• Akebono's
career recods • There's
no turning back for Akebono
By Ferd
Lewis Advertiser Staff Writer
What do you do when you are 32 years old and retired from the
only real job you've ever had?
"I
guess I could go home and be the biggest cook at Jack-in-the-Box,"
Chad Rowan has joked as his retirement from sumo has drawn
closer.
Now that his days in the ring are over — his retirement
ceremony will be held today (Hawai'i time) — the man known as
Akebono is wrestling with what to do next. "I don't think he's
really decided yet," said his wife, Christine.
His options include becoming a private citizen, taking his
nearly $1 million meritorious service bonus and the several hundred
thousand dollars to be realized from retirement ceremonies and going
into business or becoming a member of the ruling Japan Sumo
Association — with or without opening his own stable.
Since he steps down as a yokozuna, the highest rank in the
centuries-old sport, Akebono has options not available to most
retiring sumotori. It is sumo policy that yokozuna are allowed to
become participating members of the JSA for up to five years and
draw a salary without having to buy stock.
Sumotori below the rank of yokozuna who qualify to become
elders must purchase stock in the JSA before they can join. A share
can cost $2 million or more depending upon availability. Once
secured, it allows a former sumotori to stay in the sport as a coach
or stable owner until age 65 and draw a salary.
There are 105 permanent shares of stock and two special
one-generation shares held by former yokozuna Taiho and
Kitanoumi.
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With his
retirement from active sumo wrestling, Waimanalo's Chad Rowan,
known as yokozuna (grand champion) Akebono, will be able to
spend more time with his one-year-old son Cody.
Advertiser library photo • June
1974 |
Akebono's stablemaster, the former Jesse Kuhaulua of Maui, a
former sekiwake, became the first foreigner to open his own
stable.
But the cost of stable ownership is steep and the demands
exhausting. Securing a piece of land in Tokyo or its environs, where
all 53 stables are located, and building a stable large enough to
house and train 10-to-30 growing sumotori can run upwards of $3
million. When Kuhaulua built his Azumazeki beya in 1986 it cost
nearly $2 million.
Then, there is the matter of recruiting capable prospects,
training them and attracting sponsors. For while the JSA provides a
stipend that helps underwrite some of the costs of training the
sumotori, stables survive on their ability to secure
patrons.
Within the association, new members are often assigned duties
such as ticket takers or arena security supervision before becoming
judges or assuming other roles.
The most likely path, at least for the moment, is that
Akebono could stay in the sport as a coach and elder for at least
five years, assisting in Kuhaulua's stable without opening one of
his own.
"I
learned a lot from sumo and I feel that, in some way, it is my
responsibility to pass on what I have gained to the next
generation," Akebono said in a recent speech. "(However), becoming a
stablemaster is not something I can decide on my own. I need the
support of the sumo association and my family."
There has been speculation in some of the Japanese media that
Akebono might go into professional wrestling or become a so-called
show business "talent" like Nanakuli's Salevaa Atisanoe, who
competed in sumo as Konishiki.
But Akebono has said the debilitating knee injuries that
forced his retirement from sumo after 13 years wouldn't permit
another career in the ring. Nor, his family said, is he inclined to
follow Konishiki into the entertainment business.
One thing he will do when the ceremonies are behind him, "is
come back to Hawai'i for a rest," Christine said. "When you are a
yokozuna your time isn't your own. It belongs to sumo, that's why
we've only been able to stay for three or four days at a time. Chad
would like to stay for a couple of weeks, at least, next
time."
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