| 3rd
annual US SUMO OPEN OVERVIEW |
Opening ceremonies included
Japanese taiko drumming and Japanese traditional dance. A sake barrel
breaking ceremony with Akebono, and representatives of The Japan Foundation
and the Consulate General of Japan kicked off the competition. The third
annual US SUMO OPEN was part of "US-Japan 150", in celebration
of the 150th anniversary of US-Japan relations.
Highlights of the event included several rivals from the 2002 US SUMO
OPEN facing off again in the final rounds. The competition featured
31 sumo athletes from all over the world, including competitors and
sumo teams from the USA, Bulgaria, Hungary, New Zealand, Lebanon, the
Philippines, Hong Kong, Korea, Mongolia, and Japan. American athletes
came from all over California, Hawaii, Arizona, Idaho, Utah, Texas,
and New York.
The men's lightweight division saw some major upsets. The three 2002
medallists, Trevor Roberts, Jason Maron, and Trent Sabo all competed
again, but none of them medalled in 2003. The upsets came from three
other 2002 competitors, none of whom got medals that year. In the semi-final
rounds, Joe Davis of Los Angeles defeated UCLA student Kevin Yonemoto,
and Mongolian-born Tumur Baatar defeated local Trent Sabo.
The third place match between Trent Sabo and Kevin Yonemoto was quite
an upset. Trent and Kevin had trained together for years, with Trent
generally getting the upper hand. In fact, Trent had gone undefeated
against Kevin in prior 2003 tourneys, and had also lifted Kevin up and
out in an early match of the US SUMO OPEN on August 3. Kevin, however,
managed to win his other matches and advance to the semi-finals. The
two struggled all over the ring, grappling, pushing, and sidestepping,
until they knocked each other off-balance, and Trent went sailing out
of the ring just a split second before Kevin.
In the final match, 187-pound Joe Davis went against 164-pound Tumur
Baatar. In prior tournaments, Joe had won some major victories, but
was unable to get gold, as he competed against much larger opponents
in the middleweight class. For the OPEN, Joe cut 15 pounds to compete
in lightweight, where he went undefeated. Tumur, Mongolian-born, and
now a Bulgarian resident, had done well in 2002, but didn't make it
to the final rounds. He and Joe smashed together in the final match,
but Joe used his size and strength to crush Tumur out of the ring.
The middleweight opening rounds included a tie-breaker in one bracket
that saw Daryl Wilhelm from Arizona defeat California gubernatorial
candidate Kurt Rightmyer, to advance to the semi-finals. Daryl lost
in the semi-finals to Major Gyula of Hungary, and LAPD officer Troy
Collins was defeated by Hawaiian Kena Heffernan. Troy, a 2002 OPEN medallist,
came back to defeat Daryl in the third place match.
Kena and Major both had a strong charge in the final match, but Kena,
a sumo veteran from Hawaii, slipped a little on the canvas ring, and
his hand touched the ground. Ever gracious in victory and defeat alike,
Kena bowed and accepted the silver. In 2002, Major had lost a controversial
semi-final match, but this year, he redeemed himself with the gold.
The heavyweight men, like the lightweights and middleweights, included
several returning athletes from the 2001 and 2002 US SUMO OPEN tournaments.
In the semi-finals, 402-pound Sonny Parsons of New Zealand pushed out
420-pound Kelly Gneiting of Idaho, who had medalled in 2001. Meanwhile,
Hungarian Barnabas Toth and Mosi Humphrey from San Diego unleashed intense
slapping attacks on each other in the other semi-final. The battle was
furious, but Barnabas' persistence, experience, and speed paid off,
as he finally slapped Mosi out.
In the third place match, Kelly defeated Mosi with his superior size.
In the finals, Barnabas, facing a larger opponent, caught Sonny off-balance,
for a quick gold medal victory. In 2002, Barnabas had lost in the semi-finals,
so settled for third place, which made his 2003 victory all the sweeter.
The women's competition was also exciting, as ladies from 108 to 178
pounds fought in a round-robin to advance to the semi-finals and finals.
The overall champion was 17-year old Flo Kinslow, who went undefeated,
while Mahshid Tarazi, a medallist for the last two years, settled for
silver. May Chung of Hong Kong, at 108 pounds, got the openweight bronze.
Most of the male competitors also returned for the openweight compeition,
where athletes of all sizes fought each other. None of the lightweights
made it past the first round, but there were five heavyweights and three
middleweights left in the quarter-finals. Sonny Parsons, at 402 pounds,
defeated 530-pound Casey Burns of Idaho, 245-pound Troy Collins defeated
325-pound Richard Hopp, 358-pound Barnabas Toth beat 250-pound Kena
Heffernan, and 253-pound Major Gyula edged out 293-pound Mosi Humphrey.
