Education
He had been going to Tamanoi stable regularly for practice since primary school as his sumo club had an ongoing relationship with the stable, and this was the stable he ultimately chose to join after junior high school.
He had been going to Tamanoi stable regularly for practice since primary school as his sumo club had an ongoing relationship with the stable, and this was the stable he ultimately chose to join after junior high school.
His highest rank to date has been maegashira 4. Kazuyoshi Shibuya went to primary school and junior high school in the Adachi, Tokyo. He began practicing sumo in his fifth year of primary school and in his sixth year came in a second in a national primary school sumo tournament.
He made his debut in November 2003, the same tournament as later jūryō contemporary Sadanoumi.
He rose gradually to the ranks of makushita and was working his way up, but would start to suffer from pain due to a neck injury and would eventually drop back down to the fourth tier sandanme division. After two tournaments here he would slowly work his way through makushita again.
He reached the elite sekitori ranks in January 2011, a little over seven years after his professional debut. His rise through jūryō and onto the top-tier makuuchi division was surprisingly smooth compared to his struggles in lower divisions, undoubtedly helped by the forced retiring of several jūryō and lower makuuchi wrestlers due to an unprecedented match-fixing scandal.
In these circumstances, a relatively average record of 9-6 at jūryō #8 would allow him promotion to the makuuchi division in July of that year.
This first makuuchi tournament would be a very successful 10-5 record which would allow him to rise higher through the ranks, but his following four efforts were all losing tournaments which saw him slide back to maegashira 15. A very disappointing 3–12 score in the May 2012 tournament saw him demoted back to the jūryō division, but upon his return to the top division he put together a string of five consecutive 8–7 records which eventually saw him promoted to his highest rank to date of maegashira 4. He sat out the March 2014 tournament, recuperating after a detached retina operation.
This led to his demotion back to jūryō for the following May 2014 tournament where he only managed a 7-8 record.
This has been his last makuuchi appearance to date. Fujiazuma weighs 183 kg, making him one of the heaviest wrestlers in makuuchi.
He wins most of his bouts by pushing and thrusting. His most common winning kimarite or technique is oshi dashi (push out).
A member of Tamanoi stable, he is the first top division wrestler produced by Tamanoi"s head coach, the former ozeki Tochiazuma Daisuke.