Kaganishiki Yuji
Jonidan 105Highest rank: Jonidan 105
Championships and special prizes are counted from 2000 Aki Basho onward; kinboshi are counted from 2000 Hatsu Basho onward.
What is the strength index?▼
A single number that represents a rikishi's current competitive strength.
• Calculated from every bout's wins and losses alone (not banzuke rank or body measurements).
・It rises more for wins over strong opponents and falls more for losses to lower-rated opponents.. The opponent's strength is part of the calculation.
• Everyone starts around 1,500 and rises with winning records. Upper Makuuchi is typically around 2500 or more or higher.
• Unlike the human-set banzuke, it is driven only by results, so it can show improvement or decline before the ranking catches up.
Based on an Elo rating adapted from systems used in games such as chess.
Rank and record in the last six basho
Most successful winning techniques wins by this technique
Most common losses by technique loses by this technique
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Yorikiri17
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Additional statistics
- Tokyo 33% (7-14)
- Osaka 43% (3-4)
- Fukuoka 57% (4-3)
- Nagoya 40% (2-3)
Win rate by tournament day (Days 1-15)
Each figure is the career win rate for that day. It shows whether a rikishi starts fast or improves late in a basho.
Frequent opponents
Open an opponent to view the head-to-head record.
Adachi Daisuke 1 wins 1 losses ▼
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2003 Nagoya Basho 7Day LossUwatenage
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2003 Natsu Basho 8Day WinOshidashi
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Wakakabuto Tomokatsu 0 wins 2 losses ▼
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2003 Hatsu Basho 13Day LossYoritaoshi
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2002 Kyushu Basho 14Day LossYorikiri
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Fukukasuga Koji 1 wins 1 losses ▼
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2003 Aki Basho 5Day WinYorikiri
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2003 Hatsu Basho 10Day LossYorikiri
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Sawaisamu 2 wins 0 losses ▼
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2003 Aki Basho 4Day WinOshidashi
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2003 Nagoya Basho 6Day WinOshidashi
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Echizenyama Masamichi 1 wins 0 losses ▼
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2003 Aki Basho 14Day WinOshidashi
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Hara 1 wins 0 losses ▼
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2003 Aki Basho 2Day WinOshidashi
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