| The
2005 US Sumo Open was the largest Open yet, with nearly 1,000 people
in attendance in the Los Angeles Convention Center. To add to the
drama, competition took place on an elevated stage, with audience
members
seated around.
As in pro sumo in Japan, many athletes went tumbling
off the stage, and several fans ended up with giants in their laps!
As in past years, some of the best international sumo athletes in
the world competed. The main foreign teams flew in from Japan and
Europe. Japanese sumo wrestlers have competed in most US Sumo Opens,
but with four Japanese competitors in 2005, this was the largest Japanese
contingent since the inaugural US Sumo Open in 2001. Not surprisingly,
the four Japanese athletes won a total of six medals!
The team from Japan was comprised of the best members
of the Shizuoka Sumo Federation, including Katsuhiko Shimomura (Chairman)
and Yukimasa
Muramatsu (Director), who served as referees for the competition,
and who each have decades of sumo experience. Both Mr. Shimomura and
Mr. Muramatsu are certified sumo referees, and their expertise is
greatly valued. Mr. Shimomura has refereed sumo all over the world,
including at the World Sumo Championships.
The Japanese athletes from Shizuoka -- Koichi Kato,
Shintaro Fukuzato, and Keisuke Matsuno -- have all won many titles
over the years. Of particular note, Mr. Kato not only won the World
Sumo Championships, but he also won the All-Japan National Sumo Championships,
which arguably draws stronger competition than the World's. Due to
injury just prior to the tournament, Mr. Matsuno was unable to compete,
but he served as a sideline judge for the matches.
In addition to excellent officiating, the event this
year featured some of the best competition at an amateur sumo event
in this country in recent memory. As always, the European and Japanese
athletes dominated most of the Americans, and really raised the bar
for Americans who are trying to improve the quality of sumo here.
Some Americans did stand out, though. In the heavyweight
division, Carl Pappalardo was the only American to even reach the
semi-finals, en route to his silver medal. In the lightweight competition,
Trent Sabo went undefeated, and even won against the former World
Junior Champion from Bulgaria, Valentin Gogov, in an exhibition match.
Perennial middleweight contenders, Kena Heffernan
and Troy Collins, each won medals in both the middleweight and openweight
classes. Troy and Kena have accomplished this amazing feat for three
years in a row now!
In 2003, Barnabas Toth, the enormous Hungarian won the openweight,
while Troy and Kena got the other two medals, defeating many heavyweights
in the process. In 2004, European champion Petar Stoyanov of Bulgaria
won
the openweight, and again the much smaller Troy and Kena got silver
and bronze. In their respective three-peats in 2005, Kena and Troy
got openweight silver and gold again, while the undefeated giant,
Kato of Japan, took the title. So, every year a foreign heavyweight
wins the openweight, while the two premiere American middleweights,
Kena and Troy, fend off the entire field, including competitors twice
their size, to stand on the openweight podium.
The women's competition was the largest since 2002,
with seven competitors, including four lightweights and three middleweights.
Sumo newcomer Susie Braendle won the lightweight, while Hiroko Suszuki
of Japan grabbed the middleweight. In the openweight, sumo veteran
Mahshid Tarazi came back against Hiroko to take gold.
Besides the strong foreign presence, US competitors
came from six different states, including California, Idaho, Arizona,
Hawaii, New Jersey, and New York. The competition was quite long,
with a total of 100 matches – 97 official matches, and three
exhibition matches with former World Junior Sumo Champion, Valentin
Gogov of Bulgaria, who was too heavy to compete in the lightweight,
but fought unofficially with the American lightweights, losing only
to Trent Sabo. The 2005 US Sumo Open was also a very safe event (not
only because of medical staff on hand and lots of padding around the
ring): among the athletes from all over the country and the world
were four police officers: Troy Collins (LAPD), Patty Braendle (LAPD),
Susie Gras (LAPD), and Rene Marte (NJPD).
As the level of US Sumo Open competition improves
each year, and international teams, with numerous National and World
Sumo Champions, vie for medals, we look forward to a very exciting
6th annual US Sumo Open in 2006. Don't miss it! |
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Fans
stream into the LA Convention Center. |
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Sumo
wrestlers tighten their belts before their bouts. |
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The
renowned Shizuoka Sumo Federation members are honored at the
Open. |
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| The heavyweights
are introduced. |
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Middleweight
champ Kena Heffernan and heavyweight champ Koichi Kato finally
meet in the openweight final match. |
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The
Japanese team demonstrates sumo ritual. |
| Photographer:
Chuck Green |
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