Hanaregoma stable (2021)

(Redirected from Nishonoseki stable (2014))

Hanaregoma stable (放駒部屋, Hanaregoma beya), formerly known as Matsugane stable and Nishonoseki stable, is a stable of sumo wrestlers. It was founded in 1990 as Matsugane stable by Wakashimazu who branched out from the Futagoyama stable. It has produced five top makuuchi division wrestlers; Wakakoshō [ja] (2000), Wakatsutomu (2001), Harunoyama (2004), Shōhōzan (2011) and Ichiyamamoto (2021). After the retirement of Harunoyama in November 2006 the stable had no sekitori until Shōhōzan (then known as Matsutani) reached the jūryō division in March 2010. As of January 2023 it had 8 wrestlers.

In late 2014, the general consensus among those with connections to the Nishonoseki ichimon was that an ichimon so named without a Nishonoseki stable as its head was a misnomer. In accordance with this general opinion, the oyakata of Matsugane stable, which had absorbed support personnel from the defunct Nishonoseki when it closed, decided to revive the name. He switched his Matsugane elder name with the former Tamarikidō's Nishonoseki elder name, thus allowing him to rename the stable. The former Tamarikidō, now known as Matsugane-oyakata, also joined the newly renamed stable.[1]

In December 2021 the Japan Sumo Association approved the transfer of the stable to Hanaregoma (former sekiwake Tamanoshima); the stable changed its name to Hanaregoma stable accordingly.[2] Nishonoseki oyakata swapped elder names with former yokozuna Kisenosato, and became Araiso-oyakata.

Ring name conventions

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Some wrestlers at this stable take ring names or shikona that begin with the character 若 (read: waka), meaning young, in deference to their former coach and the stable's founder, the former Wakashimazu.

Owner

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  • 2021 to present: Hanaregoma Arata (iin, former sekiwake Tamanoshima)
  • 1990–2021: (former ōzeki Wakashimazu), known as Matsugane from 1990 to 2014 and Nishonoseki from 2014 to 2021

Notable active wrestlers

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Coaches

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  • Araiso Mutsuo (former ōzeki Wakashimazu)
  • Minatogawa Tadamitsu (iin former komusubi Daitetsu)[3]
  • Matsugane Hideki (iin, former maegashira Tamarikidō)

Notable former members

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Referees

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  • Shikimori Kindayū (makuuchi gyōji, real name Hiromitsu Oshida, nephew of Kirinji Kazuharu)
  • Shikimori Shinnosuke (jūryō gyōji, real name Yōji Mizutani)

Ushers

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  • Matsuo (jūryō yobidashi, real name Yoshihiro Mine)
  • Satoru (jūryō yobidashi, real name Satoru Asakura)

Hairdressers

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  • Tokohira (1st class tokoyama)
  • Tokoshima (1st class tokoyama)

Location and access

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Chiba prefecture, Funabashi City, Kosaku 4-13-1
10 minute walk from Funabashihōten Station on Musashino Line

See also

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References

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  1. ^ An item for Sadanoumi from Kumamon - Nikkan Sports 2014/11/23
  2. ^ "元横綱稀勢の里・荒磯親方 二所ノ関襲名し二所ノ関部屋". Nikkan Sports (in Japanese). 24 December 2021. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  3. ^ "Oyakata (Coaches)". Nihon Sumo Kyokai. Archived from the original on 2012-09-11. Retrieved 2013-07-20.
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