Hanakaze Daisaku


Hanakaze Daisaku is a Japanese professional sumo wrestler from Tokyo. He made his debut in March, 1986 and wrestles for Tatsunami stable. Despite never rising higher than the fourth division, he has set several records for longevity in the sport. As of March 2020 he has competed in 204 tournaments, and is the only remaining active wrestler who began his career in the Showa era, and is consequently the only wrestler to fight in the Showa, Heisei and Reiwa eras. He is also the only active wrestler in his 50s, and one of very few in sumo's long history who wrestled into his sixth decade.

Career

Daisaku Yamaguchi joined sumo out of junior high school, in the era of the yokozuna Futahaguro and Hokutoumi, one year before his future stablemaster, the 7th Tatsunami elder, former komusubi, Asahiyutaka.
In the beginning of his career, he had three losing tournaments in a row, missed his fourth tournament, and dropped off the banzuke by the end of 1986. He returned to active sumo in March 1987, exactly on year after his initial debut. In this tournament he became the first wrestler to win a match in the newly rebuilt Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium. Since this time he has not missed a single tournament in over 31 years, although he has occasionally missed matches within tournaments due to injury. It would be July 1987 before he would receive his first kachi-koshi tournament. He got his first 6–1 record in November 1988, a feat he has achieved 9 times in his career. He has never had an undefeated 7-0 tournament. Conversely, in tournaments he was active in, he has had a winless 0–7 tournament three times in his career. Two of those occasions were the first and last tournaments of the Heisei era. His highest rank achieved is sandanme 18 in November 2003, which was incidentally one of his winless tournaments. He battled for thirteen years with the shikona of Tatsuyamaguchi before changing it to the current Hanakaze in July 1999. He has been promoted to the sandanme division a record 19 times.
Though Hanakaze has never reached the top, salaried ranks, he has a number of notable longevity records. Upon the retirement of Tochitenkō in May 2011 he became the oldest active wrestler in sumo, and also simultaneously tied with Hokutōryū for longest active career as they both joined sumo in March 1986. In 2016, both Hanakaze and Hokutōryū simultaneously became the longest serving sumo wrestlers ever, passing the largely uninterrupted, nearly 30-year career set by the legendary Miyagino Nishikinosuke. After Hokutōryū retired following the March 2017 tournament, Hanakaze solely holds the record for longest career ever in the centuries long history of sumo; a career spanning 33 years as of March 2019. He is also the only remaining active wrestler who began his career in the Showa era, which ended in January 1989. He reached another milestone in the following May tournament, when he passed already retired Ichinoya to become the oldest wrestler since the beginning of the Showa era, which began in 1926. If he continues fighting until 2023 he will become the oldest wrestler in sumo history.
Other records he holds are most tournaments ever in the history of sumo and the record for most consecutive tournaments, beginning in March 1987 to now. As of January 2020 he has fought 1393 bouts, with 653 wins against 740 losses, plus 13 injury absences. As he has only fought seven matches per tournament, as opposed to sekitori ranked wrestlers who fight all 15 days, he does not hold any record for most bouts contested or most consecutive bouts.
Hanakaze turned 50 years of age in May 2020. By comparison, the mandatory retirement age for elders is 65. His stablemaster attributed his longevity to his "abundance of spiritual power and physical durability" and commented "the important duties in our communal kitchen make him irreplaceable". Having never reached the sekitori level, he is not eligible for any retirement benefits despite his many years in sumo. Former yokozuna Kitanofuji has reportedly said, "If you can’t climb any higher than the third division, you’re better off quitting and returning home to the countryside."
In July 2020 he fought the 42-year-old Tenichi for the first time since July 1996 – a gap between meetings of 24 years. The combined age of the two wrestlers was 92.

Fighting style

Hanakaze’s most common winning kimarite are uwatenage hatakikomi and yorikiri.

Career record