Career
He was the sport"s 47th yokozuna, fighting at sumo"s highest rank from 1961 to 1969. After his retirement he became an elder of the Japan Sumo Association and ran his own training stable from 1970 until his death. Born in what is now part of the city of Tsuruoka in the northern prefecture of Yamagata, Kashiwado made his professional debut in September 1954, joining Isenoumi stable.
He initially fought under his own surname of Togashi.
Upon reaching the top makuuchi division in September 1958 he rose rapidly up the rankings. In only his fourth top division tournament, following a shikona change to Kashiwado, he was runner-up to yokozuna Tochinishiki with a 13-2 record and earned special prizes for Fighting Spirit and Technique.
He made the san"yaku ranks in November 1959, winning promotion to ōzeki in September 1960 and taking his first top division yūshō in January 1961. After taking part in a playoff for the championship in September of that year, he was promoted to yokozuna, joining the aging pair of Asashio and Wakanohana who were soon to retire.
He was however a tournament runner-up on no fewer than fifteen occasions.
He suffered from many injury problems during his career, which led to him being dubbed the "glass yokozuna". He failed to complete four tournaments in a row from January to July 1963. However he made a spectacular comeback in September 1963, winning his first championship as a yokozuna (and second yūshō in total) with a perfect 15-0 record.
He was listed as a yokozuna on the banzuke for 47 tournaments, which puts him in equal 6th place on the all-time list.
He was popular among sumo crowds, appealing to those who found Taihō too dominant. The eight years in which the two shared the yokozuna rank was known as the Hakuhō era, a combination of their names (Haku is another reading of Kashi)
Kashiwado"s favoured kimarite or techniques were migi-yotsu (a left hand outside, right hand inside grip on the opponents mawashi), yorikiri (force out) and tsukidashi (thrust out).
In all, about sixty percent of his wins were by either force out or force out and down (yoritaoshi). After retiring from active competition in July 1969 he remained in the sumo world as an elder, and he opened up his own stable, Kagamiyama, in November 1970.
He coached Tagaryū to the top division championship in September 1984.
He also served as a director of the Sumo Association and was head of the judges committee until 1994. He died of liver failure in 1996, at the age of 58. Taihō was at Kashiwado"s bedside and was distraught over his death.