Professional Cycling For the Fans - Who is Dick Pound?

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View Full Version : Who is Dick Pound?


ohplease
08-08-06, 04:03 PM
Caught this article on another cycling forum. Regardless of what Floyd Landis might or might not have done, this article provides some valuable context.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A61120-2004Aug12.html

The Difficulty of Watching Pound Throw His Weight Around

By Sally Jenkins
Friday, August 13, 2004; Page D10

ATHENS

That phony careerist and human necktie Dick Pound should promptly remove himself from public life and quit trying to enlarge his reputation by wrecking the reputations of others. But unfortunately it appears we will have to shove him forcibly from the Olympic stage while he is still grabbing at the free shrimp from the VIP buffet.

For all those who haven't heard his officious and highly prejudiced bellowing, Pound is the head of the World Anti-Doping Agency. He's the guy who's supposed to oversee a body devoted to the ethical competition of the Olympics. And yet Pound commits an ethical violation almost every time he opens his mouth, and expresses another self-serving, sorehead and headline-seeking opinion. He's the biggest scandal here.

It is plainly unethical and prejudicial for a head of WADA to make pronouncements about an ongoing and supposedly confidential investigation such as BALCO, and the guilt or innocence of those involved. And yet there was Pound on the eve of the Opening Ceremonies, accusing USA Track and Field of being "largely responsible" for doping and again attacking Marion Jones by name.

Jones has been his favorite punching bag for months, despite the fact that evidence against her is less than persuasive and she has not been formally accused of anything. "If she's innocent, she comes here and that's fine," Pound said Thursday. "And if she's not and comes here and has made all those statements, it's going to be a dark and deep hole into which she goes. It would be a shame."

Pound loves to suggest that Jones is guilty until proven guilty, because she hangs around with the wrong people, meaning her husbands and boyfriends. Now, that's funny coming from him. Dick Pound has spent his entire adult life hanging around with one of the dirtiest and most corrupt organizations on the earth: the International Olympic Committee.

Who exactly is Dick Pound? He was an Olympic swimmer for Canada in 1960 and he has been a relentless ladder climber ever since. For many years he was the right hand of that man beloved of Generalissimo Francisco Franco, former IOC president Juan Antonio Samaranch. He helped deliver the Olympics to NBC for an entire generation, and he was Samaranch's handpicked successor. But he became increasingly unpopular in the IOC because of his role as an ethics officer, and Jacques Rogge instead replaced Samaranch. In other words, Pound is a permanently marginalized (and possibly embittered) guy who was passed up.

Ever since then, Pound has been trying to become important in the Olympics again, and his chief way of doing this is to style himself the savior of purity in the Games, by accusing anyone and everyone of doping and corruption, whether there is proper evidence or not. Pound's attack on the USATF was the sort of baseless and distorted crack that has become typical of him, issued to satisfy his craving for attention. There's no doubt that USATF has had its problems. But USATF has nothing to do with drug testing or enforcement. That is the job of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, as Pound well knows, since he oversees USADA as head of WADA. "Mr. Pound is well known for his colorful remarks," USATF spokeswoman Jill Greer said in response to his remarks. "I would hope that as head of the World Anti-Doping Agency he would not prejudge any athlete." But that's all Pound does -- judge.

Pound has become known as the bullying head of an organization of controversial legal standards. The family of banned Australian cyclist Mark French has complained that even Saddam Hussein received better legal treatment. Among Pound's remarks and insinuations: Anyone who takes exception to his methods or those of WADA is either a guilty athlete, or part of their team. "Everyone else thinks we're doing exactly the right thing," Pound told the Canadian Press.

No, actually, they don't. Jon Drummond said during the U.S. trials, "Find out about Dick Pound and why he's coming down so hard on the United States. He's the WADA chair, he's the big man on campus. The athletes are doing what they're supposed to do. Dick sits in his office and passes out accusations."

Why is Pound beating up on the U.S. track federation, when it doesn't even control American drug testing? Why is he screaming?

Pound was vice president of the IOC and a representative of the Canadian delegation in 1988 when his countryman, Ben Johnson, was stripped of his gold medal for testing positive for steroid use. Pound was a public defender of Johnson's, arguing that he was essentially innocent, had been manipulated into taking an illegal drug unwittingly. "I'm certain he didn't know," Pound said. "I don't think he has the faintest idea what it's all about." He also said that Johnson had a "guilty body" but not the guilty intent that would have convicted him in a court of law. Johnson later confessed he had used steroids since 1981.

