place

Nerima-kasugachō Station

Railway stations in Japan opened in 1991Railway stations in TokyoStations of Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of TransportationToei Ōedo LineTokyo railway station stubs
Nerimakasugacho Station 2005 6 19
Nerimakasugacho Station 2005 6 19

Nerima-kasugachō Station (練馬春日町駅, Nerima kasugachō eki) is a subway station in Nerima, Tokyo, Japan. This station is served by the Toei Ōedo Line. The station number is E-37.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Nerima-kasugachō Station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Nerima-kasugachō Station
A2, Nerima

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Nerima-kasugachō StationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.7517 ° E 139.64 °
placeShow on map

Address

A2
Nerima
Japan
mapOpen on Google Maps

Nerimakasugacho Station 2005 6 19
Nerimakasugacho Station 2005 6 19
Share experience

Nearby Places

Minezaki stable
Minezaki stable

Minezaki stable (峰崎部屋, Minezaki-beya) was a stable of sumo wrestlers, one of the Nishonoseki ichimon or group of stables. It was founded in December 1988 by Misugiiso, who branched off from the Hanaregoma stable and enrolled his younger brother as a wrestler. As of January 2021 it had 7 wrestlers. It was located in the Nerima ward of Tokyo. After the May 2012 tournament it absorbed Hanakago stable, run by former Sekiwake Daijuyama, who became an assistant coach. The stable never produced a sekitori wrestler on its own, but inherited Arawashi, previously of Hanakago and before that Araiso stable, who first reached jūryō in July 2011. Minezaki stable already had a Mongolian wrestler, Torugawa, but was allowed to take another foreigner because of the merger. Hanakago stable's Ryukiyama from South Korea was allowed to transfer for the same reason. In March 2018 it emerged that a junior wrestler at the stable had been the victim of physical assault by a more senior wrestler and retired as a result. The incidents were not reported to Minezaki Oyakata at the time and he found out only after the victim's father sent him a letter saying his son was beaten four times at the stable between September 2017 and January 2018. The wrestler who allegedly carried out the assault was given a one tournament suspension by the Japan Sumo Association on March 29 and Minezaki Oyakata was given a 10% salary reduction for two months.The demotion of Arawashi to makushita in July 2019 and subsequent retirement in January 2020 left the stable with no sekitori. It closed after the March 2021 tournament, ahead of Minezaki Oyakata reaching the mandatory retirement age of 65 in May, with its wrestlers, head coach and makuuchi referee transferring to Shibatayama stable. Other personnel were split between the Takadagawa and Nishiiwa stables.