Dick Pound

Dick Pound




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РекламаЗапасные части. Сервис. · Москва · 152932 · пн-чт 9:00-18:00, пт 9:00-15:00
Ричард Уильям Данкан «Дик» Паунд — первый президент Всемирного антидопингового агентства. Член МОК …
Рождение: 22 мар. 1942 r. (возраст: 79) · Сент-Катаринс, Канада
Имя при рождении: англ. Richard William Duncan Pound
Дата рождения: 22 марта 1942 (78 лет)
Место рождения: Сент-Катаринс · Ниагара[d] · Онтарио · Канада
Дата рождения, Место рождения и другое
Карьера Арнольда Шварценеггера в культуризме
Текст из Википедии, лицензия CC-BY-SA
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_Pound
Alma mater: McGill University, Sir George …
Residence: Westmount, Quebec
Children: 5
Национальность: Canadian
Richard William Duncan Pound, CC OQ CD QC (born March 22, 1942) is a Canadian swimming champion, lawyer and prominent spokesman for ethics in sport. He was the first president of the World Anti-Doping Agency and vice-president of the International Olympic Committee.

Pound is a staunch advocate of strict drug testing for athletes, and has made many alle…
Richard William Duncan Pound, CC OQ CD QC (born March 22, 1942) is a Canadian swimming champion, lawyer and prominent spokesman for ethics in sport. He was the first president of the World Anti-Doping Agency and vice-president of the International Olympic Committee.

Pound is a staunch advocate of strict drug testing for athletes, and has made many allegations of cheating and official corruption, some of them challenged, owing to disputes over the testing and reporting procedures. Time magazine featured him as one of the "100 Most Influential People in the World". He was a chancellor of McGill University and was chairman of the board of Olympic Broadcasting Services.
https://www.thecut.com/2020/02/dick-pound-olympics.html
Перевести · 26.02.2020 · Dick Pound, as the AP report on his statement noted, is “a former Canadian swimming champion who has been on the IOC since 1978, making him its longest-serving member.” IOC member Dick Pound says Tokyo Olympic organizers have until late May to see if the virus is under control.
Postponing Olympics was 'tough call': IOC member Dick Pound
Exclusive: Dick Pound tells USA TODAY Sports that Olympics are postponed
Russia's Olympic punishment not enough says Dick Pound
YouTube › Canada School of PS / École de la FP du Canada
Exclusive: Dick Pound tells USA TODAY Sports that Olympics are postponed
Dick Pound gets into verbal tussle with colleague at IOC meeting
https://ru.wikichi.ru/wiki/Dick_Pound
This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article "Dick_Pound" ; it is used under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. You may …
https://www.cbc.ca/sports/olympics/olympics-dick-pound-unsure-happen-1.5865838
Перевести · 08.01.2021 · Senior International Olympic Committee member Dick Pound, of Canada, said Thursday that he's unsure the Tokyo Games will go forward due to the …
https://ru.qaz.wiki/wiki/Dick_Pound
This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article "Dick_Pound" (); it is used under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.You may …
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/sports/2021/01/08/olympics/ioc-pound-olympic-virus
Перевести · 08.01.2021 · London – Dick Pound, a longtime International Olympic Committee member from Canada, hinted the rescheduled Tokyo Games could be in doubt …
https://www.thestar.com/opinion/letters_to_the_editors/2021/01/13/dick-pound-needs-to...
Перевести · 13.01.2021 · Pound backs vaccinating Olympians, Jan. 7. I’m not sure where Dick Pound lives, but it must not be anywhere near other human beings. To be …
https://fr.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_Pound
Naissance: 22 mars 1942 (78 ans), Saint …
Nationalité: Canadien
Nom de naissance: Richard William Duncan Pound
Surnom: Dick
Richard William Duncan Pound ou Dick Pound, né le 22 mars 1942 à St. Catharines, est un ancien nageur canadien, et avocat au cabinet Stikeman Elliot. Il fut également chancelier de l'Université McGill, vice-président du Comité international olympique, et président de 1999 à 2007 de l'Agence mondiale antidopage.

