Early career and rise to sekiwake On entering the sumo world, Toyonoshima rose quickly through the lower ranks of sumo, winning two championships or
yūshō in the
jonokuchi and
jonidan divisions with perfect 7–0 records. He reached
sekitori status in March 2004 after a 5–2 result at the rank of
makushita 2. He moved through the
jūryō in just two tournaments with consecutive 11–4 records. Upon reaching the top
makuuchi division he initially had little success and was demoted back to
jūryō twice. However, after winning the
jūryō championship in September 2005 with a strong 14–1 record, his fortunes began to turn and after some initial struggles, he rose steadily through the ranks of
makuuchi. In May 2006 Toyonoshima recorded only his second
kachi-koshi or winning score in the top division, in his ninth tournament there. His first big success came in January 2007 when ranked at
maegashira 9 he finished as runner up to
yokozuna Asashōryū with an outstanding 12–3 record and earned his first
special prizes for Fighting Spirit and Technique. In March he defeated two
ōzeki,
Kotoōshū and
Chiyotaikai, and earned promotion to
komusubi for May. At just 168 cm, or tall, he was the shortest wrestler to make
komusubi in fifty years. However, before the tournament began he sprained his knee and ankle ligaments in a practice session with Asashōryū at his stable and could only manage four wins in his ''
san'yaku'' (titled rank) debut. , 2007 In September 2007 Toyonoshima became the first
maegashira to defeat
Hakuhō since his promotion to
yokozuna, earning his first
kinboshi. He also defeated
ōzeki Kotoōshū and
Kotomitsuki. He finished with an 8–7 score and was awarded the Outstanding Performance prize. He achieved another winning record in the next tournament but faltered slightly with two 6–9 scores in January and March 2008. In May, however, he was on the leaderboard for much of the tournament and finished with joint runner-up honours and a share of the Fighting Spirit prize. He was one of seven wrestlers who
NHK commentator Shūhei Nagao (the former
Mainoumi) in 2008 called the "
Seven Samurai" and identified as "holding the key" to a Japanese resurgence in sumo, which was dominated by foreigners in the top ranks. (The others were
Gōeidō,
Kisenosato,
Kotoshōgiku,
Hōmashō,
Toyohibiki and
Tochiōzan). Toyonoshima returned to the ''san'yaku
ranks at komusubi'' for the July 2008 tournament, where he defeated Asashōryū for the first time on the opening day. He finished with ten wins and another Outstanding Performance prize, and Kotoshogiku's losing record meant Toyonoshima was promoted to
sekiwake for the September tournament, becoming the first wrestler from Tokitsukaze stable to reach the rank since
Kurama in 1978. He fell short with a 6–9 score and was demoted to
maegashira 1, but returned to
komusubi for the January 2009 tournament. On the 7th day of the January 2009 tournament, Toyonoshima fell victim to
ōzeki Kaiō's
kotenage armbar throw. Toyonoshima appeared to suffer a severely hyper-extended elbow during the throw. Despite being doubled over in pain, Toyonoshima managed to bow to Kaiō and left the
dohyō unassisted, until he was safely back in the dressing area, where medical attention appeared to be prompt.
NHK English-language announcers later reported that Toyonoshima said he heard the elbow snap. The online-edition of the
Yomiuri Shimbun reported that Toyonoshima was diagnosed with left-elbow sprain" and he was forced to forfeit the next day's scheduled bout against
Kotoshōgiku. Later news reports indicated that the
Japan Sumo Association doctors told the 25-year-old
rikishi to take a six-week medical leave, and that Toyonoshima would bow out of the remainder of the 2009 Hatsu
basho at the
Ryōgoku Kokugikan in
Tokyo. This is the first occasion since his debut that he has missed any tournament bouts. Toyonoshima returned to action in the March tournament in
Osaka with his elbow strapped, but secured a winning record of 8–7 on the final day. In May, ranked at
maegashira 3, he could manage only two wins in the first twelve days before winning his last three bouts. He produced his best performance of the year in November, a promising 11–4 score which won him his second Technique prize and opened up the possibility of promotion back to ''san'yaku'' in January 2010. However, due to
Chiyotaikai's demotion to
sekiwake and
Kakuryū finishing 7–8, he had to settle for the
maegashira 1 position. He recovered from 3–6 down in the January tournament to post his majority of wins, and this returned him to the ''san'yaku
ranks for the first time in seven tournaments, at sekiwake''. He began brightly in the March tournament, opening with three consecutive wins, but he then faded and finished with just six wins against nine losses.
