March 2026 basho
This one is more impressive when you understand how agile Wakatakakage is, despite getting hoodwinked by Hoshoryu's sudden head-stuffing
March 2026 basho
This one is more impressive when you understand how agile Wakatakakage is, despite getting hoodwinked by Hoshoryu's sudden head-stuffing
Far more impressed by Fujinokawa's loss here to ozeki Aonishiki than his recent wins over both (!!!) yokozuna. Against Hoshoryu he got lucky with the timing of a pull/slap. Onosato is still dealing with a separated shoulder and has since withdrawn. Here he planned and executed well, and just lost.
John Gunning is too critical of Funinokawa's odd-looking tachi-ai. Getting under Aonishiki and lifting him is exactly what the Ukrainian's opponents need to do. Fujinokawa's foot sweep was a good idea, too, and well executed. He's just fighting a skilled, strong(er?), larger opponent in a sport with narrow margins and a heavy element of luck.
Hoshoryu has a slick throw this judoka can't assign to a taxon any narrower than "te-waza", but it's actually his distance management and pummeling earlier in the match that really impressed me.
Churanoumi is on the verge of establishing maemitsu front grip — the yokozuna takes it away with a perfectly calibrated sliding retreat.
Later, Hoshoryu tricks his way into the match-winning underhook with a straight-arm prop/push followed by perfect eel pressure while he gets chest-to-chest. Exquisite.
Asakoryu's throw looks cool but check out his defense on the tawara: maintaining forward pressure in a deep back arch and forcefully parrying Fujiryoga's thrust.
Deserved a replay.
Aonishiki forced by injury to his B-game, when he makes it work, is in a way more fun to watch than his standard forehead-in the-chest strategy.
Good scrambling pummel to find the second belt grip.
If I still had my copy of Aikido: The Dynamic Circle I could name-drop this specific technique. The most explosive, physical combat sport proves the efficacy of techniques of the gentlest martial art.
I'm reminded of an old judo teammate, some sort of LEO, who was a far more diligent aikido student than he was a judoka. Former near-pro American footballer, built like a brick shithouse, tremendously fast and grip like a vise. I asked his experience applying aikido and I didn't understand the answer. I get it now. Ineffective in the hands of non-athletes, incredibly useful as one tactic of many.