In the semi-finals, Troy used quickness and technique to push out Sonny,
a man almost twice his size. This was reminiscent of the 2002 openweight
third-place match, where Troy beat another opponent in the 400-pound
range in the openweight class.
The other semi-final match was between the middleweight and heavyweight
champions, Major Gyula and Barnabas Toth, both from Hungary. Major,
who gave up 100 pounds, came in fast and hard to secure an excellent
inside grip. He drove Barnabas to the edge several times, but each time
Barnabas recovered. Finally, Barnabas twisted Major to the side, and
fell on top of him for the win.
In the third place match, Major redeemed himself with a victory against
Sonny, earning his second medal of the day. Barnabas beat Troy in the
finals, also for his second medal of the day. So, the two members of
the Hungarian team left with four medals between them, while Troy, the
LAPD officer, walked away with two medals of his own.
The matches were hard-fought and exciting, but at the awards ceremony,
all the athletes joined together with AKEBONO to celebrate the annual
contest. For those who didn't win, there's always next year . . . |
  |
| Mr. Imai
of the Japan Foundation and Mr. Mizobuchi of the Consulate General
of Japan join AKEBONO in the opening sake barrel breaking ceremony. |
  |
| AKEBONO
sits with his co-announcers at the scorer's table. |
  |
| US Sumo
Open athletes begin with "shiko" (sumo stomping). |
  |
| Kena
Heffernan of Hawaii shows impeccable sumo technique. |
  |
| International
sumo teams gather for last-minute instruction. |
  |
| In a pre-competition
demo, Kena Heffernan takes his younger opponent for a spin! |
| Photographer:
Chieko Hayashi |
|
OVERALL RECORD
| NAME |
CLASS |
WEIGHT |
RECORD |
MEDALS |
| Barnabas Toth |
Heavyweight |
358 lbs |
9 - 0 |
Heavy Gold, Open Gold |
Major Gyula
|
Middleweight |
253 lbs |
8 - 1 |
Middle Gold, Open Bronze |
| Troy Collins |
Middleweight |
245 lbs |
8 - 2 |
Middle Bronze, Open Silver |
| Joe Davis |
Lightweight |
187 lbs |
5 - 1 |
Light Gold |
| Tumur Baatar |
Lightweight |
164 lbs |
3 - 2 |
Light Silver |
| Kena Heffernan |
Middleweight |
250 lbs |
4 - 3 |
Middle Silver |
| Sonny Parsons |
Heavyweight |
402 lbs |
5 - 4 |
Heavy Silver |
| Kelly Gneiting |
Heavyweight |
420 lbs |
4 - 2 |
Heavy Bronze |
| Kevin Yonemoto |
Lightweight |
161
lbs |
4 - 3 |
Light Bronze |
| Trent Sabo |
Lightweight |
185 lbs |
4 - 3 |
|
| Daryl Wilhelm |
Middleweight |
253 lbs |
4 - 5 |
|
| Mosi Humphrey |
Heavyweight |
293 lbs |
3 - 4 |
|
| Jason Maron |
Lightweight |
180
lbs |
2 - 3 |
|
| Kurt Rightmyer |
Middleweight |
218
lbs |
2 - 3 |
|
| Casey Burns |
Heavyweight |
530
lbs |
2 - 3 |
|
| Richard Hopp |
Heavyweight |
325
lbs |
2 - 4 |
|
| Dimitar Serafinchev |
Middleweight |
223
lbs |
1 - 2 |
|
| Trevor Roberts |
Lightweight |
187
lbs |
1 - 3 |
|
| Al Bannaut-Kinslow |
Lightweight |
180
lbs |
1 - 3 |
|
| Todor Iliev |
Middleweight |
215
lbs |
1 - 3 |
|
| Justin Sabo |
Middleweight |
200
lbs |
1 - 3 |
|
| Randy Stirm |
Heavyweight |
343
lbs |
1 - 3 |
|
| William Lee |
Lightweight |
165
lbs |
0 - 3 |
|
| Eric Bautista |
Lightweight |
170
lbs |
0 - 4 |
|
| Franklin Buddmeyer |
Middleweight |
220
lbs |
0 - 4 |
|
| John Hidalgo |
Heavyweight |
285
lbs |
0 - 4 |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
| WOMEN |
|
|
|
|
| Flo Kinslow |
Middleweight |
160 lbs |
4 - 0 |
Middle Gold, Open Gold |
| Mahshid Tarazi |
Heavyweight |
178 lbs |
2 - 2 |
Heavy Gold, Open Silver |
| May Chung |
Lightweight |
108 lbs |
2 - 2 |
Light Gold, Open Bronze |
| Jennifer Perkins |
Lightweight |
128 lbs |
0 - 4 |
Light Silver |
|