Cet ancien nageur canadien, qui a participé aux Jeux olympiques de 1960, terminant à la 6 pl…
Richard William Duncan Pound ou Dick Pound, né le 22 mars 1942 à St. Catharines, est un ancien nageur canadien, et avocat au cabinet Stikeman Elliot. Il fut également chancelier de l'Université McGill, vice-président du Comité international olympique, et président de 1999 à 2007 de l'Agence mondiale antidopage.

Cet ancien nageur canadien, qui a participé aux Jeux olympiques de 1960, terminant à la 6 place du 100 mètres nage libre devient membre du comité olympique canadien à la fin de carrière sportive, puis président de ce même comité. Devenu avocat, on lui demande de défendre son compatriote, le sprinteur Ben Johnson, lorsque celui-ci est contrôlé positif au stéroïdes lors des Jeux Olympiques de Séoul en 1988 .

En 1978, il est élu au Comité international olympique, prenant en charge la responsabilité de la négociation des droits télévisés et de sponsoring. Il est le principal artisan du passage du CIO à une entreprise multimilliardaire. Il se fait également connaître à cette époque pour ses critiques acides de la corruption existant au sein du CIO de l'ère du président Juan Antonio Samaranch. Ces critiques le conduisent à la tête de l'enquête menée après les révélations de corruption au sein du CIO pour l'attribution des Jeux olympiques 2002 de Salt Lake City.

Durant cette période, il est un fervent militant pour un renforcement des contrôles antidopage.

À l'annonce du retrait de Samaranch de la présidence du CIO en 2001, il pose sa candidature à ce poste. Mais les votants lui préfèrent le Belge Jacques Rogge, suivi du Coréen Kim Un-Yong, un des principaux accusés du scandale de Salt Lake City. Celui-ci sera d'ailleurs exclu du CIO plus tard.

