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Pierre Dumas : ウィキペディア英語版 | Pierre Dumas
Pierre Dumas (died Paris, 29 February 2000) was a French doctor who pioneered drug tests in the Olympic Games and cycling. He was doctor of the Tour de France from 1952 to 1969 and head of drug-testing at the race until 1977. ==Background== Dumas taught physical education at Reims from 1942. He then studied to become a doctor and joined the École Nationale de la Santé Publique〔A national medical school formed in Paris, but since moved to Rennes, at the end of the second world war. Since 2004 it has been the École des Hautes Études en Santé Publique.〕 in Paris in 1951. He was a short, stocky figure, a Greco-Roman wrestler〔(Google Books - Le tour de France cycliste: 1903-2005, by Sandrine Viollet )〕 who had a black belt in judo.〔 He knew nothing more of cycling than he had read in the newspapers when in July 1952 he cancelled a climbing holiday in the Alps to become doctor at the Tour de France. Dumas remained head doctor of the Tour until 1972, when he handed over to Philippe Miserez.
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