Michihito Chida
Date of birth (1958-12-22) December 22, 1958
Place of birthKitakami, Iwate Prefecture, Japan
Height6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
SchoolKurosawajiri High School
Occupation(s)Teacher at the Kitakami Municipal South Junior High School and Kitakami Rugby School
Rugby union career
Position(s) Lock, Flanker, Number 8
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
- Kurosawajiri High School ()
Senior career
Years Team Apps (Points)
1980–1988 Nippon Steel Kamaishi ()
International career
Years Team Apps (Points)
1980–1987 Japan 26 (0)

Michihiko Chida (千田美智仁, Chida Michihiko) (born 22 December 1958 in Kitakami) is a former Japanese rugby union player who played mainly as Number 8.

Biography

After graduating from Kurosawajiri High School of Iwate, Chida started to play for Nippon Steel Kamaishi. He played as lock while representing Kamaishi and Japan. During the 1983 Japan tour of Wales, Chida played as flanker in order to enlarge the third row. Later, he played as flanker and as number 8 for Japan and mainly played as number 8 for Kamaishi. In 1985, during the Japanese championship against Doshisha, Chida received the ball, leaving Doshisha's defense and went down the goal post. While combining power and speed, he is not a rushing type, but a clever forward that accurately judges pass and dense formation according to circumstances, He was active as a mainstay of Nippon Steel Kamaishi's seventh consecutive victory of the Rugby Japanese Championship and also served as a forward for the contemporaneous rugby Japanese national team.

International career

His debut for Japan was against New Zealand Universities, at Tokyo, on 30 March 1980. During the match against Wales in 1983, Chida rushed 20 metres from a scrum to score a try late in the second half in the Wales match.[1] He was also a member of the 1987 Rugby World Cup roster, where he played two matches, with the pool match against England at Sydney being his last for Japan.

Personal life

Currently, he works as sales manager for Nippon Steel Engineering Morioka as well as advisor for club team Blaze Lager from Kitakami. He is also teaching at the Kitakami Municipal South Junior High School and Kitakami Rugby School. According to Number (22 January 2010), former prop Jiro Ishiyama, who was a teammate in Kamaishi and in the Japan national team stated "Although Hayashi (Toshiyuki) and Oyagi (Atsushi) are never weak, nevertheless, it was Chida who gave the most power required to the scrum."

Notes

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