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Nagoya Sumo
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Nagoya Sumo

entertainment

Nagoya Sumo

大相撲名古屋場所

Est. 210Nagoya, Chubu

Overview

The July Grand Tournament at Dolphins Arena. Fifteen sweltering days of sumo in Nagoya's most intimate major venue, where the crowd noise feels closer.

The Nagoya Basho is the midsummer grand sumo tournament, running fifteen days every July at Dolphins Arena (Aichi Prefectural Gymnasium). Of the three regional tournaments outside Tokyo, Nagoya is known for its intense atmosphere. The smaller venue means the crowd is closer, louder, and more reactive to each bout. The format follows the same daily rhythm as all grand tournaments: lower-ranked wrestlers from around 8:30 AM, with energy building through the afternoon until the top makuuchi division bouts from 3:30 to 6:00 PM. July in Nagoya is hot and humid. The arena is air-conditioned but the walk from Meijo-Koen Station is not. Tournament visitors often combine the trip with Nagoya Castle (a short walk) and Atsuta Shrine, home to one of Japan's three imperial regalia.

Local tips

Nagoya's smaller arena means even upper-level seats have a good view of the ring. If the heat is too much, the basement level has food stalls selling yakitori, beer, and bento boxes in a cooler environment. Wrestlers stay at temporary stables (called beya) around the city during tournament month. Ask at your hotel if any nearby stables allow morning practice viewing (keiko).

Practical info

Japanese name
大相撲名古屋場所
Nearest station
Shiyakusho Station (5 min walk)
Reservations
Advance tickets go on sale about one month before the tournament through the official Japan Sumo Association site (in Japanese) or convenience store kiosks. Nagoya is slightly easier to get tickets for than Tokyo. Same-day general admission (jiyuseki) tickets are sold at the venue from around 8:00 AM for about 2,000 yen, first come first served. Weekday mornings are the easiest entry point.
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