At the Hatsu basho in Tokyo,
Takanohana, winner of 22 tournament championships, announces his retirement from sumo after eight years as a
yokozuna, after suffering three defeats in the first seven days.[1] He had suffered many injury problems and had only recently returned from a seven tournament layoff. His fellow yokozuna
Musashimaru sits out the whole tournament after injuring his wrist in the previous tourney. Also missing are
ozekiKaio and
Chiyotaikai, and
Tochiazuma who drops out after five losses in a row. In their absence, ozeki
Asashoryu wins his second successive
makuuchi division championship, with a 14–1 record, and is promoted to yokozuna. He becomes the third foreigner, and first
Mongolian, to reach sumo's highest rank.
KomusubiWakanosato, and
maegashiraDejima and
Tochinonada, are runners-up on 11–4. Wakanosato is awarded the Fighting Spirit prize along with
KoreanKasugao. The
juryo division championship is won by Asashoryu's stablemate
Asasekiryu who defeats
Buyuzan in a playoff.
Former komusubi
Ryogoku inherits the
toshiyori name of Sakaigawa from former yokozuna
Sadanoyama, and changes the name of his stable from Nakadachi to
Sakaigawa stable.
February
Former sekiwake
Takatoriki takes over the running of
Otake stable from his father-in-law, former yokozuna
Taiho.
At the Haru basho in Osaka, Chiyotaikai returns from injury to win his third top division championship with a 12–3 record.
Asashoryu scores 10–5 in his debut tournament as a yokozuna, enough for the runner-up position alongside Kaio and maegashira
Kyokushuzan and
Hokutoriki. Musashimaru and Tochiazuma sit the tournament out.
Musoyama pulls out after five losses in the first six days. Kyokushuzan's stablemate
Kyokutenho wins the Fighting Spirit prize, and
Takamisakari the Technique Award.
Tochisakae wins the juryo championship. Veteran former komusubi
Daizen retires after 22 years in sumo, as does former juryo wrestler
Susanoumi, the heaviest Japanese rikishi ever at some 240 kg.
May
At the Natsu basho in Tokyo, Asashoryu takes his first championship as a yokozuna with a 13–2 record. Kaio is runner-up on 11–4, alongside maegashira
Aminishiki who wins the Technique Prize. Chiyotaikai finishes on 10–5. Musōyama returns to preserve his ōzeki rank with an 8–7 record. He had been denied
kosho seido status, with the
Japan Sumo Association feeling that the system was being abused with Kaiō and Chiyotaikai both sitting out in January despite reportedly being fit enough to compete. Kyokushuzan wins the Outstanding Performance prize for his victory over Asashoryu, his first in six attempts. Kyokutenho receives the Fighting Spirit prize for the second tournament in a row, for his fine 10–5 score at komusubi, and is promoted to
sekiwake for the first time.
Tamakasuga wins the juryo championship and returns to the top division. Former sekiwake
Akinoshima, who has been ranked continuously in makuuchi since July 1988 and is the last top division wrestler from the
Shōwa era still active in sumo, retires at the age of 36 after a 6–9 score relegates him to juryo.
31: The
danpatsu-shiki or retirement ceremony of popular former sekiwake
Terao is held at the Kokugikan.
June
1: Takanohana's retirement ceremony takes place at the Kokugikan. He performs the yokozuna
dohyo-iri or ring entering ceremony for the last time, and his hair is cut by his uncle
Wakanohana Kanji I, his brother
Wakanohana Masaru, and finally his father
Takanohana Kenshi. The event is broadcast live on Japanese television.
July
At the Nagoya basho, Kaio wins his fourth top division championship with a 12–3 record after defeating fellow ozeki Chiyotaikai on the final day. Chiyotaikai finishes runner-up on 11–4. Musashimaru returns for the first time since November 2002 but drops out once again with a recurrence of his wrist problem. Asashoryu also withdraws through injury. He had been disqualified from a bout earlier in the tournament after pulling on the
chonmage of Mongolian rival Kyokushuzan, the first yokozuna ever to suffer a disqualification.[2] The two wrestlers scuffle in the bathroom after the match, and Asashoryu also breaks the wing mirror of Kyokushuzan's car.[3]Takamisakari, who had defeated both yokozuna, receives his first Outstanding Performance awarded
Tokitsuumi receives his third Technique Prize. The juryo division championship is won by
Kakizoe.
September
The Sumo Association chairman
Kitanoumi holds a press conference and confirms the abolition of the kosho seido (public injury) system after the November 2003 tournament, and increasing the number of sekitori from January 2004 (42 from 40 in makuuchi and 28 from 26 in juryo). In the last year, 10 top division wrestlers and 11 juryo wrestlers received the status, the most ever, and the Sumo Association feels it was getting out of hand. In addition,
Musōyama was refused kosho status after his injury in the March tournament was deemed to be an old shoulder injury, and yet still competed in May and got eight wins.
At the Aki basho in Tokyo, Asashoryu wins his second championship as a yokozuna, third of the year, and fourth overall, with a 13–2 record. He finishes two wins ahead on a trio of wrestlers on 11–4: Chiyotaikai, sekiwake Wakanosato and maegashira
Iwakiyama. Kaio, who had been told a 15–0 score was necessary for yokozuna promotion, can only manage 7–8. Musashimaru sits the tournament out. Wakanosato receives the Outstanding performance Award while Iwakiyama wins the Technique prize and Kyokutenho and Takamisakari share the Fighting spirit prize.
Takekaze wins the juryo championship.
November
Former yokozuna
Akebono announces he is leaving his oyakata position to become a
K-1 fighter.
At the Kyushu basho, Musashimaru retires after his second attempted comeback ends in failure, losing four matches in the first seven days.[4] He is the last wrestler from
Hawaii in sumo, a legacy that began with
Takamiyama in 1964. Lower down the ranks, former maegashira
Aogiyama and the American born
Sentoryu also announce their retirements. Ozeki Tochiazuma wins the makuuchi championship, his second, with a score of 13–2. Asashoryu finishes in second place, one win behind, after losing to Tochiazuma on the final day. Veterans
Tochinonada and
Tosanoumi, with three wins over yokozuna between them in this basho, share the Outstanding Performance Prize.
Tamanoshima wins the Fighting Spirit prize. In the juryo division
GeorgianKokkai wins the championship with a fine 14–1 record and becomes the first
Caucasian to be promoted to the top division. The makushita yusho is won by veteran
Daimanazuru, with an unbeaten 7–0 score, who earns promotion to the sekitori ranks for the first time. Runner-up on 6–1 is the 18-year-old Mongolian
Hakuho, who is also promoted to juryo.
28 April: Yamawake Oyakata, who as the former maegashira
Tochifuji defeated Taiho in the yokozuna's final tournament in May 1971, dies aged 56.
17 July: Maeda Yoritaka, an apprentice at the
Kitanoumi stable, aged 15, of
Cardiomyopathy. He is the only sumo wrestler to have died without taking ever taking part in an official tournament.
17 December: Former komusubi
Fujinishiki, also the former head of the
Takasago stable, dies of
liver disease aged 66. Asashoryu is criticised for not returning from Mongolia to attend his funeral.