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Interesting that this news has quickly been picked up overseas. As well as the BBC, reports have already appeared on the wire services, The Guardian and the Wall Street Journal.
[INDENT][floatl][/floatl] G[color="Silver"]h[/color]ETT[color="Silver"]o[/color]Y IMAGES feb 2---Japan Sumo Association chairman Hanaregoma holds a press conference after the association's board meeting at the Kokugikan sumo gymnasium in Tokyo on February 2, 2011.
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Taro Toporific wrote:Foreign news services and Westerners in general are deluded into thinking that sumo ancient, sacred sport of honor rather than just the sleazy pastime of gangsters and crooked elderly businessmen.
"Say it ain't so, Akebono."BBC wrote:The messages are said to include precise plans of how one wrestler would attack and the other fall, in exchange for payments of hundreds of thousands of yen.
Doctor Stop wrote:"Say it ain't so, Akebono."
Sumo wrestling was today plunged into the biggest crisis in its modern history after at least three wrestlers admitted fixing matches in the latest scandal to have tarnished the Japanese sport's reputation. The education minister, Yoshiaki Takaki, who has responsibility for sumo, told a parliamentary panel that the wrestlers had admitted arranging to fix bouts via mobile phone.
The admissions come a day after reports that police had discovered dozens of emails that pointed to rampant match-fixing in a sport steeped in tradition and, until recently, considered a bastion of sportsmanship. The prime minister, Naoto Kan, said the allegations, if true, amounted to a betrayal. ''Sumo has a long history and a great number of fans," he told parliament this morning. "It is certainly the national sport. If matches have been fixed, it is a serious betrayal of the people''...more...
Mulboyne wrote:Guardian: Sumo wrestlers admit fixing matches
There's also mention in the press that wrestlers may have been betting on these rigged matches. You have to think this affair is also an indictment of the press. Given the long-standing rumours of match-fixing, and the willingness of wrestlers in the past to testify, it is surely a "betrayal of the people" that the media failed to chase this story down much earlier, preferring instead to watch while the JSA successfully sued publishers for reporting what was an open secret.
It's a sad state of affairs when the scholar of another country is the one who manages to see through the background dealings tainting Japan's national sport.
Mulboyne wrote:There's also mention in the press that wrestlers may have been betting on these rigged matches. You have to think this affair is also an indictment of the press. Given the long-standing rumours of match-fixing, and the willingness of wrestlers in the past to testify, it is surely a "betrayal of the people" that the media failed to chase this story down much earlier, preferring instead to watch while the JSA successfully sued publishers for reporting what was an open secret.
Even before the sumo match-fixing scandal started making waves, 57 percent of people in a recent Yomiuri Shimbun survey said they did not think the Japan Sumo Association's reform efforts would do any good. Only 35 percent said they had faith the JSA would be able to achieve its reform goals, according to the survey. The general sports survey was conducted on Jan. 29 and Jan. 30 and covered 3,000 people nationwide, just a few days before the latest match-throwing allegations broke, with 1,234 people giving valid responses.
With a majority of the public expressing little hope the scandal-prone sumo community can get back on track, it is highly likely the recent fracas over thrown bouts has made the public even more critical toward the sumo world. Asked what they would like to see from grand sumo, 64 percent of respondents said they want "Japanese wrestlers to succeed," and 40 percent said "criminal gangs should be eradicated and bad tendencies should be corrected." Thirty-six percent wanted "wrestlers to have more dignity," and 31 percent hoped "the quality of the instructors can be improved." Multiple answers were allowed.
Asked what sport they liked to watch, 44 percent chose professional baseball as their favorite--winning first place for the 17th consecutive year. Professional soccer came in second with 36 percent, drastically higher than the ninth spot it held last year, likely due to the achievements of the national team at the recent Asian Cup in Qatar. Sumo came in sixth at 23 percent As for baseball teams, 23 percent said they supported the Yomiuri Giants, winning first place for the 20th year in a row. Ichiro of the U.S. Seattle Mariners was the most popular player.
Yokohammer wrote:But I'm pretty sure it'll be "rooted out" (read: "swept under the carpet") in time for the summer basho. There's too much at stake.
Yokohammer wrote:The investigating committee has asked all juryo and higher rikishi to surrender their ketai and bankbook for examination. That could be interesting. I assume they'll make sure they have all bankbooks. The smart scammer would have at least two. Same for keitai. Also, no rikishi with something to hide would hand in their keitai without deleting incriminating messages. I believe messages can be reconstructed if they're in the phone's memory (that's how they nabbed the current bunch), but if these guys are smart enough to store all their mail on a removable card the phone itself wouldn't contain any evidence at all. They'd have to get the logs from the carrier.
dimwit wrote:I love the ones that are claiming that their wives stepped on them or they lost them to a paper shredder or whatnot. I would assume that they would automatically go for the carrier logs. But this all raises some rather important legal matters. They have not done anything illegal, so does the Sumo Association have the right to receive the logs?
Article 22:Kuang_Grade wrote:There is no constitutional right to be employed as a sumo wrestler.
Yokohammer wrote:The investigating committee has asked all juryo and higher rikishi to surrender their ketai and bankbook for examination.
Doctor Stop wrote:Article 22:
Every person shall have freedom to choose and change his residence and to choose his occupation to the extent that it does not interfere with the public welfare.
Article 27:
1. All people shall have the right and the obligation to work.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:I was at a shita-machi motsu-yaki shop near Asakusa last night. The general consensus among the oyaji at the counter seemed to be that this shit has been fixed since the Edo Period and anyone claiming to be shocked is either full of shit or a fucking idiot.
Agreed!IkemenTommy wrote:It makes you wonder if other "sports" and entertainment are also fixed.
K-1 and Pride... no way, can't be!
JRA... It's not impossible but making the horses to run across the goal line in a specific order and making it look like a close race can be a little tricky. Greji, I'll need your expertise on this one (or not).
Easily done.Keirin and Kyotei (boat races)... quite riggable if you'd ask me.
J-league soccer... pussy sport that no one cares to watch anyway.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:I was at a shita-machi motsu-yaki shop near Asakusa last night. The general consensus among the oyaji at the counter seemed to be that this shit has been fixed since the Edo Period and anyone claiming to be shocked is either full of shit or a fucking idiot.
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