Il devient ensuite président de l'Agence mondiale antidopage, l'AMA. Il est l'artisan principal du développement de la lutte antidopage. Cette mission l'entraîne dans de nombreuses luttes, en particulier contre le Comité olympique, soupçonné puis convaincu de ne pas dénoncer ses athlètes contrôlés positifs, en particulier en athlétisme. Cette lutte lui vaut également les reproches du monde du hockey sur glace nord-américain après qu'il eut déclaré que près de la moitié des hockeyeurs de la LNH étaient des utilisateurs de stéroïdes ou autres produits dopants.
РекламаЗапасные части. Сервис. · Москва · 152932 · пн-чт 9:00-18:00, пт 9:00-15:00
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"Richard Pound" redirects here. For the professional wrestler, see Richard Pound (wrestler).
Richard William Duncan Pound, CC OQ CD QC (born March 22, 1942) is a Canadian swimming champion, lawyer and prominent spokesman for ethics in sport. He was the first president of the World Anti-Doping Agency and vice-president of the International Olympic Committee.
In office
November 10, 1999 – December 31, 2007
Pound is a staunch advocate of strict drug testing for athletes, and has made many allegations of cheating and official corruption, some of them challenged, owing to disputes over the testing and reporting procedures. Time magazine featured him as one of the "100 Most Influential People in the World". He was a chancellor of McGill University and was chairman of the board of Olympic Broadcasting Services.
Pound was born in St. Catharines, Ontario, the eldest of four children.[1] His father was an engineer at a pulp-and-paper mill,[2] and the family moved often. His family moved to numerous Quebec towns, including La Tuque and Trois Rivieres.[3] When Pound was six, his family moved to Ocean Falls, British Columbia.[2] He later moved to Montreal in 1957 and attended Mount Royal High School in Mount Royal, Quebec.[4][5]
In addition to swimming, Pound was a squash player and won the Canadian intercollegiate championship twice.[4]
In 1962, he earned a Bachelor of Commerce degree from McGill University and was on the Dean's List.[6] One of his classmates was John Cleghorn. He received a licentiate in accounting from McGill in 1964 and got his chartered accountant designation the same year.[7] He received a B.A. with honours[1] from Sir George Williams University (now Concordia University) in 1963[8] and graduated from the McGill University Faculty of Law with a B.C.L. in 1967. During his time at McGill, he swam for the McGill Redmen from 1958 to 1962 and from 1964 to 1967.[3] He established school records in every freestyle event, winning three Canadian intercollegiate gold medals in each of his freshman, sophomore and senior years.[3] He was honoured by the Scarlet Key Society[3] and was awarded the Carswell Company Prize.[9] He served as managing editor of the McGill Law Journal.[10]
Pound won the Canadian freestyle championship four times (1958, 1960, 1961, and 1962) and the Canadian butterfly championship in 1961.[4] He competed for Canada at the 1959 Pan American Games in Chicago and the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, where he finished sixth in the 100 meter freestyle and was fourth with the 4 × 100 m relay team. He won one gold, two silver, and one bronze medals at the 1962 British Empire and Commonwealth Games in Perth, Western Australia[3][11] and set a Commonwealth record in the 110 yd freestyle.[3]
After Pound retired from competitive swimming, he served as secretary of the Canadian Olympic Committee in 1968.[3] He became president of the organization from 1977 to 1982.[12]
Pound was the Deputy Chef de mission of the Canadian delegation for the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich. He was director and executive member of the Organizing Committee for the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary and director of the Canadian Bidding Committee for hosting the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. Pound was the former Secretary of the Canadian Squash Rackets Association, as well as a former member of the Pan-American Sports Organization (PASO) Executive Commission and Legislative Commission.[13]
In 1978, Pound was elected to the International Olympic Committee and put in charge of negotiating television and sponsorship deals. He was on the IOC executive committee for 16 years, as vice-president from 1987 to 1991 and again from 1996 to 2000,[12] and was a one-time candidate for the presidency of the organization. Pound revolutionized the Olympic movement using such deals to transform the IOC into a multibillion-dollar enterprise. He became known as an outspoken critic of corruption within the IOC, while at the same time supporting the leadership of IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch. His criticisms were given a wide airing after the scandals surrounding the Salt Lake City Olympics broke, and he was then appointed head of the inquiry into the corruption. He also campaigned vehemently for stronger drug testing. Within the ISO, Pound has been in a variety of positions throughout the years, he was Member of the Executive Board (1983-1987, 1992-1996), Vice-President of the IOC (1987-1991, 1996-2000), Chairman of the following Commissions: Protection of the Olympic Games (1981-1983), Television Rights Negotiations (1983-2001), Marketing (1988-2001), Coordination for the Games of the XXVI Olympiad in Atlanta in 1996 (1991-1997),[14] Olympic Games Study (2002-2003), Vice Chairman of the Eligibility Commission (1990-1991). As well as being a member of the following Commissions: Preparation of the XII Olympic Congress (1988-1989), Protection of the Emblems (1974-1977), Eligibility (1984-1987), Olympic Movement (1983-1991, 1992-1999), Programme (1985-1987), Juridical (1993-2015), Study of the Centennial Olympic Congress – Congress of Unity (1994-1996), Sport and Law (1995-2001 and 2014-2015), "IOC 2000" (Executive Committee, 1999), Marketing (2005-), Olympic Philately Numismatics and Memorabilia (2014-2015), Legal Affairs (2015-2018), Communications (2018-), Chair of the boards of directors of Olympic Broadcasting Services S.A.[15] Switzerland and S.L., Spain (2014-2018), Member of the Board of directors of Olympic Channel Services S.L., Spain (2015-2018), IOC Representative on International Council of Arbitration for Sport (2016-2018), and Arbitrator, Court of Arbitration for Sport[16] (1985-2006, 2018-).[13]
