There are three Grand Sumo tournaments in Tokyo every year and we were fortunate that one takes place in September. The competition lasts 15 days and each day is full of bouts between wrestlers of different divisions. We got our tickets in the morning and came back in the afternoon to see the higher ranking professionals go at it. We even tried the traditional (and nutritional) stew they eat to maintain their huge frames. After entering the ring the sumos have a time limit of four minutes to go through their rituals, warm up, and prepare themselves for battle. The longest match we saw probably lasted 90 seconds and most are over in less than 15 so the buildup makes the action more exciting. We were surprised to see several Europeans and even a Brazilian participate. Although size is an important factor, a wrestler from the Czech Republic who was probably 100 pounds lighter than his foe, won the first match we saw by tossing his opponent to the ground after making him off-balance. Marcia used the same technique outside of the arena to take me down and win our impromptu match…
Não poderíamos estar um melhor momento em Tóquio do que setembro: Tornamento de Sumo. Pra começar a soupa Chankonabe super nutritiva, saborosa, com vários legumes e bem tradicional dos atletas do esporte (e é claro que experimentamos e adoramos). Eles lutam em um ringue circular chamado Dohyō e daí em diante é um tentando derrubar o outro. Conforme as regras mesmo dizem, o lutador que conseguir derrubar o outro no chão, empurrar o adversário para fora do círculo, ou mesmo se perder o equilíbrio e colocar um dedinho no chão, perde o jogo. O mais engraçado é que toda essa estratégia muitas vezes dura apenas segundos. O tornamento acontece o dia inteiro e por uma semana apenas, todos os competidores lutam todos os dias e o que tiver mais medalhas ganha o tornamento. Aprendemos tbém que muitas técnicas de Jiu-jitsu (a começar pelo nome) vem do Sumo e para nossa surpresa muitos dos athetas são europeus e brasileiros. E para fechar a noite com chave de ouro, tiramos uma foto com Kaisei Ichirō lutador brasileiro profissional de Sumo há anos. Além do abraço apertado ele nos surpreendeu mais ainda: ele estava super cheirosinho… daquele tamanho com cheirinho de talco : )
So, what’s M’s nickname going to be now that she has apparently earned top Sumo honors in the family? Very interesting and I am pretty sure this picture does not quite capture everything. We showed the pic to A, and she says to go back there because she wants to see a pic of you in the ring, Uncle Bryan. Don’t forget to bring home the “stew” recipe! Thanks for the picture post and the very nice commentary. WLD
Uau!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! que legal!!!!!
bjksss
aproveitem!!!!
amo vcs