Oguruma stable

Coordinates: 35°41′00″N 139°47′48″E / 35.6833°N 139.7966°E / 35.6833; 139.7966
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Entrance to Oguruma Stable

Oguruma stable (尾車部屋, Oguruma-beya) was a stable of sumo wrestlers, one of the Nishonoseki group of stables. In its modern form it existed from March 1987 when it was founded by Kotokaze, a former Sadogatake stable wrestler.[1], until February 2022. The first wrestler from the stable to achieve sekitori status was Tomikaze in July 2000. Initially the stable had a policy of not accepting foreign born wrestlers or college recruits, but this was waived when Chuo University graduate Takekaze personally asked to join in 2002. Their first foreigner was the Mongolian Hoshikaze, who joined in the same year and eventually reached jūryō but was thrown out of sumo after the 2011 match-fixing scandal. The stable absorbed Oshiogawa stable in 2005 ahead of the retirement of Oshiogawa-oyakata, with Wakakirin and Wakatoba among the wrestlers transferring over. As of January 2022, it has 14 wrestlers. The stable produced seven makuuchi or top division wrestlers - Takekaze, Yoshikaze, Wakakirin, Kimikaze, Amakaze, Yago and Tomokaze.[1]

Kotokaze announced on 25 December 2021 that Oguruma stable would close following the January 2022 sumo tournament.[2] The closure officially took place on 7 February 2022, with the stable's personnel being split between a new Oshiogawa stable run by the former Takekaze, and Nishonoseki stable, with the former Yoshikaze assisting the coaching there.[3][4]

Ring name conventions[edit]

Almost all wrestlers at this stable took ring names or shikona that end with the character 風 (read: kaze), meaning wind or breeze, in deference to their coach and the stable's owner, the former Kotokaze.

Owner[edit]

Notable former wrestlers[edit]

Coaches[edit]

Assistant[edit]

Usher[edit]

  • Rokurō (jūryō yobidashi, real name Kenzō Araki)

Hairdresser[edit]

Location and access[edit]

Tokyo, Edogawa ward, Kiyosumi 2-15-5
3 minutes from Kiyosumi-shirakawa Station on the Toei Ōedo Line and Hanzōmon Line

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "2019 January Grand Sumo Tournament Banzuke Topics". Japan Sumo Association. Archived from the original on 14 January 2019. Retrieved 14 January 2019.
  2. ^ "尾車親方が1月初場所後に部屋閉鎖を表明 「悔いはない。やりきったと」". Nikkan Sports (in Japanese). 25 December 2021. Retrieved 26 December 2021.
  3. ^ "「押尾川部屋」が始動 尾車部屋から力士ら6人移籍". sakigake.jp (in Japanese). 7 February 2022. Retrieved 7 February 2022.
  4. ^ "元嘉風、断髪式「ワクワクさせる力士育てる」 師匠・尾車親方止めばさみ&エール". Yahoo! Japan (in Japanese). 6 February 2022. Retrieved 7 February 2022.

External links[edit]

35°41′00″N 139°47′48″E / 35.6833°N 139.7966°E / 35.6833; 139.7966