2001 in sumo


The following are the events in professional sumo during 2001.

Tournaments

Hatsu basho">honbasho">basho

Ryogoku Kokugikan, Tokyo, 7 January – 21 January

Haru basho

Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium, Osaka, 11 March25 March

Natsu basho

Ryogoku Kokugikan, Tokyo, 13 May27 May

Nagoya basho

Aichi Prefectural Gymnasium, Nagoya, 8 July22 July

Aki basho

Ryogoku Kokugikan, Tokyo, 9 September23 September

Kyushu basho

Fukuoka International Centre, Kyushu, 11 November – 25 November

News

January

February

  • 21: The Sumo Association reduces the height requirement for new entrants from to, due to a shortage of applicants. 13 tryouts are accepted.

March

May

  • 22: Takanohana wins his 22nd yusho in dramatic fashion, beating Musashimaru in a playoff despite clearly suffering from serious knee ligament damage sustained in a defeat to Musoyama the previous day. Kaio pulls out with back pain after losing four bouts in the first eight days. Kotomitsuki receives the Technique Award while fellow komusubi Asashoryu gets the Outstanding Performance Prize in his first tournament at the rank. Kitazakura wins his first juryo yusho. Former maegashira Shikishima retires.

June

  • 5: Futagoyama Oyakata announces that his son Takanohana will not take part in the next tournament, and indicates that he will require a lengthy layoff.

July

  • 22: Kaio wins his second championship of the year with a 13–2 record despite limited training due to his ongoing back trouble. Musashimaru is runner up on 12–3 alongside Tamanoshima who gets another Fighting Spirit Award. The Technique Prize is shared between Tochiazuma and Tokitsuumi while Wakanosato receives the Outstanding Performance Prize. Dejima is demoted from the ozeki rank. Buyuzan wins the juryo championship, coming through a series of playoffs after a record eight men all finish on the same score, just 9–6.
  • 23: It is revealed that Takanohana has travelled to Paris to have his injured knee operated on by a specialist.

September

[Image:YokozunaAkebonoPuttingOnRopeBelt.jpg|right|thumb|Akebono at his retirement ceremony]
  • 23: Maegashira 2 Kotomitsuki wins his first championship with a 13–2 record, and takes all three special prizes. Sekiwake Tochiazuma is runner-up on 12–3. Kaiho also receives a share of the Technique Prize, while Asashoryu gets a share of the Fighting Spirit prize. Takanohana is still recuperating from his surgery, and Kaio, Chiyotaikai and Miyabiyama all drop out early through injury. Miyabiyama joins his stablemate Dejima in being demoted from ozeki. Musashimaru finishes with a mediocre 9–6. Former maegashira Aogiyama wins the juryo yusho.
  • 29: Akebono's retirement ceremony or danpatsu-shiki takes place at the Kokugikan. Guests taking part in the hair-cutting ritual include US Ambassador to Japan Howard Baker, an ambassador representing the French President Jacques Chirac, Konishiki, Takanohana and finally Akebono's stablemaster Azumazeki Oyakata.

November

  • 25: Musashimaru wins his first yusho since September 2000 with a 13–2 score. Tochiazuma is once again runner-up on 12–3 and seals his promotion to ozeki. He also receives his seventh Technique Prize. Takanohana, Chiyotaikai and Miyabiyama sit out, but Kaio returns to score 10–5. Asashoryu and Wakanosato share the Fighting Spirit Prize with top division debutant Buyuzan. Oikari wins the juryo championship. Former komusubi Tomonohana retires.
  • 28: Tochiazuma's promotion to ozeki is officially confirmed. He becomes the fifth son of a former wrestler to make the ozeki rank.

Deaths

  • 17 January: former komusubi Wakabayama, also former Shikoroyama Oyakata, aged 78, of cerebral thrombosis.
  • 27 January: Onogawa Oyakata, former maegashira Hachiya, aged 50, of mouth cancer.