Rikidōzan

Rikidōzan
Rikidōzan as the Japanese Heavyweight Champion in 1954
Personal information
BornKim Sin-rak (김신락)
November 14, 1924
DiedDecember 15, 1963(1963-12-15) (aged 39)
Tokyo, Japan
Children3, including Mitsuo and Yoshihiro
FamilyPak Myong-chol (son-in-law)
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s)Mitsuhiro Momota
Rikidōzan
Billed height1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Billed weight110 kg (243 lb)
Billed fromNagasaki
Trained byBobby Bruns
Harold Sakata
DebutOctober 28, 1951
RetiredDecember 7, 1963 (last match)
Rikidōzan Mitsuhiro
力道山 光浩
Personal information
Height1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Weight116 kg (256 lb; 18 st 4 lb)
Career
StableNishonoseki
Record135–82–15
DebutMay 1940
Highest rankSekiwake (May 1949)
RetiredSeptember 1950
Championships1 (Makushita)
1 (Sandanme)
Special PrizesOutstanding Performance (1)
Gold Stars2 (Azumafuji)

Last updated: May 2013

Mitsuhiro Momota (born Kim Sin-rak; November 14, 1924 – December 15, 1963), better known by the ring name Rikidōzan (力道山), was a Korean-Japanese professional wrestler and sumo wrestler. He was known as the father of professional wrestling in Japan, nicknamed "The Father of Puroresu" (日本プロレス界の父), and is considered one of the most influential people in professional wrestling history.

Born in Korea under Japanese occupation, in an area that is now part of North Korea, Momota initially practiced ssireum before moving to Nagasaki to become a sumo wrestler. As a member of the Nishonoseki stable, he was given the shikona Rikidōzan Mitsuhiro (力道山 光浩). He competed in sumo until 1951, retiring as a sekiwake, and was introduced to professional wrestling by members of the American National Wrestling Alliance. Credited with popularizing professional wrestling in Japan at a time when its people needed a hero to emulate, he was lauded as a national icon.

At the age of 39, Momota died from peritonitis, which had been caused by stab wounds he suffered a week prior in an altercation with a yakuza member at a Tokyo nightclub. He was posthumously inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame in 2017, becoming the first ethnic Korean inductee and the third puroresu inductee (after Antonio Inoki and Tatsumi Fujinami).