Eiji Mikawa
{{Short description|Japanese businessperson and rugby player}}
{{Orphan|date=February 2018}}
{{Use Canadian English|date=November 2016}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2016}}
{{Nihongo|Eiji Mikawa|美川 英二|Mikawa Eiji|17 August 1933 – 19 June 1999}} was a Japanese businessperson and rugby player, who played for the Japan national rugby union team in the 1950s. He worked for Yokogawa Electric from 1956 and became company president in 1993.
Life and career
Mikawa was born on 17 August 1933{{sfn|Asahi Shimbun staff|1999a}} in what is now Suita, Osaka, where he graduated from {{illm|Suita Municipal Senri Elementary School No. 2|ja|吹田市立千里第二小学校}}.{{sfn|Asahi Shimbun staff|1999b}} He then attended Keio Senior High School in Yokohama, where he became interested in rugby union. From 1952 he studied law at Keio University in Tokyo, where he joined the rugby team and became a member of the Japan national rugby union team.{{sfn|Asahi Shimbun staff|1999a}} He played as a flanker.{{sfn|Nakagawa|1994|p=1}}
Mikawa joined Yokogawa Electric in 1956. He became company director in 1976 and managing director in 1982.{{sfn|Asahi Shimbun staff|1999a}} Around this time he was involved in negotiating joint ventures in Brazil.{{sfn|Nakagawa|1994|p=3}} In 1983, as Managing Director he handled the company's merger with {{illm|Hokushin Electric Works|ja}}. In 1991 he became vice president of Yokogawa, and then president in June 1993. At the time he became president he had to deal with the recession that had hit Japan after the economic bubble in Japan burst in 1992, and in 1994 Yokogawa's operating income fell to 30% of what it had been in 1991.{{sfn|Nakagawa|1994|p=1}}
Mikawa made the decision to take in 25 former employees (primarily those 36 and over) from Yamaichi Securities, which had gone out of business in November 1997.{{sfn|Asahi Shimbun staff|1999b}}
In 1990, Mikawa launched an initiative to reinforce the {{illm|Yokogawa Electric Soccer Club|ja|横河電機サッカー部}} (now Tokyo Musashino City FC) with Brazilian coaches and players. He announced in January 1994 his intention to have the team join the Japan Football League.{{sfn|Asahi Shimbun staff|1994}}
Mikawa had a reputation for being energetic, and earn nicknames such as Same ({{lang|ja|鮫}} "shark") and Raion ({{lang|ja|ライオン}} "lion"). He was married and had three sons.{{sfn|Nakagawa|1994|p=1}} Mikawa died from bile duct cancer at a hospital in Shinjuku on 19 June 1999 at 13:10.{{sfn|Asahi Shimbun staff|1999a}} A company funeral was held for him on 21 June.{{sfn|Asahi Shimbun staff|1999b}}
References
{{Reflist|colwidth=20em}}
=Works cited=
{{Refbegin|colwidth=40em}}
- {{cite news
|author = Asahi Shimbun staff
|title = J-League Kamei, Shiya ni Gaikoku Senshu Mukae Kyōka
|script-title = ja:Jリーグ加盟、視野に 外国選手迎え強化
|language = ja
|newspaper = Asahi Shimbun
|date = 1994-01-12
}}
- {{cite news
|author = Asahi Shimbun staff
|title = Mikawa Eiji-shi Shibō
|script-title = ja:美川英二氏 死去
|language = ja
|newspaper = Asahi Shimbun
|date = 1999-06-22
|ref = {{SfnRef|Asahi Shimbun staff|1999a}} }}
- {{cite news
|author = Asahi Shimbun staff
|title = Yokogawa Denki Shachō Mikawa Eiji-san (Sekibetsu)
|script-title = ja:横河電機社長 美川英二さん(惜別)
|language = ja
|newspaper = Asahi Shimbun
|date = 1999-07-22
|ref = {{SfnRef|Asahi Shimbun staff|1999b}} }}
- {{cite news
|last = Nakagawa
|first = Takao
|title = 'Jidai no Līdā' Mikawa Eiji: Yokogawa Denki Shachō
|script-title = ja:【時代のリーダー】美川 英二・横河電機社長
|language = ja
|newspaper = Nikkei Business
|date = 1994-04-11
|url = http://business.nikkeibp.co.jp/article/person/20090408/191339/?P=3&nextArw
|access-date = 2016-11-22
|url-access=subscription
}}
{{Refend}}
{{Portal bar|Biography|Business and economics|Japan|Sports}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mikawa, Eiji}}
Category:20th-century Japanese businesspeople
Category:Japanese rugby union players
Category:Rugby union players from Osaka Prefecture
Category:Keio University alumni
Category:Japanese business executives