Upon his retirement he became an
elder of the
Japan Sumo Association under the name Takashima Oyakata, working as a coach. He recruited
Kaiō in March 1988, whom he had been aware of when he was still an active wrestler. He became head of the
Tomozuna stable in May 1989 upon the mandatory retirement of the previous head, former
jūryō Ichinishiki (who was also his father-in-law). In 1993 Kaiō reached the top division, and became an
ōzeki in 2000. In 2006 Tomozuna Oyakata became a Director on the board of the Sumo Association, initially in charge of the Education department and running the sumo school. He continued to produce top level wrestlers, with
Kaisei reaching the top division in 2011. In April 2012 Tomozuna stable absorbed
Ōshima stable when its stablemaster retired.
Kyokutenhō then immediately won the top division championship in May 2012, giving Tomozuna stable another championship to go with the five won by Kaiō. In an interview in 2006 Tomozuna criticized his former wrestler
Sentoryū, and
yokozuna Akebono, who both moved into
mixed martial arts, for continuing to use their traditional
ring names outside of the sumo world. In June 2017 he passed on ownership of the Tomozuna name to the former Kyokutenhō and retired from his head coach role upon reaching 65 years of age, although he was re-hired as a consultant on reduced pay for a period of five years. He went back to the Tomozuna name in February 2022 when Tomozuna stable was renamed Ōshima stable. Tomozuna's consultancy role expired upon his 70th birthday in June 2022, ending his 57-year stay in the Japan Sumo Association. ==Personal life==