He took part in national sumo competitions at high school and was an amateur champion at
Nihon University, where he was a contemporary of the future
maegashira Higonoumi. He made his professional debut in January 1992, joining
Mihogaseki stable. He had
makushita tsukedashi status because of his amateur achievements and so began at the bottom of the
makushita division. He won the
jūryō division championship in September 1993 with an 11–4 record. He reached the top
makuuchi division in January 1994. In July of the same year he won the Outstanding Performance Award for defeating tournament winner
Takanohana, which proved to be his only
special prize. He reached his highest rank of
komusubi the following tournament in September 1994, but scored only six wins against nine losses and never made the rank again. Suffering from
diabetes he was demoted from the top division in March 2001 after 39 consecutive tournaments as a
maegashira, and after being demoted from the
jūryō division in January 2002 he fought in the unsalaried
makushita division for the last two years of his career. ==Retirement from sumo==