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Sumo’s greatest-ever champion Hakuho retires

 

Sumo’s greatest-ever champion Hakuho retired on Monday after battling persistent knee trouble, officials said, leaving a gaping hole at the top of the ancient sport.

The Mongolian-born 36-year-old has won a record 45 tournaments 13 more than anyone else in history  but has been sidelined by injury for most of the year.

He made his only appearance of 2021 at July’s Nagoya Grand Sumo Tournament, going unbeaten to win the title after missing all or part of the previous six competitions.

He and 17 other wrestlers from his stable were forced to miss the following tournament, which ended Sunday, after a coronavirus outbreak.

His departure leaves just one other wrestler, Terunofuji, in the yokozuna class sumo’s highest rank.

“I learned from the sumo association chairman that Hakuho’s letter of retirement was filed through his stable master today,” Hironori Yano, head of the yokozuna deliberation council, which is close to the association, told reporters.

Hakuho’s decision, reportedly the result of a right knee injury, brings the curtain down on his illustrious career after 1,187 wins.

The Japan Sumo Association declined to comment, but the news made headlines in the country and grateful fans tweeted their support for the star.

Near the Kokugikan venue where sumo’s Tokyo tournament is held, Takashi Sakai was full of praise for the retiring wrestler.

“I want to tell him: ‘Great work. Well done’. He worked really hard, coming all the way to Japan, becoming a sumo wrestler and a yokozuna champion. It’s not very easy to achieve all that,” the 76-year-old told AFP.

“He has been the strongest wrestler for a long time and has been very influential,” said Miyako Arai.

“I think there are many wrestlers whose admiration of Hakuho led them to pursue the sport,” the 46-year-old added.

Born Munkhbat Davaajargal and the son of an Olympic silver-medal freestyle wrestler, Hakuho came to Japan at age 15 to enter the sumo world.


Hakuho and Terunofuji bout evokes memories of past sporting greats

 

He debuted in 2001 and won his first top-division title in May 2006, before reaching the sport’s highest rank of yokozuna at age 22 in July 2007.

His battles with fellow Mongolian yokozuna Asashoryu  the pantomime villain to Hakuho’s popular good guy  helped breathe new life into the sport, with attendances booming.

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Asashoryu retired in 2010 but Hakuho went from strength to strength, overtaking the legendary Taiho’s record of 33 tournament wins in January 2015.

The one-time rival called Hakuho “a tremendous yokozuna”, in a post on Twitter after news of the retirement emerged.

“I will save the rest of my words for when the two of us speak in person. But to sum up, thanks for all your hard work,” Asashoryu wrote.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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