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Oshio Kenji

Ōshio Kenji
大潮 憲司
Oshio 2010 Jan.JPG
Personal information
Born Kenji Hatano
(1948-01-04) January 4, 1948 (age 69)
Kitakyushu, Fukuoka, Japan
Height 1.86 m (6 ft 1 in)
Weight 134 kg (295 lb)
Career
Stable Tokitsukaze
Record 964-929-47
Debut January 1962
Highest rank Komusubi (January 1978)
Retired January 1988
Championships 3 (Jūryō)
Special Prizes 1 (Fighting Spirit)
1 (Technique)
Gold Stars 3
Kitanoumi (2)
Wajima
* Up to date as of November 2007.

Ōshio Kenji (born 4 January 1948 as Kenji Hatano) is a former sumo wrestler from Kitakyushu, Japan. His highest rank was komusubi. His career lasted twenty six years, from 1962 until 1988, and he holds the record for the most bouts contested in professional sumo.

He was born in Yahata Higashi ward. He made his professional debut in January 1962 at the age of just 14, joining Tokitsukaze stable. His first stablemaster was the former yokozuna Futabayama. He initially fought under his own surname, Hatano, before adopting the shikona of Ōshio in 1969. He reached the second highest jūryō division in November 1969 and was promoted to the top makuuchi division for the first time in September 1971. He reached his top rank of komusubi in January 1978, but held it for only one tournament. In the May 1978 tournament he defeated Wajima on the opening day, his first ever victory over a yokozuna. He was to earn two more kinboshi in September 1982 and January 1983, at the age of 35. He also earned two special prizes, for Technique and Fighting Spirit.

During his extraordinarily long career Ōshio was ranked in makuuchi for 51 tournaments and 55 tournaments in jūryō, for a total of 106 ranked as an elite sekitori wrestler, a record that stood until 2002 when it was broken by Terao. He holds the "elevator" record for winning promotion to makuuchi from jūryō a total of 13 times. The longest he was able to stay in the top division consecutively was 18 tournaments between January 1981 and November 1983. He fell from makuuchi for the last time in May 1984 and announced his retirement in January 1988 at the age of forty after falling into the non-salaried makushita division. He had competed in 157 tournaments, and had fought a total of 1891 career bouts, which is an all-time record. His total of 964 career wins was also a record at the time, although it was surpassed by Chiyonofuji less than two years later, in September 1989.


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