God forbid an American should defend a U.S. track athlete to WADA in such terms. As it happens, the United States has made strides against doping in track. The Olympic lab under the direction of the devoted and hard-working Don Catlin has made critical progress in identifying several designer drugs. What has Dick Pound ever done, except excuse Ben Johnson? As far as I can tell, Pound has committed exactly one act of any substance as the head of WADA: He moved the organization to Montreal, conveniently for him and, perhaps, his business pals. Is that an unfair accusation? Well.

Pound is also an author. He has a book out, called "Inside the Olympics." More properly, it should be entitled, "Big Events in Small Minds." Quill and Quire, a Canadian review of books, had this to say about Pound and his book: "Readers looking for the definitive exposé of Olympic greed, avarice, and scandal will be disappointed. . . .Pound occasionally comes across as supercilious and hypocritical. He pontificates about the scourge of fixed judging in figure skating and the injustice of hopped-up athletes who win medals, but fails to connect those scandals to the same morally bankrupt, win-at-all-costs attitudes that had infected the bidding process leading up to the Salt Lake scandal."

I detest Pound on principle as a hypocrite who attacks the easiest and most vulnerable targets he can find for the sake of his own advancement. He should be summarily dislodged from his job for betraying his chief responsibility as the head of WADA, to be measured and fair. Personally, I find him utterly devoid of any real Olympic spirit or spirit of justice. The Romans believed that the enforcement of an absolutely just law, without any regard for possible exceptions, resulted in absolute injustice. Or as Martin Luther King put it, "an injustice anywhere is an injustice everywhere."

We should all question, rightly, what's going on in Olympic sports and how best to make the Games fair, untainted and equitable for all competitors. But there is one person we most assuredly should not listen to, Dick Pound. He is neither fair, nor equitable, nor untainted.


lotek
08-08-06, 04:15 PM
While I don't disagree with anything that ms Jenkins said
keep in mind that she (Jenkins) co authored both of the
Lance Armstrong books and is a big Lance supporter.
Lance has a personal vendetta against Pound so read
with a grain of salt.

marty

EURO
08-08-06, 04:17 PM
Once more amazing that the conspiracy theorists are unable to detect that the anti-Pound PR is a conspiracy in itself.


hombredebicycle
08-08-06, 11:05 PM
Sally Jenkins is a very good writer, a person who has written about sports and sports people for a very long time before and after the Armstrong book. She has been a featured write for the Washington Post and SPorts Illustrated so her credentials and research will have been good to slam Mr. Pound.

Her Dad, Dan Jenkins, wrote one of the most entertaining and damning insiders view of the NFL in history Semi-Tough. A Texan too which didnt hurt when it came to Lance picking someone.

USAZorro
08-12-06, 12:08 PM
Dick has always seemed to me, to be pompous and imperious. Certainly, WADA has a role to play, and needs a leader - but it would be far better served by having someone who has sufficient self-discipline to refrain from issuing press releases that condemn athletes by name - period. Mr. Pound seems to leap at opportunities to get his name in the press, even if it means blasting athletes who are under suspicion before they've been accorded the opportunity to clear their names. The concept of dignity (as it pertains to either himself, his positiion, or to others) seems to escape him entirely. Surprisingly, the importance of being circumspect is something he failed to learn from Juan Antonio Samaranch.

davefarb
08-17-06, 10:18 AM
Dick Pound is an adult film star.

Trevor98
08-17-06, 11:20 AM
Dick Pound undermines WADA and the whole anti-doping effort.

Blue Order
08-17-06, 04:17 PM
And now Pound undermines the doping investigation and exposes WADA to legal action:

Pound attacks Landis and USADA (http://www.cyclingnews.com/news.php?id=news/2006/aug06/aug14news3)
By Tim Maloney, European Editor

In a tersely-worded opinion column in a Canadian newspaper, Dick Pound, ranking member of the International Olympic Committee and president of the World Anti-Doping Agency, took aim at 2006 TdF winner Floyd Landis and the United States Anti-Doping Agency, claiming the latter may subscribe to a theory that Landis was "ambushed by a roving squad of Nazi frogmen".

Pound appears to be struggling to contain his cynicism in his capacity as WADA chief. In the August 9, 2006, edition of the Ottawa Citizen, he authored a column titled "It's time to come clean", where he beseeches Landis and 100 metre sprinter Justin Gatlin - who's also tested positive to testosterone - to inform on their "enablers".

