Born in
Shigaraki,
Koka District, he joined
Futagoyama stable at the beginning of 1979 at the age of 15, recruited by former
yokozuna Wakanohana. He initially fought under his own surname before being given the
shikona of Misugisato (meaning "village of three cedars") in 1980. In July 1984 he reached the
sekitori ranks for the first time, but lasted only one tournament in the
juryo division before being demoted back to
makushita. It took him exactly two years to win promotion back to
juryo and he promptly won the divisional
yusho or tournament championship with an 11-4 record. He moved up and down the division a few times before winning promotion to the top
makuuchi division after a 10-5 score at the rank of
Juryo 2 in March 1988. In November 1988 he scored nine wins against six losses at the rank of
maegashira 7, which was enough to see him promoted to
komusubi for the January 1989 tournament. Unusually, he had been promoted to the ''
san'yaku ranks without ever having faced any san'yaku
ranked wrestlers himself. (He received some banzuke good fortune as both komusubi
and most of the maegashira
ranked above him had finished with make-koshi'' or losing records in November). Misugisato was thrown in at the deep end in his
komusubi debut, facing all the three
yokozuna in the first three days. Unsurprisingly, he was unable to defeat any of them and finished with a losing score of 3-12. Nevertheless, he upset
yokozuna Hokutoumi in the May and September 1989 tournaments, to earn the first two of his eventual six
kinboshi or gold stars. On the final day of the January 1992 tournament he faced
Takahanada, who needed the win to clinch his first top division tournament championship. Takahanada was the nephew of Misugisato's stablemaster Futagoyama, who was officiating in his last tournament as the head of the
Japan Sumo Association and was due to present the trophy to the winner of the
yusho. Misugisato had already earned a majority of wins, and lost the match to finish on 8-7. He and Takanohana would later become stablemates when Futagoyama stable merged with Takahanada's Fujishima stable. In May 1992 he earned ten wins at
Maegashira 1, defeating
ozeki Konishiki and
Kirishima along the way, and was rewarded with his first
sanshō or special prize, for Fighting Spirit, and promotion back to
komusubi. He held the rank for the next two tournaments. Misugisato never reached the ''san'yaku
ranks again, but he remained in the top division until March 1997. He then fought in the juryo
division until his retirement in July 1998 at the age of 36. Although he had a losing record by Day 9 and demotion to the third makushita'' division was inevitable, he was aware that his stablemaster
Fujishima Oyakata would not let him compete at such a low level and so he was determined to reach 700 career wins in his final tournament. He achieved this on Day 12, and then announced his retirement. ==Retirement from sumo==