Ottavio Cinquanta
Ottavio Cinquanta | |
---|---|
10th President of the International Skating Union | |
In office 27 February 1994 – 28 February 2016 | |
Preceded by | Olaf Poulsen |
Succeeded by | Jan Dijkema |
Personal details | |
Born | Rome, Italy | 15 August 1938
Died | 18 July 2022 Milan, Italy | (aged 83)
Ottavio Cinquanta (15 August 1938 – 18 July 2022) was the president of the International Skating Union and a member of the International Olympic Committee. He held the ISU position from 1994 to 2016 and the IOC position since 1996. In 2000 he was elected member of the IOC's executive committee, a position that he held until 2008. Prior to becoming ISU's president, he was ISU's vice president and before that the chair of its technical committee for Short Track Speed Skating.
Biography
[edit]Cinquanta grew up in Milan, Italy, where he practiced ice hockey, athletics and speed skating. Cinquanta attended university and he was mainly active in business administration. At the time of his election to the ISU Presidency, at the age of 56, he retired from his position as a manager of an international chemical company.
When Cinquanta was first elected to the ISU Presidency, he was initially regarded as a progressive who introduced prize money at ISU events after negotiating several commercial contracts, including an important television contract with ABC Sports. This allowed the ISU to retain athletes who might have otherwise left Olympic-eligible skating to participate in unsanctioned made-for-television professional skating competitions, which were then offering large appearance fees to top skaters. The television money also allowed the ISU to sustain a variety of development programs in both figure skating and speed skating branches, including, for example, the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating.
However, because of his speed skating background, Cinquanta has been the subject of a considerable amount of criticism from the figure skating community, particularly in Canada and the United States. During the 2002 Olympic Winter Games figure skating scandal, he was criticized for his evasiveness and his admission that he "did not know figure skating so well".[1] In spite of his professed lack of knowledge about the sport, he proposed a new scoring system for figure skating[2] whose major feature is secrecy, which would prevent anyone from knowing how an individual judge had marked the competition. The implementation of secret judging at the 2003 World Figure Skating Championships in Washington, D.C., was controversial enough to result in a fan protest at that event,[3] with Cinquanta personally being jeered by the audience whenever he was introduced.[4]
Cinquanta had previously been loudly booed by fans at the 1996 World Figure Skating Championships in Edmonton, Alberta, after he invoked a technicality to prevent local skating favorite Kurt Browning from skating in the opening ceremony of that event[5][6] and again at the 1998 Championships in Minneapolis, Minnesota.[7]
Cinquanta was consecutively reelected to the ISU Presidency at all the ISU elective Congresses until he passed the retirement age.
References
[edit]- ^ "Scoring scandal knocks skating chief for a loop". USA Today. 13 February 2002. Retrieved 23 December 2021.
- ^ "Skating set for radical change". BBC. 18 February 2002. Retrieved 23 December 2021.
- ^ Michaelis, Vicki (24 March 2003). "Figure skating losing its luster". USA Today. Retrieved 23 December 2021.
- ^ Liberty, Lady (15 April 2003). "Putting Saddam on Ice". Junto Society. Archived from the original on 1 November 2006. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
- ^ Ismangil, Sita (December 1997). "A Kurt Browning Frequently Asked Questions". SympaTico. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
- ^ Cole, Cam (20 March 1996). "Snubbed: Browning had a song in his heart". The Kurt Files. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
- ^ SLAM![usurped]
Further reading
[edit]- Sonia Bianchetti Garbato, Cracked Ice. ISBN 88-86753-72-1.
- Joy Goodwin, The Second Mark. ISBN 0-7432-4527-X.
External links
[edit]- International Skating Union – Past Presidents at www.isu.org