Sumowrestling Wiki

Takagenji Satoshi - 貴源治 賢士 (born May 13, 1997) is a former Japanese professional sumo wrestler from Sakai, Ibaraki. He made his debut in March 2013 and last wrestled for Tokiwayama stable. He reached the makuuchi division in July 2019. His highest rank was maegashira 10 and he was dismissed in September 2021.

Early Life[]

He was born in Oyama, Tochigi Prefecture, as a younger brother of an identical twin to a Filipino mother and a Japanese father. He would grow up in Sakai, Ibaraki Prefecture.[1] He was in many sports as a youth such as karate and kickboxing but was particularly good at basketball.[2] In junior high he was ranked third nationally in basketball and was scouted by many top high school basketball programs.[3] Among his rivals was future NBA player Rui Hachimura.[4] Upon his father's request he took up sumo after being introduced to yokozuna Takanohana in the third grade.[5] After junior high he chose to join Takanohana stable along with his brother stating, "I won't make any money in basketball and I would like to continue using my body."[1] The stable already had a set of twins (Takageppo and Takatoshi) making Takanohana stable the first in sumo history to have two sets of twins simultaneously. However, both of the other twins had retired by the end of 2014.[6]

Career[]

Early Career[]

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Takagenji during his time in makushita (c. 2017)

He made his professional debut alongside his brother in March 2013 and was given the shikona "Takagenji" (貴源治). He scored an impressive 6-1 record in his jonokuchi debut and would reach the fourth highest division of sandanme just a year after his professional debut. Takagenji would spend another year in sandanme before earning promotion to makushita in March 2015. At the time of his makushita debut, Takagenji was still only 17 years old.[7]

He could manage only three wins at the rank and was immediately demoted back down to sandanme for the May 2015 tournament. He proceeded to bounce between the two divisions for a little less than a year before a surprise 6-1 runner-up performance in January 2016 would help to firmly establish him in the makushita division. In January 2017, while ranked at makushita 4, Takagenji finished with a strong 5-2 record which included a win over juryo-ranked Amuru. He was promoted to the rank of makushita 1 for the following March 2017 tournament where he finished with a 4-3 record. This record was sufficient enough to earn him a juryo promotion for the May 2017 tournament.[7]

Juryo Career[]

At the time of promotion, Takagenji was only 19 years old. His first tournament in juryo did not pan out as his last year had and he fell flat managing only a 4–11 record and being immediately be demoted back down to the makushita division. This would not last long though as two winning records would send him back up to the sekitori ranks for the November 2017 tournament.[7]

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Takagenji defeats Nishikigi (c. 2019)

This time his stay in juryo was the polar opposite of his first with four straight winning records before getting his first make-koshi or losing record. After the January 2018 tournament, his brother (then known as Takayoshitoshi) was promoted to juryo also, making them the first twins to be ranked in juryo simultaneously.[8] Shortly after this his stable was dissolved and he moved to then Chiganoura stable (since renamed) along with his brother.[9] In May 2019 at the rank of juryo 2 he got a 13-2 winning record taking home the yusho or championship and guaranteeing his promotion to the top division.[7]

Makuuchi Career[]

Takagenji made his makuuchi debut in July 2019 at the rank of maegashira 10. He made a promising start by winning four of his first five matches but then lost ten in a row to finish on 4–11. The same score of 4–11 in the September tournament from the very bottom rank of maegashira 17 saw him demoted to juryo for November 2019.[7]

Later Career[]

After Takagenji's demotion, he continued to struggle and produced another four straight losing records which saw him demoted to makushita for the September 2020 tournament. However, he would bounce back after scoring a 4-3 record and was promoted to juryo for the November 2020 tournament.[7]

Retirement from Sumo[]

MMA Career[]

On December 24, 2021, Satoshi announced that he was becoming a mixed martial artist, adopting the ring name Takakenshin (貴賢神).[10] His first bout against Hideki "Shrek" Sekine is scheduled for April 16, 2022 at Rizin Trigger 3.[11] He lost the bout via TKO due to soccer kicks and punches on the ground in the second round.[12]

Satoshi faced Cally Gibrainn de Oliveira at Rizin Landmark 4 on November 6, 2022. He lost the fight by ground and pound TKO stoppage at the end of the first round.[13]

Satoshi faced Hidetaka Arato at Rizin Landmark 6 on October 1, 2023. He lost the bout via technical knockout at the end of the second round.[14]

Satoshi faced Cody Jerabek at RIZIN Landmark 9 on March 23, 2024, winning his first bout via TKO stoppage in the first round.[15]

Controversy[]

Power Harassment Scandal[]

According to a document released from the Japan Sumo Association's Compliance Committee on September 26, 2019, from May to July of the same year, Takagenji harassed and bullied his junior stablemates. Unlike his twin brother, Takanofuji, Takagenji was not physically abusive to his stablemates, but he punished them in degradable ways.[16]

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Takagenji (left) leaves the Ryogoku Kokugikan with his twin brother and Chiganoura Oyakata after he was questioned by the JSA for his involvement in hazing (Takagenji's twin brother, Takanofuji, was later dismissed for physically assaulting a junior wrestler)

When four low-ranking wrestlers failed to greet him—a customary practice in sumo—Takagenji punished them by forcing them to do push-ups, pay a fine, or forbidding them from leaving the stable. On some occasions, when one of the four neglected a duty, he would impose collective punishment, requiring all of them to perform two sets of 30 push-ups. During the July 2019 (Nagoya) tournament, one of his tsukebito (personal attendants) forgot a task, and Takagenji made him raise his hands and repeatedly shout, “I am dumb!” while recording the incident on his phone. As this was Takagenji’s first offense, the Compliance Committee issued him a warning.[17]

