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IRENE & ABE POLLIN
Chairmen and Owners of Washington Sports & Entertainment,
LP
In
their 45th season of ownership of the franchise, Irene and Abe Pollin
hold the distinction of being the longest-tenured owners in the
National Basketball Association. Since becoming owners in 1964,
the Pollin's have watched tIhe NBA become the standard by which
all other professional sports leagues are measured, as it exploded
in growth from a small, regional league to a worldwide presence.
Irene and Abe Pollin have been at the center of some of the NBA’s
most historic events during their distinguished time at the helm
of the Washington Bullets/Wizards. In 1978, they reached the pinnacle
of the NBA when their Bullets, behind the play of Wes Unseld, Elvin
Hayes and Bob Dandridge, defeated Seattle and brought a World Championship
to Washington. In the summer of 1979, Pollin took his Bullets to
Asia to lead the NBA’s first ever venture into China, forging
the way for the NBA to become a global entity.
As the majority owners of Washington Sports & Entertainment
Limited Partnership, the Pollin’s oversee the operations of
the Washington Wizards, Washington/Baltimore Ticketmaster and in-house
promoter Musicentre Productions, as well as the management of Verizon
Center and The George Mason University Patriot Center.
Thirty-five years ago, the Pollin’s opened the Capital Centre
in Landover, Maryland, the new home for their Baltimore Bullets,
and applied for a National Hockey League expansion franchise. The
Capital Centre opened on December 2, 1973, and it was what Verizon
Center is today -- a state-of-the-art sports and entertainment facility
that became the standard for new arenas throughout the world.
The Capital Centre, aptly named by Irene Pollin, was built in a
record 15 months and boasted a plethora of unique features including
electronic ticketing, one-of-a-kind luxury suite accommodations
and the never-before-seen telescreen. It was the premier arena in
its time, as it hosted a wide range of events from sports to concerts,
and even presidential galas.
But as time and the sports and entertainment industry changed,
the Pollin’s realized that their teams were no longer playing
in the “best” facility in their respective leagues.
In 1964, when the Pollin’s and two partners purchased the
Baltimore Bullets, they had dreams that someday the team would play
in a brand-new facility in the nation’s capital. Once again,
they seized the opportunity to make their dreams a reality.
After the long years of planning and building Verizon Center, the
Pollin’s watched as their dreams came true on December 2,
1997, when a sellout crowd filled Verizon Center to watch the Wizards
host the arena’s first event versus the Seattle Supersonics.
Since that time, the downtown Chinatown neighborhood has sprung
to life with almost 26 million people having spun the turnstiles
at Verizon Center to be a part of close to 2,200 concerts, family
shows and world-class sporting events. The 2007-08 NBA season marked
the 10th Anniversary of the opening of Verizon Center in downtown
Washington; a milestone celebrated with a series of special community
events and building accolades. Nominated for Arena of the Year for
the first time by leading trade publication, Pollstar, Verizon Center
also saw the installation of the first true indoor, high-definition,
light emitting diode (LED) display scoreboard for an arena in the
country, once again putting the building on the cutting edge of
technology and ahead of the curve.
“I had two goals when I decided to build this building,”
said Abe Pollin. “The first was that if I was building in
downtown Washington, the nation’s capital, it had to be the
best building of its kind in the country. The second was to be the
catalyst that turned the city around.”
In 1998, as the Wizards completed their first season at Verizon
Center, the Pollin’s WNBA franchise, the Washington Mystics,
made history of their own. The Mystics made their Verizon Center
debut on June 19, 1998 in front of 20,674 fans — the largest
crowd ever to attend a women’s professional basketball game
in the United States. And while the Mystics’ beginnings under
the Pollin’s guidance were historic in their own right, their
purchase by Sheila Johnson and Lincoln Holdings was of similar significance.
In May of 2005, the Pollin’s facilitated the sale of their
Mystics to Sheila Johnson as the Mystics President and Managing
Partner, and brought Johnson to Lincoln Holdings, a minority partner
in Washington Sports & Entertainment. With Lincoln Holdings’
stake in the NBA’s Wizards and the NHL’s Capitals, Johnson
became the first African-American woman to have ownership interest
in three professional sports franchises.
While the sports industry is full of astute business professionals,
what distinguishes Irene and Abe Pollin from their peers is their
commitment to social responsibility. They share a passionate need
to give back to the community and have made helping people a way
of life. Their philanthropic and humanitarian endeavors know no
bias or boundaries, which is evident by the numerous public service
and community organizations to which they selflessly devote enormous
time and energy.
Abe Pollin serves as the Chairman of the Advisory Council, is Honorable
Chairman of the Salvation Army’s Leadership Committee for
Centers of Hope and Co-Chair of the Community Capital Campaign for
N Street Village in the District. He is also the co-sponsor of the
“I Have a Dream Foundation” and he personally guaranteed
a college education for 55 students. Recent philanthropic endeavors
of the Pollin’s have included the re-launch of the Abe’s
Table program to feed the underserved in the DC community and financial
sponsorship of Gilbert Arenas’ Gilbert Scores for Schools
program, through which the Pollin’s donated $100 for every
point that Arenas scored in select Wizards games during the 2006-07
and 2007-08 seasons to a different Washington area school each game
(a donation that exceeded $300,000 last season alone). Most recently,
in August of 2008, the Pollin’s donated $1,000,000 to the
Society for Progressive Supranuclear Palsy - CUREPSP - to establish
a fund to support research in corticobasal degeneration (CBD) and
to find the cause and cure for the rare neurological disease, a
disease which Mr. Pollin was diagnosed with several years ago.
