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Koji Kitao




In his sumo career he competed under the shikona Futahaguro and was able to reach the highest rank, Yokozuna , at the tender age of 23. However, he lasted just eight tournaments at this rank and became the only Yokozuna in sumo history ever to retire without ever winning a Yusho (tournament title). After a couple of serious behavioral mishaps, Kitao also became the first Yokozuna ever to be expelled from the Sumo Association by a panel of sumo elders.

Upon being dismissed by the Sumo Association, Kitao was linked with a move to America's NFL, but instead turned to professional wrestling. To mollify the association, he dropped the shikona and used his real name.

Trained at New Japan Pro Wrestling dojo, he debuted as a wrestler in 1990 , and soon left the promotion to go to SWS . He teamed with fellow former sumo Genichiro Tenryu in an appearance at the WWE 's Wrestlemania VII event. Nevertheless, he was fired in 1991 for making an "inappropriate comment" using a microphone (actually may have been a Shoot on how puroresu was pre-staged).

He then wandered in martial arts, but in 1993 he returned to wrestling by challenging UWF International top star Nobuhiko Takada to a (worked) Mixed Martial Arts match. Takada won, but the importance of the match was that Kitao was truly back into puroresu.

In the following years he formed his own promotion called Kitao Pro Wrestling, later a Stable of the WAR promotion under the name '''Bukō Dōjō'''. Among the wrestlers that came out of the dojo were Masaaki Mochizuki and Takashi Okamura , who later became business partners of Ultimo Dragon in his junior heavyweight ventures.

Kitao won his only title, the WAR 6-Man Tag Team Championship, with Mochizuki and WAR rookie Nobukazu Hirai in 1998, but retired from pro wrestling altogether later in the year.

In September 2003, Kitao Koji sensationally returned to the world of sumo after being offered a job as a coach at his former training stable.