Masuiyama Daishirō II
Masuiyama Daishirō was a Japanese sumo wrestler and coach from Hyōgo. In 1980, he became the oldest wrestler to be promoted to the rank of ōzeki in the modern era. After retiring from active competition in 1981 he became a sumo coach and an elder of the Japan Sumo Association under the name Mihogaseki and produced several top-division wrestlers as head of Mihogaseki stable before stepping down upon reaching age 65 in 2013. He was also an enka musician.
Early life and career
Born in Himeji, he was the son of former ōzeki Masuiyama Daishirō I, and the grandson of a komusubi in Osaka sumo, Tamanomori. He was a talented swimmer at school but wanted to follow his father into sumo. Initially turned down because of his size, he eventually persuaded his father to let him join his Mihogaseki stable in January 1967. He began at the same time as Kitanoumi, a future yokozuna. He began fighting under the name Suiryū, adopting the Masuiyama shikona the following year. He reached sekitori status in July 1969 upon promotion to the jūryō division and reached the top makuuchi division for the first time in March 1970. Weighing barely 100 kg, and prone to injury, he was not able to establish himself in the division until 1972, temporarily dropping back to jūryō where he won his only yūshō or tournament championship in January of that year. In November 1972, he won the first of his five Ginō-shō or Technique prizes and earned promotion to komusubi. He was demoted after only one tournament and mostly remained in the maegashira ranks for the next few years. In May 1974, he scored 12 wins and was a tournament runner-up behind stablemate Kitanoumi.In July 1978, he finally earned promotion to the third highest sekiwake rank, but once again was unable to maintain it, dropping back to maegashira level. At the end of 1979, he returned to sekiwake and scored 11 wins. In January 1980, he was again a tournament runner-up, this time to yokozuna Mienoumi, and after the tournament he was promoted to ōzeki. It had taken him 60 tournaments to get there from his top-division debut, a record, and at thirty one years two months he was also the oldest to reach the rank since the introduction of the six-tournaments-a-year system in 1958. Masuiyama and Mihogaseki Oyakata became the first father and son ōzeki in sumo history. His ōzeki career was brief, and he announced his retirement during the March 1981 tournament.