Home / News / World News / Article / Crowds welcome newest yokozuna in ancient ceremony

Crowds welcome newest yokozuna in ancient ceremony

Mongolian-born Hoshoryu became the 74th yokozuna, or grand champion, in sumo history this week after winning the second tournament of his career

Listen to this article :
Mongolian born yokozuna, or grand champion, Hoshoryu performs the ring-entering ceremony at Meiji Shrine in Tokyo on Friday. PIC/AFP

Mongolian born yokozuna, or grand champion, Hoshoryu performs the ring-entering ceremony at Meiji Shrine in Tokyo on Friday. PIC/AFP

Drums thundered and priests chanted as sumo’s newest grand champion strode onto the public stage on Friday in a ceremony to mark his promotion to the ancient Japanese sport’s highest rank. Mongolian-born Hoshoryu became the 74th yokozuna, or grand champion, in sumo history this week after winning the second tournament of his career.

The 25-year-old is the first new yokozuna since 2021 and the only wrestler to currently hold the exalted rank. His promotion meant sumo avoided having no yokozuna for the first time in over 30 years, after Terunofuji announced his retirement earlier this month. Around 3,500 fans turned out on a sunny January afternoon to catch a glimpse of Hoshoryu as he took part in a ceremony at Tokyo’s Meiji Shrine. Among those watching were Hoshoryu’s uncle Asashoryu, himself a former wrestler who became the first Mongolian-born yokozuna in 2003.

Trending Stories

Latest Photoscta-pos

Latest VideosView All

Latest Web StoriesView All

Mid-Day FastView All

Advertisement