
Hot Topics | |
---|---|
Greji wrote:Good shot Ji, but I've often wondered, whether it should it be Honkey Power, or Honky Power? Does the "e" add some class for Rednecks?
I suppose it would depend it you were a Honky, Honker, or Honkee..
In the male world of professional sumo wrestling where women are not even allowed to touch the ring, it is a lady with a gripping smile who made Bulgarian-born Kaloyan Mahlyanov, known in Japan as Kotooshu, into the sumo superstar he is today..."I was like a clever fox in the late 1990s, luring plump boys from wrestling clubs to try out sumo," Bulgarian Sumo Federation chief Lilyana Kaneva, who previously worked for the national wrestling federation, told AFP. "Kaloyan was a second-year wrestling student who turned up at an amateur competition and I knew immediately that he had talent and potential in sumo and not in wrestling, as he already weighed over 100 kilogrammes (220 pounds)"...After converting to sumo, Mahlyanov quickly became amateur champion in Bulgaria and the professional Sadogatake sumo stable in Tokyo was ready to take him on as a disciple.
"I had trouble convincing his mum and dad to let him go, at the same time undertaking this enormous responsibility as he had to quit university and it was clear to me that there was no going back once he went to Tokyo," Kaneva said. But Mahlyanov made it to Japan, where he joined the stable's draconian training during the day, discussing problems with his mentor in the evenings. "After 20 days, it was time for me to go and he suddenly said: 'I'm leaving with you'," she recalls, noting she was then fully aware that this would amount to sacrilege. Knowing the stable had expelled a South Korean wrestler to make space for Mahlyanov -- each Japanese stable is only allowed one foreigner -- she said she "promised him luxury, posh yachts... the world" but he insisted on returning to his tiny village of Djulyunitsa in central Bulgaria.
"We were sitting there the last evening, finishing dessert and I told master Kotozakura (the famous former head of the Sadogatake stable) to let him go, and that I would commit harakiri if Kaloyan did not return to the stable within a week," Kaneva said. "Well, he was granted leave but returned to Tokyo as promised so I was spared harakiri," she laughs...
...Kotooshu's Bulgarian fairy godmother has meanwhile become the first woman ever to sit on the board of directors of the International Sumo Federation and the European Sumo Union. Kaneva, who studied French philology and writes haikus, a form of Japanese poetry, in her free time, is still luring plump boys into her "sumoland" as she calls it, and has fostered the development of 20 amateur sumo clubs around Bulgaria. In November 2006, she was awarded the Japanese Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette, the second most prestigious Japanese decoration, for her contribution to the nation. The only thing she says she regrets now is that she did not discover sumo earlier. "I could have become a sumo wrestler and not just a sumo judge," she says with a wink.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests