Kotonowaka Terumasa - 琴ノ若 晴將 (born May 15, 1968) is a former Japanese professional sumo wrestler from Obanazawa, Yamagata. He made his debut in May 1984 and wrestled for Sadogatake stable. He reached the makuuchi division in November 1990 and has 7 special prizes as well as 8 kinboshi. His highest rank was sekiwake and he retired in November 2005.
Early Life[]
At junior high school he practiced judo and shot put, and even represented his prefecture at the All Tohoku Shot put Championships. He was already 1.87 m (6 ft 1 1⁄2 in) tall by the age of 14. He was scouted into sumo by a supporter of Sadogatake stable,of which he is now the head coach(shisho). He had intended to join in March 1984 alongside Kotonishiki, but failed the physical because of high blood pressure, delaying his entry by two months.
Career[]
Early Career[]
At first he wrestled under the name Imano and then Kotokonno before finally settling on Kotonowaka in 1988. He was promoted to sandanme in January 1986 and makushita in March 1987. Initially he could not establish himself in makushita and he won the sandanme yusho on two separate occasions. In May 1990, Kotonowaka was ranked at makushita 2 and he produced a strong 6-1 record which secured him a spot in juryo.
Juryo Career[]
He made his juryo debut in July 1990 and posted a solid 9-6 record. In the following tournament he participated in a playoff for the yusho after producing an 11-4 record, but lost to Oginohana by uwatenage (overarm throw). Nevertheless, he was promoted to makuuchi in November 1990 after just two tournaments in juryo.
Makuuchi Career[]
He first reached makuuchi in November 1990 and remained continuously in the top division from March 1991. He advanced several times into the san'yaku ranks, first making komusubi in September 1993. However he had to wait until January 1999 to achieve his highest rank of sekiwake, following a strong 10-5 showing at komusubi the previous November.

Kotonowaka prepares for his upcoming match (c. 2000)
Kotonowaka never won a tournament, but he nevertheless earned eight kinboshi or gold stars for victories against yokozuna while a maegashira, with three such wins coming against Takanohana. He defeated Asashoryu twice as a yokozuna, and also looked to have defeated him in July 2004, but the judges controversially called for a rematch after deciding that Asashoryu had in fact not hit the ground before Kotonowaka touched down. Kotonowaka lost the rematch, but NHK received calls from viewers saying that Asashoryu was shini-tai ("dead body") and should have lost the first bout. He also received five Fighting Spirit and two Outstanding Achievement prizes in the course of his long career, the first coming in July 1995, nearly five years after his top division debut. He was ranked in the top division for 90 tournaments, which is the eighth best in history, and he was one of only a handful of wrestlers to win over 600 top division bouts. He was relatively injury-free until March 2000, when he suffered a serious injury to his left knee in training which was to bother him for the rest of his career. He injured the knee again in November 2003 and was the last wrestler to be able to take advantage of the kosho seido (public injury) system before its abolition, sitting out the January 2004 tournament without affecting his ranking.
Retirement from Sumo[]
During the 2005 November tournament, in which, at 37, he was the oldest rikishi in his division, he announced his retirement. He took over immediately as stable master of Sadogatake stable, as the previous head, former yokozuna Kotozakura, had reached the mandatory retirement age of 65. Kotonowaka had been in line to inherit the stable ever since he had married Kotozakura's daughter in March 1996, and changed his legal name from Mitsuya Konno to Mitsuya Kamatani.

Kotonowaka celebrates his son's makuuchi promotion (c. 2020)
Kotonowaka oversaw the promotion of Kotomitsuki to ozeki in July 2007, and Kotooshu's first top division championship in May 2008. The first wrestler from his stable to be promoted to the top division since he took over was Kotokasuga, also in May 2008. He produced his first new sekitori, Kotokuni, in January 2009, followed by Kotoyutaka in July 2009, although neither were able to maintain a position in juryo .
In July 2010 Kotomitsuki was dismissed from sumo for illegal betting on professional baseball, and Sadogatake was punished for his lack of supervision of his top wrestler by being demoted two ranks in the Sumo Association's hierarchy.
In 2011 Sadogatake saw Kotoyuki reach the sekitori ranks, and Kotoshogiku was promoted to ozeki, the first Japanese wrestler to reach the rank since Kotomitsuki. Kotoyuki became his first makuuchi debutant in January 2013. Since then Kotoeko, Kotoshoho and his own son, also known for a time as Kotonowaka and now the second ozeki Kotozakura, have reached makuuchi.
In March 2022 Sadogatake was elected to the Japan Sumo Association's board of directors. In January 2023 he took over as the head of the judging department following the resignation of Isegahama.
Personal Life[]
- His good looks meant he was popular with female sumo fans.
- When active, his hobbies were video games and calligraphy.
Family[]
Kotonowaka's son Masakatsu Kamatani was born in November 1997, and in November 2015 joined Sadogatake stable using the fighting name Kotokamatani. He won the jonokuchi championship in January 2016 and reached the makushita division in September 2016. Following the May 2019 tournament he was promoted to the second juryo division, adopting his father's shikona Kotonowaka. In 2024 he reached ozeki rank and afterward took his grandfather's shikona of Kotozakura.
Fighting Style[]

Kotonowaka defeats Tosanoumi by uwatenage (overarm throw)
Kotonowaka relied strongly on countering techniques against his opponents, and his bouts were often relatively long as compared to most other wrestlers. This proclivity led to him receiving the nickname "Mr. Ippun" ("Mr. One-Minute"). He favoured a migi-yotsu (left hand outside, right hand inside) grip on his opponent's mawashi. His speciality was uwatenage, or the overarm throw, which he used to win over 20 percent of his matches (the average is only 7 percent).
Record[]
Division Results[]
- Total: 782-764-100/1541 (130 basho)
- Makuuchi: 608-657-84/1260 (90 basho)
- Juryo: 30-15/45 (3 basho)
- Makushita: 57-46-16/103 (17 basho)
- Sandanme: 48-22/70 (10 basho)
- Jonidan: 33-23/56 (8 basho)
- Jonokuchi: 6-1/7 (1 basho)
Championships[]
- 2 Sandanme Championships
- 1st (May 1987)
- 2nd (September 1989)
Achievements[]
- Special Prizes: Fighting Spirit Prize (5), Technique Prize (2)
- Kinboshi: 8: (3) Takanohana, (2) Asashoryu, (2) Wakanohana, (1) Akebono
- Record: 9th most top division bouts (1260 bouts)
- Record: 9th most tournaments ranked in the top division (90 tournaments)
Shikona History[]
- Imano Mitsuya (1984.05 - 1984.05)
- Kotokonno Mitsuya (1984.07 - 1988.01)
- Kotonowaka Mitsuya (1988.03 - 1998.07)
- Kotonowaka Masakatsu (1998.09 - 1999.05)
- Kotonowaka Terumasa (1999.07 - 2005.11)