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Maenoyama

Maenoyama Tarō
前の山 太郎
Personal information
Born Kazuichi Kaneshima
(1945-03-09) March 9, 1945 (age 72)
Osaka, Japan
Height 1.87 m (6 ft 1 12 in)
Weight 130 kg (290 lb)
Career
Stable Takasago
Record 487-397-48
Debut March, 1961
Highest rank Ōzeki (September, 1970)
Retired March, 1974
Championships 1 (Jūryō)
Special Prizes Fighting Spirit (2)
Outstanding Performance (3)
Gold Stars 1 (Kashiwado)
* Up to date as of July 2007.

Maenoyama Tarō (born 9 March 1945 as Kazuichi Kaneshima) is a former sumo wrestler from Osaka Prefecture, Japan. He began his career in 1961, reaching the top makuuchi division in 1966. His highest rank was ōzeki which he held from 1970 until 1972. He retired in 1974 and became head coach of the Takadagawa stable. He left the Sumo Association in 2010 upon turning 65.

He was born in Moriguchi, of Korean descent. He entered Takasago stable and made his professional debut in March 1961. He reached sekitori status in November 1965 upon promotion to the jūryō division and reached the top makuuchi division in September 1966. He made his san'yaku debut in March 1968 at sekiwake. In May 1969 he defeated yokozuna Kashiwado on opening day and went on to win 11 bouts, receiving his first sanshō or special prize, for Fighting Spirit. He was promoted to sumo's second highest rank of ōzeki in July 1970 after two consecutive runner-up performances to yokozuna Kitanofuji, the second coming in a play-off. His ōzeki debut in September 1970 was inauspicious as he had injured his right foot in training and had to miss the entire tournament through injury. He returned in November to score 9-6 and keep his rank, but the foot injury continued to trouble him and he was unable to win more than nine bouts in any of his ten tournaments at ōzeki rank. He was demoted from ōzeki in March 1972 after two consecutive losing scores. His Day 12 win over Kotozakura in this tournament was criticized by the Japan Sumo Association as being an example of mukiryoku or "unmotivated" sumo, a euphemism for yaocho or match-fixing, as his fellow ōzeki opponent had shown little resistance. It was unprecedented for the Sumo Association to publicly warn wrestlers in this way. Maenoyama withdrew after this bout and his resulting 6-7-2 record confirmed his demotion. He would have been promoted back to ōzeki if he had won at least ten bouts in the following tournament, but he scored only 7-8. He continued to compete in the lower ranks until March 1974 when he announced his retirement from active competition at the age of 29.


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