Dejima Takeharu - 出島 武春 (born March 21, 1974) is a former Japanese professional sumo wrestler from Kanazawa, Ishikawa. He made his debut in March 1996 and last wrestled for Musashigawa stable. He reached the makuuchi division in March 1997 and has 10 special prizes, 6 kinboshi and 1 top division championship. His highest rank was ozeki and he retired in July 2009.
Early Life[]
Dejima did sumo at elementary school, where he was a rival of fellow top division wrestler Tochinonada. He later continued his amateur career at Kanazawa Shiritsu Naruwa Junior High School and Kanazawa Municipal Technical High School. During his time in high school, he won the national championship and became a high school yokozuna. After graduation, he enrolled at Chuo University's Department of Law and also joined the school's sumo club. He had a successful career and became College Yokozuna in his fourth year.
Career[]
Early Career[]
Dejima joined professional sumo in March 1996 at the age of 22, recruited by Musashigawa stable, home to then ozeki Musashimaru. Due to his amateur success he was given makushita tsukedashi status and was allowed to make his debut in the third makushita division. He did not adopt a traditional shikona, and he only ever used his real name as an active wrestler. He was promoted to juryo in September 1996 after only three tournaments in makushita.
Juryo Career[]
Dejima produced a strong 11-4 record in his juryo debut and followed with a solid 9-6 record. In his third tournament, Dejima won the juryo yusho with a 12-3 record and earned promotion to the makuuchi division after six tournaments into his professional career. His rise was so rapid that his hair had not yet grown long enough to be fashioned into the traditional oichonmage topknot.
Makuuchi Career[]
Dejima scored an impressive 11 wins in his top division debut, and was awarded two special prizes, for technique and fighting spirit. After another 11–4 score in September, in which he won two more prizes and earned his first two kinboshi or gold stars for defeating yokozuna, he made his san'yaku debut at sekiwake in November 1997. However, after winning five of his first six matches, he injured himself on the seventh day and missed the next two tournaments. He made a full recovery and after reappearing in May 1998 he quickly returned to the san'yaku ranks at komusubi in September 1998, a rank he held for four straight tournaments.
Ozeki Career[]
Dejima returned to sekiwake in May 1999 and produced a strong 11–4 record, and in the following basho in July 1999 he won his first top division yusho or tournament championship, defeating yokozuna Akebono and Takanohana and both ozeki to score 13–2 and then beating Akebono once again in a playoff. Dejima chose to henka the yokozuna in this bout, for which he received some criticism.

Dejima accepts the Emperor's Cup after winning the July 1999 tournament
Nevertheless, in addition to his yusho he was awarded all three special prizes on offer, for technique, outstanding performance and fighting spirit. He was only the second wrestler after Takahanada to achieve this feat. After the tournament his promotion to ozeki was confirmed. He was the fourth former amateur champion, after Yutakayama, Wajima and Asashio, to reach sumo's second highest rank. His stablemates Musoyama and Miyabiyama subsequently made ozeki also, in March and May 2000 respectively. With Musashimaru at yokozuna, Dejima had three of his colleagues in the top two ranks, an advantage as sumo wrestlers never fight members of their own stables except in playoffs. Dejima held onto his ozeki rank for two years, with his best result being an 11–4 score in March 2000, but in July 2001 he was forced to pull out of the tournament with only three wins. As he had also made a losing score in May 2001, he was demoted from ozeki. Returning in September, he needed ten wins to return to ozeki but still in poor condition he could only manage a 5–10 record.
Later Career[]

Dejima defeats Yokozuna Asashoryu to claim his last kinboshi (c. 2007)
Persistent injuries, particularly to his knees and ankles, prevented Dejima from making any sustained attempt to regain ozeki status. Aside from an 11–4 runner-up performance in January 2003 which briefly returned him to san'yaku, he largely remained in the maegashira ranks. He competed for 48 tournaments after dropping from the ozeki rank – longer than any other former ozeki in history until Miyabiyama overtook him. Near the end of his career he was still capable of producing strong results, as he proved in January 2007 by defeating Yokozuna Asashoryu, the only wrestler to do so in that tournament.
In May 2007 he produced a strong 12–3 record, his second runner-up performance in makuuchi and his highest score in a tournament since his title win, and was awarded his fourth fighting spirit prize. In November 2007 he earned ten wins from the maegashira 2 rank, and won promotion to komusubi for the January 2008 tournament. His return to the san'yaku ranks after 27 tournaments away was the third slowest in the modern era. He was however able to win only three bouts there. In November 2008 he won his first six matches, but then lost nine in a row. In May 2009, ranked at maegashira 12, he seemed in danger of demotion from makuuchi after recording only three wins in the first nine days, but he made a partial recovery to score 7–8.
Retirement from Sumo[]
In the July 2009 tournament, which came exactly ten years after his championship win, Dejima announced his retirement from active competition after suffering nine losses in the first eleven days, rather than face demotion to the second juryo division. Dejima has stayed in the sumo world as a coach at Musashigawa stable (now Fujishima stable) under the elder name Onaruto oyakata. His official retirement ceremony or danpatsu-shiki was held at the Ryogoku Kokugikan on 29 May 2010.
Fighting Style[]

Dejima defeats Asashoryu by oshitaoshi (frontal push down)
Dejima was an oshi-sumo specialist, favouring pushing and thrusting techniques (tsuki-oshi) over fighting on the mawashi or belt. His most common winning technique was oshidashi, or push-out, followed closely by yorikiri or force out. These two techniques accounted for around 70 percent of his wins. He rarely employed throwing moves, his most common being the beltless sukuinage or scoop throw which he used for only 3 percent of his victories.
He was famed for his explosive start at the tachi-ai and so was often prone to being sidestepped at the initial charge. The technique which he has been defeated most often, aside from yorikiri, is hataki-komi, a slap down move that is often the result of a sidestep. He was also vulnerable to the pull down, hiki-otoshi.
He suffered from knee and ankle problems in his latter years and had lost much of his speed and mobility. He remarked upon this at his retirement press conference, saying, "I have been battling with injuries and old wounds for some years now."
Record[]
Division Results[]
- Total: 595-495-98/1085 (81 basho)
- Makuuchi: 546-478-98/1019 (75 basho)
- Juryo: 32-13/45 (3 basho)
- Makushita: 17-4/21 (3 basho)
Championships[]
- 1 Makuuchi Championship (July 1999)
- 1 Juryo Championship (January 1997)
- 1 Makushita Championship (May 1996)
Achievements[]
- Special Prizes: Fighting Spirit Prize (4), Outstanding Performance Prize (3), Technique Prize (3)
- Kinboshi: 6: (2) Akebono, (2) Takanohana, (1) Wakanohana, (1) Asashoryu
Shikona History[]
- Dejima Takeharu (1996.03 - 2009.07)