Masunoyama Tomoharu

Sumo Wrestler

Masunoyama Tomoharu was born in Sakae, Chiba Prefecture, Japan on November 1st, 1990 and is the Sumo Wrestler. At the age of 33, Masunoyama Tomoharu biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
November 1, 1990
Nationality
Japan
Place of Birth
Sakae, Chiba Prefecture, Japan
Age
33 years old
Zodiac Sign
Scorpio
Profession
Rikishi
Masunoyama Tomoharu Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 33 years old, Masunoyama Tomoharu has this physical status:

Height
181cm
Weight
176kg
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Not Available
Measurements
Not Available
Masunoyama Tomoharu Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Not Available
Masunoyama Tomoharu Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Not Available
Children
Not Available
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Masunoyama Tomoharu Career

He first stepped on the pro sumo dohyō in July 2006. Being a diligent trainer, and managing to avoid injury, he rose through the ranks and in a little over a year and half achieved his first championship at the rank of sandanme 46 with a 7–0 perfect record. It would take him another two and half years of mostly winning records to reach the second division jūryō in November 2010. He entered jūryō at the same time as Takayasu. Both had the distinction of being half Filipino as well as simultaneously being the first two wrestlers to enter jūryō that were born in the Heisei Era.

Masunoyama only managed a 6–9 score in his first jūryō tournament but as he had debuted at the relatively high rank of jūryō 11, he was spared relegation. In the January 2011 tournament, he won his first five bouts in a row, but on the sixth day in morning practice he injured a ligament in his right leg. He made the decision to continue competing, and managed to beat Kakizoe on that day. However, two days later he aggravated the injury in a bout against Daidō and was obliged to miss the next day and take a fusenpai. He then returned for two more days, both wins against veteran wrestlers Tamanoshima and Chiyohakuhō before losing again and re-aggravating his injury to miss the final two days. Through all this he still managed an 8–5 record with two absences. Three tournaments later (with one being missed due to the sumo match-fixing scandal), at the rank of jūryō 1 he came just short of a championship, but lost in a playoff to Myōgiryū who was in his jūryō debut. This record allowed Masunoyama to be promoted to the top-tier makuuchi for the following September tournament.

On the fourth day of his makuuchi debut in a bout against Tochinowaka Masunoyama injured the same ligament in his left leg that he had previously injured in his right leg. He was forced to bow out of the tournament with only a 2–3 record, and was demoted back to jūryō. Though advised by his doctor not to enter the next tournament in order to let his injury heal, he insisted on fighting on. However, unable to do much training and hobbled by his injury he had losing records in the following two tournaments. He returned to form in the next tournament in March 2012 and posted strong winning records in this and the following tournament. He re-entered makuuchi in July 2012, marking it with an 11–4 win and the Fighting Spirit prize. However he had two losing records to only one winning one for the remainder of the year. In 2013, he had a lackluster performance, recording mostly losing tournaments, but mostly records of 7–8 which kept him from falling too far down the ranks. This continued in 2014, and his unimpressive 4–11 score at maegashira 13 led to his relegation to the jūryō division in July.

His downward slide continued in 2015 and absence from the dohyō meant he had fallen to the bottom of the makushita division by September. After having surgery on his right knee for a dislocation and meniscus damage, he declared that he would enter the March 2016 tournament after a five basho absence. He was ranked in the jonidan division for this tournament and came through with a 6–1 record. He was promoted to the sandanme division for May 2016 but withdrew from that tournament after losing his first match. He sat out the July tournament with injury and was therefore demoted to jonokuchi, the lowest division. He is only the second wrestler with top division experience to fall to jonokuchi since the beginning of the Shōwa era – the other being Ryūhō in 2012. Finally back on the active list for the September 2016 tournament, easily took a 7–0 perfect record and the jonokuchi championship and secured a second successive promotion with a 6–1 in jonidan in November. He missed the January and March 2017 tournaments through injury, but entered the May tournament on Day 7 at jonidan 81 and secured a 4–0–3 winning record. In July he won all seven of his matches in the jonidan division, although he was defeated in a playoff for the championship. That month he changed the spelling of his shikona surname from 舛ノ山 to its current spelling. He was ranked at sandanme 49 in September 2017, his highest rank for two years, but turned in a make-koshi 3–4 record. He was promoted back to the makushita division for the March 2018 tournament, his first time in the third highest division since September 2015, only to see him injured again in May, causing him to also miss the July 2018 tournament and sending him back down the rankings. He continued to suffer injury problems and absences, falling to jonidan in May 2021. The Sumo Association announced his retirement during the May 2021 tournament.

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