Background
Jūmonji was born in Hashikami, Sannohe District.
Jūmonji was born in Hashikami, Sannohe District.
His highest rank was maegashira 6. He was forced to retire in April 2011 after an investigation by the Japan Sumo Association found him guilty of match-fixing. He made his professional debut in November 1992, joining Tatsutagawa stable (which was absorbed into Michinoku stable in 2000 upon the retirement of its stablemaster).
He spent six years in the lower divisions, picking up a tournament championship or yusho in the sandanme division in 1995.
He reached the second jūryō division in January 1998, fighting under the shikona or ring name of Kaigatake, but he lasted only one tournament there. Upon winning promotion back to jūryō in November 1999 he reverted to his own surname, which he used for the rest of his career.
He used various names as the second part of his shikona, including Akinori and Masayasu, but returned to his given name of Tomokazu in 2008. Jūmonji made his debut in the top makuuchi division in May 2000.
He made his first winning score in the division in March 2001, but after suffering from a hernia he was demoted back to jūryō and had to miss the September 2001 tournament.
Upon his return to competition he earned immediate promotion back to makuuchi but he mostly remained in the middle and lower maegashira ranks, without making much of a challenge for promotion to the titled sanyaku ranks. Despite competing in over 500 top division bouts, he never once rose high enough to face a yokozuna or an ozeki. He was demoted once again in May 2007.
He could only manage a 5-10 score in July 2007, pushing him towards the bottom of the jūryō division.
He continued to slide down the rankings, turning in losing scores of 3-4 in the tournaments of January and March 2008. After falling to a low of Makushita 20, he recovered with four consecutive winning scores from September 2008 to March 2009.
His 4-3 score at Makushita 2 East in March was enough to return him to the jūryō division for the first time since November 2007, where he recorded a winning score of 9-6 in his 100th tournament in sumo. He maintained his sekitori status until January 2010, when he could score only 6-9 at the lowest jūryō rank of Number.
14 West. He was demoted to makushita once again after the November 2010 tournament.
Jūmonji was one of 23 wrestlers found guilty of fixing the result of bouts after an investigation by the Japan Sumo Association, and he was forced to retire in April 2011. Jūmonji was a yotsu-sumo specialist, and in a grappling position preferred a migi-yotsu grip on the mawashi, with his left hand outside and right hand inside his opponent"s arms. His most common winning kimarite was a straightforward yori-kiri or force out, which accounted for roughly 40 percent of his victories at sekitori level