Akebono Taro dies at 54; Hawaii-born sumo champ was considered a legend of the sport

By Stephen Wade and Audrey McAvoy | Associated Press

TOKYO — Hawaii-born Akebono Taro, one of the greats of sumo wrestling and a former grand champion, has died. He was 54.

He was the first foreign-born wrestler to reach the level of “yokozuna” — or grand champion — in Japan.

“It is with sadness that we announce Akebono Taro died of heart failure earlier this month while receiving care at a hospital in the Tokyo area,” the family said in a statement.

His wife Christine Rowan, in an email to The Associated Press, said he died “within the past week” but declined to give details.

“I had to tend to personal matters that needed to be done prior to publicly announcing my husband’s death,” she said.

Akebono grew up on the rural side of the Koolau mountains from Honolulu and was born Chad George Ha’aheo Rowan. He moved to Tokyo in the late 1980s and won his first grand championship in 1993. At the prime of his career he was a real giant, reported at the time to weigh 500 pounds and stand 6-feet-8.

The United States ambassador to Japan, Rahm Emanuel, sent his condolences on social platform X.

“I was deeply saddened to learn of the passing of Akebono, a giant in the world of sumo, a proud Hawaiian and a bridge between the United States and Japan,” Emanuel posted.

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“When Akebono became the first-ever foreign-born grand champion, sumo’s highest rank, in 1993, he opened the door for other foreign wrestlers to find success in the sport. Throughout his 35 years in Japan, Akebono strengthened the cultural ties between the United States and his adopted homeland by uniting us all through sport.”

Akebono was an 11-time grand tournament winner; he retired in 2001.

In 1993, he won the final of the San Jose Sumo Basho, the first accredited sumo tournament held on U.S. soil. Among the 39 other competitors was Konishiki, also U.S.-born and the first non-Japanese sumotori to reach ozeki, the second-highest rank.

The family’s statement said friends and family will hold a “private celebration of his life.” He is survived by his wife, Christine, a daughter and two sons.

“The family kindly asks for privacy during this time of mourning,” the statement said.

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