Tournament playoff He was suspended along with over a dozen other wrestlers from the July 2010 tournament after admitting involvement in illegal betting on baseball. As a result, he was demoted to the
jūryō division for the following September. He bounced back from this penalty with an impressive 14–1 record and took his second
jūryō championship, exactly five years after his first, guaranteeing himself promotion back into the top division. Fighting from
maegashira 9 in November, he produced another 14–1 score, losing only to
Kyokutenhō and defeating two
ōzeki. He lost to
Hakuhō in a playoff for the
yūshō on the final day, narrowly failing to become the first wrestler ever to win back-to-back
jūryō and
makuuchi championships (and the first Japanese-born winner of a top division tournament since 2006), but he received special prizes for Fighting Spirit and Technique. He was promoted to
maegashira 1 for the following tournament in January, the first time that a
maegashira has won fourteen bouts and not been promoted to a ''san'yaku
rank. He made a poor start to the January tournament losing seven of his first eight matches, but he recovered to earn his 8–7 majority of wins on the final day. This returned him to san'yaku'' for the (subsequently cancelled) March tournament. In the May 'technical examination' tournament he had an even worse start, losing nine of his first ten bouts and finishing on 5–10. He returned to
komusubi in September 2011 and recovered from a 1–7 start for the second time in his career to keep his rank with an 8–7 score. He rose to
sekiwake in January 2012 but lost his rank after only scoring 5–10. He had a fine tournament in March, beating the
ōzeki Kotoshōgiku and Kotoōshū and sharing the Technique prize, which returned him immediately to
sekiwake. In the May 2012 basho he defeated Hakuhō for just the second time in the top division, sending the
yokozuna crashing to his fourth loss of the tournament. In this period he managed to achieve enough winning tournaments to stay in the higher ranks of
makuuchi, and also earned two
gold star wins against
yokozuna Harumafuji, which were ironically both losing tournaments for Toyonoshima.
Later career and fall to makushita Toyonoshima maintained his position in the upper
maegashira ranks in 2015, earning a fourth
kinboshi in March when he again defeated Harumafuji. In January 2016 he produced his best performance for several years when his 12–3 record included a win over the eventual winner
Kotoshōgiku and saw him tying for second place and being awarded the prize for Outstanding Performance. This was his tenth special prize, putting him level with Harumafuji and behind only
Gōeidō and
Aminishiki amongst active wrestlers. His performance saw him being promoted to
sekiwake for the fifth time, and for the first time since May 2012. His next two tournaments were disappointing: he lost his
sekiwake rank after recording only three wins in March and then posted a 5–10 record in May. He missed the July 2016 tournament after undergoing surgery for a left
Achilles tendon rupture which occurred in training and as a result was demoted to
jūryō for the first time since 2010. He decided to skip the September tournament as well to allow his injury to fully heal, which meant a demotion to the
makushita division. He is only the second wrestler to have fallen to
makushita having previously taken part in a
makuuchi division playoff, after
Hokutōriki. He considered retiring at this point, but was persuaded to carry on by his young daughter. Toyonoshima managed only a bare majority of four wins against three losses on his comeback in November 2016 but recorded six wins in January 2017. He strained his right calf in training shortly before the March 2017 tournament, and after missing his first match announced his withdrawal, although he returned from the fifth day. By January 2018 he had risen to
makushita 5, but he was again affected by injury in this tournament, withdrawing on Day 5 and again on Day 9 having returned on Day 7. He won promotion back to the
jūryō division after a 6–1 record at
makushita 1 in September 2018, after an absence of 13 tournaments. He is the sixth oldest wrestler post-World War II to return to
jūryō at 35 years and four months. In March 2019 he was promoted back to
makuuchi. He is the third former
sekiwake to fall to
makushita and make a return to
makuuchi after
Kotokaze and
Hōō. ==Retirement from sumo==