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Mizuno

Mizuno
Article code BK23_Tokyo_Verde_Mizuno_1993-1994_Home_#4_Rossum_XXL
€274,95
in stock
Mizuno football shirt Tokyo Verdy 1993/94
Size: XXL (unisex)
Condition: 9/10 (used) Read more
Mizuno
Tokyo Verdy
Mizuno football shirt Tokyo Verdy 1993/94
Size: XXL (unisex)
Condition: 9/10 (used)
€274,95
Mizuno
Article code JPM072_Fiorentina_Mizuno_training_2001-2002_L
€64,95
in stock
Mizuno training shirt Fiorentina 2001/02
Size: L (unisex)
Condition: 9.5/10 (used) Read more
Mizuno
Fiorentina
Mizuno training shirt Fiorentina 2001/02
Size: L (unisex)
Condition: 9.5/10 (used)
€64,95
Mizuno

Mizuno was founded in 1906 as Mizuno Brothers, Ltd. by Rihachi Mizuno and his younger brother Rizo, in Osaka. The shop sold Western sundries, including baseballs, and then in 1907 began to sell order-made athletic wear. In 1910 the shop moved to Umeda-Shinmichi and its name was changed to Mizuno Shop. In 1913 the firm began to manufacture baseballs and gloves. In 1933 Mizuno presented Star Line, the first Japanese made golf clubs. By 1935 its golf club showroom was the world's largest. In 1941 the company name was changed to Mizuno Co., Ltd, and has remained the same since. During World War II, Mizuno manufactured military ordnance for Japan's war effort.

The first American factory was established in Los Angeles, under the denomination American Mizuno in 1961. During the following years, Mizuno signed sponsorship deals with some of the most prominent personalities in sports, such as track and field athlete Carl Lewis, the All Blacks rugby team, former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Joe Montana, for most of his years in the NFL, the Manu Samoa rugby team, Czech tennis player Ivan Lendl, and golf player Nick Faldo and baseball Hall of Famer Rickey Henderson.

To gain a foothold in the baseball glove market in the United States, the mobile "Mizuno Baseball Workshop" was introduced in the late 1970s to service major league clubs during spring training in Arizona and Florida. The forty-foot (12 m) van contained extensive leather-working equipment, manned by two skilled Japanese craftsmen, to produce made-to-order gloves and repair all brands.

The company also expanded its operation centres opening new factories in Germany, France, China, Scotland and Hong Kong.