998.
Early Life[]
Masuda played baseball from his 4th year at elementary school to his 1st year at junior high school. He switched to judo in his second year of junior high school. He aspired to be a sumo wrestler and was introduced to Oshima stable by an official at the Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium. After graduating high school, he joined Oshima stable and made his professional debut in March 1981.
Career[]
Early Career[]
He began as Asahisato but from 1983 to 1987 was known as Kyokutenyu before reverting to his original shikona. He won the jonidan yusho in September 1982 and was promoted to sandanme in the following November tournament. He was promoted to makushita in July 1984. In November 1988, he posted a solid 5-2 record at the rank of makushita 3 and was promoted to juryo in the following January 1989 tournament.
Juryo Career[]
He became the first new sekitori of the Heisei period when he was promoted to the juryo division in January 1989. He produced a solid 9-6 record in his first juryo tournament. He rose steadily, but posted unspectacular results. In January 1990, he produced an 8-7 record at the top of juryo and was promoted to makuuchi in the following March tournament.
Makuuchi Career[]
In his debut tournament in makuuchi he had seven wins and seven losses coming into the final day but lost to Oginohana who was also on 7–7 and got demoted back to juryo. He reached the top division three more times, but in each case had make-koshi, or a losing record and he was not able to climb higher than the rank of maegashira 14 which he had first made in his debut top division tournament.
Later Career[]
He fell back to the makushita division for three tournaments from November 1994 to March 1995 but returned to the paid ranks after winning the makushita division championship with a perfect 7–0 record. He was demoted to makushita again for three tournaments in 1997 but again got promoted back. Overall, he fought 1095 career matches across 102 tournaments, with 553 wins, 543 losses and just three absences due to injury. He spent a total of 49 tournaments as a sekitori, 45 in juryo and four in makuuchi.
Retirement from Sumo[]

Nakagawa oyakata (c. 2019)
He retired in January 1998 and became an elder in the Japan Sumo Association under the name Kumagatani, although this kabu was borrowed from the former maegashira Yoshinomine who had retired from the Sumo Association two years before upon reaching 65 years of age. In 2004 he switched to the Nakagawa kabu after the takeover of Miyagino stable by the former Kanechika meant the Kumegatani kabu was needed by the former Chikubayama. Asahisato transferred to Oitekaze stable where he continued to work as a coach. In January 2017 he branched out from Oitekaze stable to become head coach of the Nakagawa stable, which is composed of wrestlers previously from the closed Kasugayama stable which had merged with Oitekaze when its previous head coach, former maegashira Hamanishiki, was forced to step down.
In July 2020 Nakagawa stable was closed down by the Sumo Association after three wrestlers complained of verbal and physical abuse. Nakagawa was allowed to stay as an elder but was demoted two rungs in the Sumo Association's hierarchy to plain toshiyori status. He was transferred to Tokitsukaze stable with his wrestlers being dispersed among several different stables. Nakagawa apologized to the other stablemasters present at the disciplinary meeting, saying "I didn’t know that my disciples took my words and deeds as (abuse)." He escaped outright dismissal as the wrestlers were not injured and were not seeking further punishment.
Personal Life[]
- Asahisato's hobbies are sleeping, karaoke, and baseball.
- During a jungyo tour In 1992, Asahisato met his future wife at a restaurant in Kumamoto and they later got married in January 1993.
Fighting Style[]

Asahisato defeats Daiki by uwatenage (overarm throw)
Asahisato was a yotsu-sumo wrestler who preferring grappling techniques to pushing or thrusting. When grabbing the mawashi or belt he used a migi-yotsu (left hand outside, right hand inside) position. He regularly used his left hand outside grip to win by uwatenage or overarm throw.
Record[]
Division Results[]
- Total: 553-543-3/1095 (102 basho)
- Makuuchi: 21-39/60 (4 basho)
- Juryo: 329-343-3/671 (45 basho)
- Makushita: 115-95/210 (30 basho)
- Sandanme: 38-32/70 (10 basho)
- Jonidan: 46-31/77 (11 basho)
- Jonokuchi: 4-3/7 (1 basho)
Championships[]
- 1 Makushita Championship (March 1995)
- 1 Jonidan Championship (September 1982)
Shikona History[]
- Masuda Kenji (1981.03 - 1981.03)
- Asahisato Kenji (1981.05 - 1983.05)
- Kyokutenyu Kenji (1983.07 - 1987.01)
- Asahisato Kenji (1987.03 - 1998.01)