An extraordinary aspect of Pound's column - given he is chief of WADA - is his seeming assumption that Landis is already guilty, well before the American cyclist has faced any official charges that may be brought against him by the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) for a positive test for testosterone at the Tour de France.

"Landis, winner of the fabled Tour de France, following a Cinderella comeback late in the race, erasing a disastrous day-before, now seems to have taken a morning-after pill to recover from the previous failure and will likely be stripped of the crown that is the dream of all cyclists - the Yellow Jersey in the showcase event of cycling," Pound wrote.

The WADA chief doesn't stop at Landis, however; he also targets the USADA and cycling in general. "We will have to wait for the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) to organize an appeal process, since both (Landis and Gatlin) are American athletes, before any formal sanction can be pronounced.

"Who knows, USADA may subscribe to a suggestion that both athletes (Landis & Gatlin), in separate sports, were ambushed by a roving squad of Nazi frogmen and injected against their will with the prohibited substances. But, if USADA does not bite, Mr. Landis faces a two-year suspension."

In his Ottawa Citizen op-ed piece, he went on to connect Landis' positive test for testosterone to the Operacion Puerto affair in Spain, then makes a plea for cycling to enter a twelve step program.

"As in alcoholism, or other addictions, if one refuses to acknowledge the existence of a problem, no cure is possible. The next step is to reach out for help."

Pound was scathing about cycling in general, making more generalisations in one statement than any ill-informed tabloid columnist has achieved thus far following the Landis announcement.

He wrote, "Take cycling in 2006. If 2006 were to be measured in the Chinese cycle, it would be the Year of the Excrement". Pound cites the fall-out of 'Operacion Puerto' with several big names in the sport also withdrawn prior to the start of the 2006 Tour de France.

Pound believes the "Spanish investigation" (Operacion Puerto) has "established that there was an organized scheme to cheat, involving riders, teams, doctors and even UCI officials".

He doesn't name the "UCI officials", but adds, "Whatever has been done to date is sadly lacking in effectiveness".

(Alternatively, it's claimed that cycling is currently the most stringently-controlled sport worldwide. An opposite, statistical, view is that if a sport does more testing, then it's likely to result in more positive dope tests.)

The answer is WADA - with raids and interrogation?
In Pound's column, he says the answer to the issue of doping in cycling, "lies in the formula established by the World Anti-Doping Agency". Working with governments on "all five continents", it would appear that Pound sees a greatly enhanced role for WADA and its signatory agencies in the future; one where the scientific specialists acquire the power of law enforcement agencies.

"Sports authorities have no power to seize evidence, to compel people to provide evidence and to enforce trafficking rules. Possession and use of most doping substances without medical prescriptions are already illegal (as in Canada), so the combination of the sport and public authorities provides a means to get at the full range of the evidence needed to stop doping," Pound wrote.

In the absence of any likely interrogation for Landis, the WADA chief insists that Landis' lawyer (Howard Jacobs) instruct his client to offer a full confession.

"If I were Floyd Landis's lawyer (which I am not), I would say that, 'if you love your sport and want to get back into it as soon as possible, tell it like it is - like it really is. Give everyone who has been subverted into the conduct that has exposed you the chance to clean it up, or take the risk that, in the Year of the Excrement, your sport may be flushed into the toilet."

Pound said that Landis should seemingly launch a counter-suit against what he calls "the enablers" (presumably the people who allegedly provided doping products and services).

"You will never, ever, have more credibility than you do today," Pound wrote of the American. "They are the ones who wrecked you and your sport. The athletes are not acting alone and may well be the compliant victims of a system that coerces them. Mr. Landis, exposed as he is now, could become the saviour of his sport. Continued denial will only consign him to a life of ridicule and obscurity."

Pound's column seems to add weight to the argument of Landis that he won't get the opportunity to fairly defend himself against doping charges. He recently told AP sports columnist Jim Litke that, "By what I've seen so far, I don't expect to get a fair chance, but I'm hoping that will change."

Bacciagalupe
08-17-06, 06:35 PM
And now Pound undermines the doping investigation and exposes WADA to legal action....
Hardly. He's just shooting his mouth off, which he always does. The line about USADA and the "Frogman Defense" is just him saying that the evidence overwhelmingly points to Landis doping, and the only way Landis can escape conviction is by positing an utterly ridiculous theory.

