Don McDougall (baseball)
Don McDougall (born December 15, 1937) is a Canadian businessman. He served as president of the Labatt Brewing Company, and led the group that successfully lobbied for a Major League Baseball expansion team team, the Toronto Blue Jays.
Biography
McDougall was born in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. He graduated from Saint Dunstan's University with a bachelor's degree, and earned his MBA from the University of Western Ontario.[1]
Heworked in several managerial positions for the Labatt Brewing Company, before being named the company's president in 1973. He resigned in 1980 to run for office in the federal elections as a member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada.[2]
One of his tasks as president was to secure a Major League Baseball franchise for the brewery and the city of Toronto. He had to overcome a failed attempt to bring the San Francisco Giants to the city,[3] and also had to fend off a rival group of businessmen with the same goal of bringing baseball north. He was part of the team that eventually brought the Toronto Blue Jays into existence in 1976, and was the club's founding director.[3]
Honors and affiliations
- In 2002, McDougall was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.[4]
- In 2008, the University of Prince Edward Island named a new building after McDougall and his wife, Marion, to honour their commitment to higher learning and philanthropic efforts.[4]
- In 2009, he was inducted into the London Business Hall of Fame.[4]
- In 2014, the University of Prince Edward Island installed McDougall as Chancellor.
- In 2014, he is a member of the University of Waterloo Stratford Campus Advisory Board.[5]
References
- ↑ McDougall in the London Business Hall of Fame
- ↑ McDougall as Progressive Conservative Party of Canada politician
- 1 2 As President of Labatt's Brewing
- 1 2 3 McDougall bio at the Canadian Hall of Fame
- ↑ "Advisory Board profiles". University of Waterloo. Retrieved 24 August 2014.
It uses material from the BR Bullpen article "Don McDougall".