“I grew up in a house where both of my parents were very
much involved in helping others,” said Pollin. “My philosophy
is that those of us who are on the giving end rather than the receiving
end are very lucky.”
Not surprisingly, recognition of the Pollin’s accomplishments
are just as impressive as the deeds they acknowledge. The recent
years have been landmark ones for Pollin, as he has received numerous
awards and accolades recognizing his accomplishments in professional
sports and contributions to community service.
Pollin was awarded the Duke Ziebert Capital Achievement Award for
his efforts in revitalizing downtown Washington, D.C. He has also
been the recipient of the Distinguished Civilian Service Award,
presented by the U.S. Army, the 1996 Robert F. Kennedy-Martin Luther
King, Jr. Award, presented by the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence,
the 1996 United Cerebral Palsy Achievement Award and the 1997 Jewish
Leadership Award. In 2006, Pollin was honored for his contributions
to the world of sports and his community when the United States
Sports Academy tabbed him for their Distinguished Service Award.
On December 3, 2007, Mayor Adrian M. Fenty proclaimed “Abe
Pollin Day” in the District of Columbia in honor of Abe Pollin’s
84th birthday and all of his contributions to the city. In addition
to proclaiming Abe Pollin Day, the Mayor unveiled F Street NW between
6th and 7th Streets NW as “Abe Pollin Way.”
As if the years of experience with the Bullets/Wizards, Capital
Centre and Verizon Center were not challenging enough, Irene Pollin
is a noted health care professional with over 28 years of experience
in the field. In 1976, she created the first Medical Crisis Counseling
Center developed to treat patients and families coping with chronic
illness. Since then, she has developed Medical Crisis Counseling
Centers at Washington Hospital Center as well as additional facilities
in surrounding communities.
Irene Pollin has forged a dynamic reputation as a psychiatric social
worker and lecturer in the department of psychiatry at Harvard University.
As president and founder of the Linda and Kenneth Pollin Foundation,
she serves on a number of national advisory boards and commissions
in fields of both mental and women’s health, and is the founder
and chairperson of the Sister to Sister — Everyone Has a Heart
Foundation, an organization whose aim is to increase women’s
awareness of heart disease and provide free cardiac screenings.
In addition to lecturing in the academic community, Irene Pollin
has been a guest on national and local broadcast shows including
the Today show, Nightline with Ted Koppel, Good Day New York, National
Public Radio and USA Today Sports Radio. She also has published
numerous articles and is the author of two books, Medical Crisis
Counseling — Short-Term Therapy for Long-Term Illness and
Taking Charge — Overcoming the Challenges of Long-Term Illness.
She has served as a board member of numerous organizations such
as the American Cancer Society, Smithsonian Institution, Cystic
Fibrosis Foundation, National Kidney Foundation, the Multiple Sclerosis
Society, the Society for Women’s Health Research, National
Cancer Institute, National Rehabilitation Hospital, the National
Institute of Mental Health, the U.S. Committee for the Washington,
D.C. United Nations Fund for Women, the National Institutes for
Health Foundation and the Office of Women’s Health at NIH.
Outside of the health field, Irene Pollin has served on the board
for the National Symphony Orchestra and the Washington Opera. In
addition, she has given back to her alma mater by serving on the
Board of American University (for 11 years), the American University
Executive Committee and the Development Committee at American University,
and being the guiding force behind the development of the new American
University Library. In the spring of 2007, Irene Pollin received
an honorary doctorate degree from Howard University.
Irene and Abe Pollin together established the Pollin Prize for
Pediatric Research, administered annually by New York Presbyterian
Hospital. The first Pollin Prize was awarded on November 15, 2002,
to four international scientists for their work in Oral Dehydration
Therapy, hailed as the most important medical discovery of the 20th
century.
Abe Pollin moved with his family to the Washington area from Philadelphia
when he was eight. He graduated from The George Washington University
in 1945 and went to work for his family’s construction company
for 12 years. Irene Pollin, a native of St. Louis, received a Bachelor’s
Degree from American University, and then earned a Master’s
Degree in Social Work from Catholic University. In 1957, the Pollin’s
launched their own construction company and, as a local contractor,
built several large apartment houses and office buildings, one of
which featured the first-ever rooftop pool in Washington.
The Pollin’s enjoy spending time with their children and
grandchildren. Robert, the elder of the Pollin’s two sons,
lives in Amherst, MA, with his wife Sigrid, where they are both
professors at the University of Massachusetts. Robert, an economics
professor, and Sigrid, an architect, have two daughters, Emma and
Hannah. The Pollin’s younger son, James, is the President
of The Pollin Group/MedEdatSea, a travel business specializing in
cruises. Irene and Abe Pollin reside in Bethesda, Maryland.
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