*** Welcome to piglix ***

Nayoroiwa

Nayoroiwa Shizuo
名寄岩 静男
Nayoroiwa Scan10006.JPG
Personal information
Born Shizuo Iwakabe
(1914-09-27)September 27, 1914
Nayoro, Hokkaidō, Japan
Died January 26, 1971(1971-01-26) (aged 56)
Height 1.73 m (5 ft 8 in)
Weight 128 kg (282 lb)
Career
Stable Tatsunami
Record 337-297-33
Debut May, 1932
Highest rank Ōzeki (January, 1943)
Retired October, 1954
Championships 1 (Makushita)
1 (Sandanme)
Special Prizes Fighting Spirit (2)
Gold Stars 2
Musashiyama
Chiyonoyama
* Up to date as of October 2008.

Nayoroiwa Shizuo (名寄岩静男, September 27, 1914 – January 26, 1971) was a Japanese sumo wrestler from Nayoro, Hokkaidō, Japan.

He joined Tatsunami stable and made his professional debut in May 1932. Along with his stablemates Futabayama and Haguroyama, he supported Tatsunami stable. In January 1937, he was promoted to the top makuuchi division. In January 1938, he defeated yokozuna Musashiyama, gaining his first kinboshi or gold star. He was promoted to ōzeki in January 1943, but was demoted to sekiwake in May 1944. He was promoted to ōzeki again in November 1946, but he lost all eleven bouts in the November 1947 tournament. He was demoted again in the May 1948 tournament. Of his six tournaments at ozeki rank he only achieved a kachi-koshi or winning record in two of them, and his overall record as an ozeki was 26 wins against 31 losses, with 22 absences.

In the May 1950 tournament, he won his first Fighting Spirit Award. In the September 1952 tournament, he defeated yokozuna Chiyonoyama, gaining a kinboshi and winning his second Fighting Spirit Award. In January 1953 he returned to sekiwake, and he remains the oldest man in the post-war era to be promoted to a san'yaku rank. During the Autumn 1954 tournament which held from September 19 to October 3, he reached his fortieth birthday, and after the tournament he retired from an active wrestler after 22 years in sumo.

After his retirement, he re-established the Kasugayama stable, which he ran until his death in 1971. Among his rikishi was the former maegashira Onobori.


...
Wikipedia

...