Author Topic: Disgraced Sumo Legend Asashoryu Forms MMA Camp  (Read 1114 times)

MindSpin

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Disgraced Sumo Legend Asashoryu Forms MMA Camp
« on: July 22, 2010, 10:18:23 AM »
Disgraced Sumo Legend Asashoryu Forms MMA Camp, Will Work With Sengoku Raiden Championships
 by Kid Nate on Jul 22, 2010 12:38 PM EDT in News


The only Mongolian yokozuna in sumo history and one of the greatest of all time, Asashōryū Akinori. Photo via Asiaenews.com
We've been talking a great deal about the collapse of Japanse MMA. Since PRIDE was driven from network television in 2006 because of a scandal linking them to the yakuza criminal underworld, MMA has nosedived in popularity in Japan. But that's nothing compared to the spectacular fall from grace experienced in recent years by Japan's oldest and by far most prestigious combat sport: Sumo wrestling.

The top sumo of the past decade Asashoryu Akinori retired from the sport at age 30 after allegations of a nightclub assault capped off a controversy filled career. He had successfully won a lawsuit against the Japanese tabloid Shūkan Gendai (the magazine that brought down PRIDE) which had accused him of fixing bouts.

Other sumo had been accused of smoking marijuana and gambling. These last charges led to Japan's NHK network dropping live coverage of the Nagoya Sumo tournament for the first time in 50 years.  The New York Times even did a full-length feature story on the scandals of sumo:

On Sunday, the Japan Sumo Association, the sport's governing body, announced the firing of a top wrestler and a stable master - a powerful coach who controls a cluster of wrestlers - for betting on professional baseball games in a gambling ring run by organized crime. Two other stable masters were demoted, and 18 other wrestlers were barred from competing in the next tournament.

This came after an apparently unrelated scandal two months ago over the sale of tickets for prized seats at the foot of the sport's raised dirt ring to around 50 members of the Yamaguchi-gumi, Japan's largest crime syndicate. The seats allowed the gangsters, known as yakuza, to be clearly visible during television broadcasts of the bouts, a brazen display that sumo experts said was aimed at cheering up an incarcerated syndicate boss watching from prison.

Facing a public outcry, the association has warned that the sport, which claims to date back at least 1,300 years, must clean up or perish. On Sunday, a dozen hulking wrestlers, wearing traditional kimonos, bowed deeply in apology before flashing cameras.

Sumo had already been shaken in recent years by scandals over marijuana use, the fatal beating of a 17-year-old novice wrestler and media accusations of bout-rigging. But the current scandals are widely seen as bigger than anything that came before because they involve such a large number of wrestlers, not to mention gangsters.

The scandals underscore the degree to which sumo, an insular, tradition-bound world long shielded from scrutiny by its special cultural status, has fallen out of step with changes in the rest of Japan. Many Japanese were appalled to learn that members of the sport actually seemed to be increasing their ties to mobsters at a time when the nation has striven to distance itself from its once thriving underworld, which until recently was a tacitly accepted presence here.

Sumo experts and former wrestlers say the sport was driven into the arms of organized crime by cash problems caused by a decline in attendance and corporate sponsorship. In short, critics say, sumo has proved to be yet another Japanese institution that is unwilling or unable to adapt to the changes brought by the nation's economic decline.

Now Asashōryū has formed an MMA camp. Here's Sergio Non:

An official with World Victory Road says Asashoryu has started an MMA team for athletes from his native country of Mongolia, according to the Nightmare of Battle. World Victory Road runs Sengoku Raiden Championships, one of Japan's two leading MMA brands along with K-1's Dream organization.

Dream and Sengoku have been open about their interest in Asashoryu as soon as he announced his retirement from sumo in February, following his latest controversial episode in a career rife with them.