I agree that, like Pat McQuaid, (http://www.velonews.com/news/fea/10720.0.html) he should be giving Floyd the presumption of innocence until the hearings are complete. At the same time, Floyd's throwing out every possible excuse and rationalization and is even accusing the UCI of sabotaging his test, while McQuaid defends Phonak's management and says that it's only a "small" percentage of riders who are doping. Athletes who get caught almost always produce a string of outrageous lies in order to avoid punishment (vanishing twins and flaxseed oil, anyone?), assuming that the public won't care once they're back on the field.

If I was in charge of WADA and had to listen to crap like that day in and day out, I'd be hopping mad and outspoken as well. Doping is endemic in athletics around the world, and if it takes an obnoxious guy with big mouth who doesn't care about offending a few people to put it in check, I'm fine with that.

Blue Order
08-17-06, 06:44 PM
Hardly. He's just shooting his mouth off, which he always does. The line about USADA and the "Frogman Defense" is just him saying that the evidence overwhelmingly points to Landis doping, and the only way Landis can escape conviction is by positing an utterly ridiculous theory.

I agree that, like Pat McQuaid, (http://www.velonews.com/news/fea/10720.0.html) he should be giving Floyd the presumption of innocence until the hearings are complete. At the same time, Floyd's throwing out every possible excuse and rationalization and is even accusing the UCI of sabotaging his test, while McQuaid defends Phonak's management and says that it's only a "small" percentage of riders who are doping. Athletes who get caught almost always produce a string of outrageous lies in order to avoid punishment (vanishing twins and flaxseed oil, anyone?), assuming that the public won't care once they're back on the field.

If I was in charge of WADA and had to listen to crap like that day in and day out, I'd be hopping mad and outspoken as well. Doping is endemic in athletics around the world, and if it takes an obnoxious guy with big mouth who doesn't care about offending a few people to put it in check, I'm fine with that.If I were representing an athlete who was found in violation of the Anti-Doping Rules, I'd be going to the CAS with Pound's statements, along with McQuaid's statements, and whatever other evidence I had, as evidence that my client's right to a fair and impartial hearing was violated. Then I'd go after WADA for violating its own Anti-Doping Code.

I think doping should be eliminated. But it won't be eliminated by anti-doping organizations that are violating the very rules they're supposed to be enforcing.

BroMax
08-17-06, 07:00 PM
Dick Pound is an adult film star.

That's what I thought. Wasn't he in Perry Does Peoria?

USAZorro
08-17-06, 08:17 PM
When is the last time someone asked - "Do the ends justify the means?" Someone needs to show Mr. Pound that his tactics are infantile, and "will only consign him to a life of ridicule and obscurity." The man has no sense of dignity at all and should be immediately replaced by an adult who shares his zeal, but at least occasionally thinks before he issues press releases.

Walter
08-17-06, 08:33 PM
If testesterone caused oversize egos Pound might himself flunking a test or two.

If the leader of the WADA doesn't believe in a presumption of innocence and cannot display the patience to let an established process run its course then one wonders about the validity of his organization.

And the fact that he wants the WADA to have police power? That is scary.

When all is said and done this is sport, not real life. I've been involved with organized sport most of my life and will continue to be but it's not that important.

Someone needs to tell Pound that.

USAZorro
08-17-06, 09:10 PM
If testesterone caused oversize egos Pound might himself flunking a test or two.

If the leader of the WADA doesn't believe in a presumption of innocence and cannot display the patience to let an established process run its course then one wonders about the validity of his organization.

And the fact that he wants the WADA to have police power? That is scary.

When all is said and done this is sport, not real life. I've been involved with organized sport most of my life and will continue to be but it's not that important.

Someone needs to tell Pound that.

He's a full-blown meglomaniac.

Rob944
08-17-06, 09:29 PM
I think doping should be eliminated. But it won't be eliminated by anti-doping organizations that are violating the very rules they're supposed to be enforcing.[/QUOTE]


+1. He is a complete disgrace. Every amatuer and pro athlete subject to WADA should be screaming for his resignation. I cant believe that the organization itself keeps this jackass as a leader.

DaveTaylor
08-20-06, 01:07 PM
As a Canadian, I find Dick Pound a national embarassment. I cannot disagree with any of the negative comments made here. To add to the foot-in-mouth stories, how about the Pound statement made last year that one third of the players in the NHL take performance enhancing drugs. The facts are that NHL players have been subject to Olympic style testing for many years in international competition with no significant positive results. After some 1500 tests done by the NHL only two positive results and one of those was by a goalie who was taking a hair growth treatment! Dick Pound represents everything that is rotten about the IOC and has taken the slime to WADA. He should be shown the door.