Participation with Influenza[]

In December 2019, the Japan Sumo Association admitted that Takagenji participated in a regional sumo tour in Kyushu while infected with the influenza virus.[18] A spokesperson said that Takagenji reported his health condition to a hospital in Saga on 11 December, but then climbed into the dohyo later in the day. The actions were criticized by the head of the Japan Sports Agency, and the sumo association acknowledged that it failed to handle the matter properly.[19]

Cannabis Scandal and Dismissal[]

The Sumo Association announced in July 2021 that Takagenji had failed a test for cannabis.[20] Having initially claimed that a trace must have come from the oil of a pain reliever he was using, he later admitted that he had smoked a cannabis cigarette while roadside at his Nagoya training quarters.[21] Takagenji was also under investigation by the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department.[22] On July 30, 2021 it was announced by the Sumo Association that Takagenji would retire immediately, and that his stablemaster would be demoted. The compliance committee noted that Takagenji had been warned about his future conduct less than two years ago, had lied about his cannabis use until the positive drug test confirmed it, and had smoked cannabis on at least eight occasions.[23]

On the September 2021 banzuke the position of Juryo 9 West, which Takagenji would have occupied, was left blank. On 3 September 2021 his case was referred to prosecutors regarding possible violation of the Cannabis Control Law by possessing marijuana,[24] but it was announced on 12 October that he would not be prosecuted.[25]

Personal Life[]

  • Takagenji's twin brother, Takanofuji, was also a professional sumo wrestler who trained under the same stable. They were the first pair of twins to be ranked in the sekitori ranks simultaneously.[26] Takagenji and Takanofuji performed shokkiri, or comedic sumo, together from the summer of 2016 to the spring of 2017.[27][28]
  • He is known for being a diligent trainer, so much so that when he dislocated his knee while practicing on tour in Tokushima in October 2016, he re-inserted the dislocated knee joint so he could finish the training session.[1]

Fighting Style[]

Takagenji's Fighting Style

Takagenji defeats Kotoeko by oshidashi (push out)

Takagenji's performances to date suggest that he is an oshi-sumo specialist who favors pushing techniques to fighting on the mawashi or belt. His most common kimarite is yorikiri followed by oshidashi and tsukidashi.[29] He was initially a yotsu-sumo or grappling specialist, but began to switch to pushing techniques around 2015 to try to improve his performances after finding himself going back and forth between the makushita and sandanme divisions.[1] His consistency improved and he was eventually promoted to sekitori level in 2017.[7]

Record[]

Division Results[]

  • Total: 271-248/519 (50 basho)
  • Makuuchi: 8-22/30 (2 basho)
  • Juryo: 149-151/300 (20 basho)
  • Makushita: 58-40/98 (14 basho)
  • Sandanme: 35-21/56 (8 basho)
  • Jonidan: 15-13/28 (4 basho)
  • Jonokuchi: 6-1/7 (1 basho)

Championships[]

  • 1 Juryo Championship (May 2019)

Achievements[]

  • 1st pair of twins to be ranked in the sekitori ranks simultaneously (alongside Takanofuji)

Shikona History[]

  • Takagenji Satoshi (2013.03 - 2021.07)

Gallery[]

JSA Profile Pictures and Tegata[]

Career Overview[]

See Also[]

External Links[]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Sumo Journal" June 2017 Issue p. 28-29
  2. BBM Sumo October 2014 Issue p. 91
  3. Sponichi Annex: Basketball talents become the first twin sumo wrestlers
  4. Asahi: Former rival of Hachimura on the court now a force in the ring
  5. Tokyo Shimbun: 18-year-old "twin sumo wrestlers" vow to do better in the future
  6. Sponichi Annex: The second set of twins to join Takanohana stable
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 Takagenji Rikishi Information
  8. Mainichi Daily News: Photo Journal: Talented twins
  9. Sanspo: Takanohana stable to disappear after wrestlers' transfers approved
  10. Tokyo Sports: Takagenji officially announces on social media that he will become a fighter
  11. eFight: Sudario's younger brother Takakenshin will make his debut against Hideki Sekine
  12. Tokyo Headline: Sekine "Shrek" Hideki wins by TKO against Takakenshin
  13. Gonkoku: Ren Hiramoto dominates Yamasu Dominator with karate
  14. Bout Review: RIZIN 10.1 Nagoya Dolphins Arena (Report)
  15. Rizin: RIZIN LANDMARK 9 in KOBE Match 5: Takanori vs. Cody Jerabek
  16. Tokyo Sports: Takanofuji's "vicious behavior" led the Sumo Association to encourage him to retire
  17. Nikkan Sports: Takagenji and Chiganoura stablemaster punished for "unreasonable" behavior
  18. Japan Times: JSA needs to look outward for good of sumo
  19. NHK-World Japan: Sumo wrestler climbs into ring after flu diagnosis
  20. Jiji Press: Sumo Wrestler Found Using Cannabis
  21. Yahoo Sports!: Takagenji uses marijuana, Sumo Association announces
  22. Jiji Press: (Update) Sumo Wrestler Found Using Cannabis
  23. Hochi News: Juryo wrestler Takagenji, who used marijuana, is dismissed
  24. Mainichi: Ex-sumo wrestler Takagenji referred to prosecutors over alleged marijuana possession
  25. Asahi Shimbun: Takagenji not prosecuted in case of suspicion of possessing cannabis
  26. Nikkan Sports: First twin sumo wrestlers Takayoshitoshi and Takagenji
  27. Nikkan Sports: Takanohana stable's twin wrestlers make their "shokkiri" debut
  28. Nikkan Sports: Sumo twins Takayoshitoshi and Takagenji perform their final first match
  29. Takagenji Kimarite Information