Sumo athletes generally have not done well in MMA competition, but none as talented or accomplished as Asashoryu, who was just the third non-Japanese in sumo's long history to become a yokozuna, the sport's highest rank. A surprisingly quick and agile 330-pounder, he ranks third on the all-time list for tournament wins at the top level of sumo.
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Re: Disgraced Sumo Legend Asashoryu Forms MMA Camp
« Reply #1 on: July 22, 2010, 11:29:46 AM »
Disgraced Sumo Legend Asashoryu Forms MMA Camp, Will Work With Sengoku Raiden Championships
 by Kid Nate on Jul 22, 2010 12:38 PM EDT in News


The only Mongolian yokozuna in sumo history and one of the greatest of all time, Asashōryū Akinori. Photo via Asiaenews.com
We've been talking a great deal about the collapse of Japanse MMA. Since PRIDE was driven from network television in 2006 because of a scandal linking them to the yakuza criminal underworld, MMA has nosedived in popularity in Japan. But that's nothing compared to the spectacular fall from grace experienced in recent years by Japan's oldest and by far most prestigious combat sport: Sumo wrestling.

The top sumo of the past decade Asashoryu Akinori retired from the sport at age 30 after allegations of a nightclub assault capped off a controversy filled career. He had successfully won a lawsuit against the Japanese tabloid Shūkan Gendai (the magazine that brought down PRIDE) which had accused him of fixing bouts.

Other sumo had been accused of smoking marijuana and gambling. These last charges led to Japan's NHK network dropping live coverage of the Nagoya Sumo tournament for the first time in 50 years.  The New York Times even did a full-length feature story on the scandals of sumo:

On Sunday, the Japan Sumo Association, the sport's governing body, announced the firing of a top wrestler and a stable master - a powerful coach who controls a cluster of wrestlers - for betting on professional baseball games in a gambling ring run by organized crime. Two other stable masters were demoted, and 18 other wrestlers were barred from competing in the next tournament.

This came after an apparently unrelated scandal two months ago over the sale of tickets for prized seats at the foot of the sport's raised dirt ring to around 50 members of the Yamaguchi-gumi, Japan's largest crime syndicate. The seats allowed the gangsters, known as yakuza, to be clearly visible during television broadcasts of the bouts, a brazen display that sumo experts said was aimed at cheering up an incarcerated syndicate boss watching from prison.

Facing a public outcry, the association has warned that the sport, which claims to date back at least 1,300 years, must clean up or perish. On Sunday, a dozen hulking wrestlers, wearing traditional kimonos, bowed deeply in apology before flashing cameras.

Sumo had already been shaken in recent years by scandals over marijuana use, the fatal beating of a 17-year-old novice wrestler and media accusations of bout-rigging. But the current scandals are widely seen as bigger than anything that came before because they involve such a large number of wrestlers, not to mention gangsters.

The scandals underscore the degree to which sumo, an insular, tradition-bound world long shielded from scrutiny by its special cultural status, has fallen out of step with changes in the rest of Japan. Many Japanese were appalled to learn that members of the sport actually seemed to be increasing their ties to mobsters at a time when the nation has striven to distance itself from its once thriving underworld, which until recently was a tacitly accepted presence here.

Sumo experts and former wrestlers say the sport was driven into the arms of organized crime by cash problems caused by a decline in attendance and corporate sponsorship. In short, critics say, sumo has proved to be yet another Japanese institution that is unwilling or unable to adapt to the changes brought by the nation's economic decline.

Now Asashōryū has formed an MMA camp. Here's Sergio Non:

An official with World Victory Road says Asashoryu has started an MMA team for athletes from his native country of Mongolia, according to the Nightmare of Battle. World Victory Road runs Sengoku Raiden Championships, one of Japan's two leading MMA brands along with K-1's Dream organization.

Dream and Sengoku have been open about their interest in Asashoryu as soon as he announced his retirement from sumo in February, following his latest controversial episode in a career rife with them.

Sumo athletes generally have not done well in MMA competition, but none as talented or accomplished as Asashoryu, who was just the third non-Japanese in sumo's long history to become a yokozuna, the sport's highest rank. A surprisingly quick and agile 330-pounder, he ranks third on the all-time list for tournament wins at the top level of sumo.

I am pretty sure my friend Chad Rowan (on the left) was either the first or second.  And Jessie Kahalua (sp )was probably the first.  But both Hawaiian.
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marty31672

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Re: Disgraced Sumo Legend Asashoryu Forms MMA Camp
« Reply #2 on: July 23, 2010, 12:45:03 PM »
lyoto trains in sumo to i read it on wikipedia