place

Higashi-Matsudo Station

Hokusō LineInternal link templates linking to redirectsMatsudoMusashino LinePages with no open date in Infobox station
Railway stations in Chiba PrefectureRailway stations in Japan opened in 1991Stations of East Japan Railway CompanyStations of Keisei Electric Railway
Higashi Matsudo station 20120929
Higashi Matsudo station 20120929

Higashi-Matsudo Station (東松戸駅, Higashi-Matsudo-eki) is a junction passenger railway station in the city of Matsudo, Chiba, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East) and the private Keisei Electric Railway and third sector Hokusō Railway.

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

Higashi-Matsudo Station
Ichikawa-Kashiwa Line, Matsudo

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Higashi-Matsudo StationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.770616 ° E 139.94381111111 °
placeShow on map

Address

ファミリーマート

Ichikawa-Kashiwa Line
270-2221 Matsudo
Japan
mapOpen on Google Maps

Higashi Matsudo station 20120929
Higashi Matsudo station 20120929
Share experience

Nearby Places

Sadogatake stable
Sadogatake stable

Sadogatake stable (佐渡ヶ嶽部屋, Sadogatake-beya) is a stable of sumo wrestlers, one of the Nishonoseki group of stables. In its modern form, it dates from September 1955, when it was set up by former komusubi Kotonishiki Noboru. Former yokozuna Kotozakura took over the running of the stable in 1974 following Kotonishiki's death. The stable is located in Matsudo, Chiba prefecture. Over the next thirty years the stable produced a string of top division wrestlers. Kotozakura stood down in November 2005, handing the stable over to his son-in-law, former sekiwake Kotonowaka. Between September 2007 and July 2010, it became the first stable since Musashigawa stable in 2001 to have two wrestlers ranked at ōzeki simultaneously, with Kotomitsuki and Kotoōshū. It happened again between November 2011 and November 2013 with Kotoōshū and Kotoshōgiku. As of January 2023 the stable has 26 wrestlers, three of them being sekitori. In March 2020 Sadogatake-oyakata's son, who also goes by the name of Kotonowaka, reached the top makuuchi division. On the May 2020 banzuke all five sekitori were ranked in the top division, although none were above maegashira 13. The most the stable has ever had in makuuchi simultaneously is seven, in November 1992 and January 1993. A successful stable, Sadogatake is currently the active stable with the longest continuous presence (59 years) of at least one of its wrestlers in the makuuchi division.