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Kasugafuji Akihiro - 春日富士 晃大 (born February 20, 1966 - March 9, 2017) was a Japanese professional sumo wrestler from Oshika, Miyagi. He made his debut in March 1981 and last wrestled for Ajigawa stable. He reached the makuuchi division in March 1989 and has one special prize. His highest rank was maegashira 1 and he retired in September 1996.

Early Life[]

Iwanaga was born in the won of Oshika in Miyagi Prefecture, but he was raised in Kawasaki, Kanagawa. He attended Sakuramoto Junior High School and after graduating, he joined Kasugayama stable.

Career[]

Early Career[]

He made his professional debut in March 1981, joining Kasugayama stable. In September 1982, he won all seven matches and was placed in a playoff for the jonidan yusho, but he lost in the second round to Asahisato. Nevertheless, he was promoted to the sandanme in the following November 1982 tournament and he changed his shikona from his surname to "Kasugafuji" (春日富士) in May 1983. He was promoted to makushita in January 1984. In November 1987, he posted a 5-2 record at the rank of makushita 1 which earned him a juryo promotion in the January 1988 tournament.

Juryo Career[]

Kasugafuji made his juryo debut in January 1988 and he posted an 8-7 record in his first tournament as a sekitori. After a couple of lackluster tournaments, Kasugafuji posted a 9-6 record in September 1988. He followed with a strong 10-5 record and a 9-6 record and was promoted to makuuchi in March 1989.

Makuuchi Career[]

He reached the top makuuchi division in March 1989, reaching his highest rank of maegashira 1 in January 1990. In the same year his stable closed when his stable-master, former maegashira Onobori, retired and he moved to Ajigawa stable. He had another change of coach in 1993 when the stablemaster of Ajigawa, ex-sekiwake Mutsuarashi, retired due to ill-health. Unusually, Kasugafuji had previously fought his new stablemaster, ex-yokozuna Asahifuji, in tournament competition. He earned a special prize for Fighting Spirit in July 1990. He fought in the top division for a total of 42 tournaments, making his final appearance in May 1996.

Retirement from Sumo[]

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Kasugayama Oyakata (c. 2012)

He retired in September 1996, after more than 15 years in sumo and 1060 consecutive matches. He became an elder of the Japan Sumo Association under the name of Kasugayama Oyakata. He re-established the Kasugayama stable in 1997 and coached the Korean-born wrestler Kasugao to the top division in 2003. Kasugao was one of a number of wrestlers force to retire in 2011 because of a match-fixing scandal, and as a result his stable lost its only sekitori. In February 2012 he was elected to the Sumo Association's board of directors, and as a result stood down from the day-to-day running of the stable. He passed control over to the former Hamanishiki and switched elder names with him, becoming Ikazuchi Oyakata.

He was forced to resign from the Sumo Association in September 2012 in a scandal involving a bogus expense claim to cover up an affair with a female employee of the Association.

Kasugayama Stable Dispute[]

In October 2013 he sued Kasugayama Oyakata (former maegashira Hamanishiki) for not paying the rent of Kasugayama stable. Kasugayama counter-sued over ex-Kasugafuji's failure to hand over control of the elder stock (toshiyori-kabu). The case went to trial in July 2014. Kasugafuji's legal team claimed that in 35 years as a coach (from his retirement as an active wrestler at age 30 to his mandatory retirement as a coach at age 65) he would have earned 430 million yen from the Sumo Association. The two sides settled the stable rent issue in June 2015, with the current Kasugayama agreeing to move to new premises, but Kasugafuji continued to refuse to hand over the kabu certificate and the ongoing legal dispute led to Hamanishiki being forced to dissolve Kasugayama stable in October 2016 and resign from the Sumo Association altogether in January 2017. The remaining issues were settled in February 2017.

Death[]

According to Sumo Association officials, he died on March 9, 2017. The cause of death was not disclosed at the request of his family, although it was reported to be heart failure.

Fighting Style[]

Kasugafuji's Fighting Style

Kasugafuji defeats Kyokudozan by hikiotoshi (pull down)

Kasugafuji favored pushing and thrusting (oshi-sumo) techniques and his most common winning kimarite was oshidashi. Although not his preferred style he was also competent on the opponent's mawashi using grappling (yotsu-sumo) techniques.

Record[]

Division Results[]

  • Total: 518-542-5/1060 (94 basho)
  • Makuuchi: 289-341/630 (42 basho)
  • Juryo: 78-72-5/150 (11 basho)
  • Makushita: 66-53/119 (17 basho)
  • Sandanme: 47-44/91 (13 basho)
  • Jonidan: 33-30/63 (9 basho)
  • Jonokuchi: 5-2/7 (1 basho)

Achievements[]

  • Special Prizes: Fighting Spirit Prize (1)

Shikona History[]

  • Iwanaga Yasunori (1981.03 - 1983.03)
  • Kasugafuji Akihiro (1983.05 - 1996.09)

Gallery[]

Sources[]

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