With the retirement of Samaranch in 2001, he ran for president of the IOC, but the IOC chose Belgian Jacques Rogge. Pound finished third behind South Korean Kim Un-Yong,[17] who was one of those found to have participated in the Salt Lake City scandals, and who was later prosecuted by the South Korean government.
On April 4, 2014, he was appointed chairman of the board of Olympic Broadcasting Services.[18] He headed the independent commission that investigated the doping scandal in Russian athletics on behalf of WADA from December 2014 and presented its first partial report in November 2015, where the exclusion of the Russian Federation from international competitions was recommended.
Pound scaled back his involvement with the IOC. He helped found World Anti-Doping Agency, based in Montreal, and became the organization's first president.[4] In that role he oversaw an unprecedented toughening of the drug-testing regimen.[19][20] Pound was an especially harsh critic of the Americans, arguing that there is widespread doping, especially amongst their track and field team. He also worked to expand WADA beyond the Olympics, calling on the major sports leagues to agree to WADA scrutiny. His allegations of widespread doping in professional bicycle racing at times brought WADA into fierce public conflict with the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI). Pound's term as WADA president ended at the end of 2007; he chose not to run for another term.
Pound chaired a commission investigating doping in Russia in track and field (athletics). The commission released its report in November 2015, accusing the Russian state of being complicit in illegal doping, requesting suspension of the Russian Athletics Federation, suspending RUSADA and firing its director and declaring it was rife with corruption, and accusing Russian Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko of cover-ups. The report released by Pound's commission instigated an INTERPOL investigation. The commission's investigation also involved Russia's FSB spying on RUSADA during the Sochi Olympics.[21][22]
He is a partner in the law firm of Stikeman Elliott LLP in Montreal. He practises tax law. He is also the author of several books on legal history. He edits Pound’s Tax Case Notes, a review of tax-law court cases for lawyers. He did much of the reading of cases and the writing of the notes on international airplane flights to and from International Olympic Committee functions.
Discussing the National Hockey League in November 2005, Pound said, "you wouldn’t be far wrong if you said a third of hockey players are gaining some pharmaceutical assistance".[23] Pound would later admit that he completely invented the figure.[24] Both the NHL and NHLPA have denied the claims, demanding Pound provide evidence rather than make what they term unsubstantiated claims. Since his comments were made, some NHL players have tested positive for banned substances, including Bryan Berard, José Théodore, and two of 250 players involved in Olympic testing. As of June 2006, there had been 1,406 tests in the program jointly administered by the league and the union, and none has come up with banned substances under NHL rules. Pound remained skeptical, claiming the NHL rules were too lax and unclear, as they do not test for some banned substance, including certain stimulants.[25] In an interview with hockey blogger, B. D. Gallof, of Hockeybuzz on December 19, 2007, Pound was asked to expand on the 30% comment and subsequent reaction, expounded that stimulants was "the NHL's drug of choice". He also cited that the NHL will have no credibility on a drug policy if it, and other sports, continue to run things "in-house".[26]
In January 2004, Le Monde quoted Pound as saying that "the public knows that the riders in the Tour de France and the others are doping." This prompted a strongly worded rebuke from Lance Armstrong, who called Pound's comments "careless and unacceptable."[27] Pound said he was surprised by the personal nature of Armstrong's response because he had never mentioned the cyclist by name.
Around the same time, scientists at a French lab were using frozen urine samples from the 1999 Tour de France to find a new way of detecting erythropoietin (EPO), an oxygen-boosting agent. The samples did not have names attached to them, only numbers, and were provided for research purposes only. But an article in the August 23, 2005 edition of L'Équipe reported finding documentation linking the numbers with the riders, with the findings from the research with samples linked to Armstrong, claiming that six of his 15 samples showed traces of EPO. Pound told the media that there was "now an onus on Lance Armstrong and the others to explain how it is EPO got into their systems."[28]
The Union Cycliste Internationale launched an enquiry, led by lawyer Emile Vrijman, former head of the Netherlands’ antidoping agency (and later defense lawyer of athletes accused of doping). In his 132-page report,[29] leaked to the media on May 31, 2006, Vrijman said no proper records were kept of the samples and that there had been no chain of custody and no process to ensure that the samples had not been spiked with banned substances at the laboratory. The report was highly critical of WADA and Pound, concluding that they had specifically targeted Armstrong and the UCI. The report also called for an investigation to "focus on the communications between Dick Pound and the media" and recommended that no disciplinary action be taken against any athletes.
In response, Pound dismissed the Vrijman report as "so lacking in professionalism and objectivity that it borders on farcical.[30] WADA released an official statement, criticising the Vrijman report as biased, ill-informed, speculative, and "fallacious in many aspects."[31]
On June 9, 2006, Armstrong sent an eight-page letter to Jacques Rogge, president of the International Olympic Committee, demanding that action be taken against Pound. He wrote that Pound was guilty of "reprehensible and indefensible" behaviour and "must be suspended or expelled from the Olympic movement". In February 2007, the IOC ethics committee recommended that Pound exercise greater prudence in his public pronouncements. It declined to move toward removing Pound as an IOC member, and found it had no jurisdiction over WADA. In response, Pound said he was accountable to WADA, not to the IOC.[32]
In 2013 Armstrong admitted that he had taken banned subs
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Dick Pound - Wikipedia
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