Amateur Sumo – the sport as it should be
Mark Buckton
Sakai World Sumo Champs – not all about winning

Las Vegas Koen
Joe Kuroda
Our man reports from the fight capital of the world

Rikishi of Old
Joe Kuroda
A look at a rikishi of yesterday with Kotozakura – our man for October

Heya Peek
John Gunning
John’s early morning dash to Azumazeki-beya & report on TKOTU

SFM Interview
Katrina Watts sits down with SFM’s Mark Buckton to discuss amateur sumo

Photo Bonanza
SFM’s best yet – Aki Basho/ Las Vegas / Amateur World Champs / Azumazeki-beya visit – seen nowhere else

Aki Basho Review
Lon Howard
Lon gives us his Aki Basho summary, along with the henka sightings results, and his take on the tournament while ‘gem’ of the basho takes a break

Lower Division Rikishi
Mikko Mattila
Mikko Mattila returns to cover lower division ups and downs

Kyushu Basho Forecast
Pierre Wohlleben & Mark Buckton
Pierre predicts the Kyushu Basho banzuke while Mark previews the ones to watch next time out

Sumo 101
Barbara Ann Klein
Discovers and explains amasumo & ozumo variations

Kimarite Focus
Mikko Mattila
Mikko once again walks us through his chosen kimarite

Minusha
John McTague
John’s unique bimonthly view of news from outside the dohyo

Online Gaming
Zenjimoto of ‘game fame’ covers some of the very best sumo games around – his own!

Kokugi Connections
Todd Lambert
Todd’s focus on 3 of the most interesting online sumo sites today

Fan Debate
Is the limit on foreign rikishi fair? See what our debaters had to say

SFM Cartoons
Benny Loh
In the first of our cartoon bonanzas, sit back and chuckle at Benny Loh’s offerings

Let’s Hear From You
What was it that made you a sumo fan? Gernobono tells all

Readers’ Letters
See what SFM readers had to say since our last issue

Sumo Quiz
The Quizmaster
Answer the Qs and win yourself next basho’s banzuke.

valiantly in September, going 8-7 despite a wrecked ankle, and should now be in shouting distance to the top division, and Dairaido, whose powerful (not to mention quite successful) oshi-zumo surprised many people last month. They'll both get to prove their skills against improved competition. And among the veterans, Yotsukasa and Toki will be in the limelight, albeit for the opposite reason. Both have steadily trended downward for the past two years and will now find themselves at the very bottom of the juryo division, fighting for their careers.

Only two rikishi are joining us from the unsalaried ranks this time: Chiyotenzan continues to be too strong for makushita, and now also needs to prove he isn't still too weak for juryo. He is
accompanied by Kakuryu, a 20-year old Mongolian who may turn out to be spearheading a new Mongolian wave that is currently moving through upper makushita. All but assured of being ranked J14, he will immediately need to prove himself as a sekitori by getting kachi-koshi if he wants to stay in the division.

Predicted Banzuke Home