Wakahaguro Tomoaki (25 November 1934 â 2 March 1969) was a sumo wrestler from Naka, Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan. His highest rank was à Âzeki.
A former swimming champion while at junior high school, Wakahaguro made his professional debut in October 1949, joining Tatsunami stable. To meet the weight requirement, he had to drink an enormous amount of water prior to his physical. However, he was able to put on more weight as he moved up the ranks. He reached the second highest jà «ryà  division in March 1954 and was promoted to the top makuuchi division in March 1955. His first big success in a tournament came in March 1956 when he won 12 out of 15 bouts and took part in a three way playoff for the championship with à Âzeki Wakanohana and sekiwake Asashio. Although he was defeated, he was awarded the Fighting Spirit prize. After three years of steady progress he worked his way up to sekiwake rank and in the September 1959 tournament was runner-up once again. This performance earned him promotion to à Âzeki. In his à Âzeki debut he took the tournament championship with a 13âÂÂ2 record, the first à Âzeki debutant to do so since Chiyonoyama ten years earlier. After the tournament a party was held at the Imperial Hotel to celebrate both his à Âzeki promotion and his engagement.
Wakahaguro was expected to quickly push on to yokozuna promotion, but his second tournament as an à Âzeki ended with an extremely disappointing 7âÂÂ8 record. After this it was clear that Wakahaguro had neither the consistency nor the determination to reach sumo's highest rank, and he was to be overtaken by two younger rivals, Taihà  and Kashiwado. In November 1960 Wakahaguro managed to defeat Taihà  for the first time in five attempts but could not prevent him from winning his first championship. Wakahaguro's 12âÂÂ3 runner-up performance was the last time he was able to challenge for a tournament title. In January 1961 it was Kashiwado's turn to win his first championship, and Wakahaguro could produce only a 10âÂÂ5 score. After a poor 5âÂÂ10 record in July 1961 he missed the September tournament through injury. In November 1961, the same tournament in which both Taihà  and Kashiwado made their yokozuna debuts, Wakahaguro lost his à Âzeki rank after managing only a 5âÂÂ10 record on his comeback. The rules in place at the time meant three consecutive make-koshi or losing scores would result in demotion, and his absences in September were counted as losses.
Wakahaguro spent the last three years of his career in the maegashira ranks, but he was beset by personal problems, including a gambling addiction. He retired in March 1965 and left the sumo world completely as he had no elder stock in the Japan Sumo Association and the regulation allowing a former à Âzeki to stay under their fighting names for a grace period did not exist at the time. Heavily in debt, he was further disgraced in May 1965 after being caught attempting to sell smuggled handguns to gangsters, which he had acquired in Los Angeles whilst on an overseas tour. He was tried, convicted and given an 18-month suspended prison sentence. A formal retirement ceremony was impossible in such circumstances so a private one was done quietly at a hotel in Miura city.
Divorced from his wife and separated from his children, Wakahaguro spent his last years working at a sumo fan's restaurant in Okayama city. He died suddenly of a stroke at the age of 34.
Wakahaguro was an oshi-sumo specialist, for which his distinctive round, fleshy body type or ' was ideally suited. He won over 40 percent of his matches by a straightforward oshi-dashi, or push out.