After retirement he set up his own training stable,
Futagoyama, which produced a string of top wrestlers, including
ōzeki Takanohana (his brother) and
Wakashimazu, and
yokozuna Wakanohana II and
Takanosato. He was also head of the
Japan Sumo Association from 1988 to 1992. Among his reforms was an attempt to improve the quality of the
tachi-ai or initial charge of a bout by fining wrestlers who engaged in
matta, or false starts, beginning in September 1991. In his first year as head of the Association, he also performed his
kanreki dohyō-iri or '60th year ring entrance ceremony' to commemorate his years as
yokozuna. At the end of his last tournament in charge he presented the
Emperor's Cup to his nephew,
Takahanada, who had become the youngest ever top division tournament winner. Upon his retirement from the Sumo Association in 1993, his stable merged with his brother's Fujishima stable. He became director of the Sumo Museum. He died of kidney cancer in September 2010 at the age of 82.
Umegatani I, who lived to 83, is the only
yokozuna to live longer than him. ==Fighting style==