http://www.themoscowtimes.com/olympic_coverage/article/russia-suffers-its-worst-ever-olympics/400660.html

Russia Suffers Its Worst-Ever Olympics 
28 February 2010
By Alexander Bratersky



One of Russia's three teams, piloted by Alexander Zubkov, crashing during heat 
one of the four-man bobsled competition at the Winter Olympics on Friday. 


Perhaps it's surprising that Russia managed to walk away with even three gold 
medals after giving its worst-ever performance at a Winter Olympics. ?

Its luge team, for one, has to build its own sleds for lack of money and only 
got a track to practice on at home in 2008 - and even then it doesn't freeze 
properly.

"We make the equipment ourselves and almost from scratch," Valery Silakov, 
president of the Russian luge federation, told The Moscow Times.

Silakov explained that it is hard to find people to produce luges within the 
country and even the Khrunichev space center cannot guarantee that its luges, 
which cost more than $100,000 each, will reach the needed speeds of about 130 
kilometers per hour.

The Russian luge team left the Vancouver Games medal-less after veteran Albert 
Demchenko, 38, placed fourth. ? ?Demchenko complained in Vancouver about the 
lack of financing for his sport, saying he has to repair his luge out of his 
own pocket.

He and his fellow athletes only got a chance to train in Russia when a luge and 
bobsleigh stadium opened in Paramonovo, outside Moscow, in March 2008. The 
stadium, however, routinely faces problems with its freezing equipment, Silakov 
said. The stadium originally built for Soviet athletes is located in 
now-independent Latvia.

Despite the difficulties, Demchenk said he would like to try his luck at the 
Sochi Games in 2014, when he will be 42.

Russia might need him. With many athletes deserting during the turbulent 1990s, 
the younger generation who has replaced them remains amateurish. "Many of them 
entered sports schools after the [training] system had already been destroyed," 
Silakov said.

With only two events left Sunday, Russia looked set to place a dismal 11th in 
the gold medals table, well behind leader Canada (13) and even countries like 
South Korea (6) and China (5). Russia also won five silvers and seven bronzes 
for a total of 15 medals.

Among the biggest setbacks were in ice hockey and skating, which the Soviet 
Union and Russia had dominated since the 1960s. An embarrassed President Dmitry 
Medvedev canceled a scheduled trip to Sunday's closing ceremony.

Russia previously gave its poorest performance in the 2002 Salt Lake City 
Games, collecting five golds for a total of 13 medals.

The luge team's woes are typical of the problems facing all athletes. While the 
government boosted financing for Winter Olympic teams to $25 million last year, 
up from $22 million in 2008, a lack of proper training facilities, rampant 
corruption and a small pool of eager athletes contributed to Russia's failure 
in Vancouver, sports officials and athletes said. ?

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has said Russia needed to learn the lessons 
offered by Vancouver, but no shakeups are expected in the sporting world that 
could improve Russia's chances for the Sochi Games.

?Russia's complete failure to win any golds in ice skating has prompted harsh 
criticism from champion Soviet ice skater Irina Rodnina.

She accused the heads of Russian sports federations of running their 
organizations like "family businesses" and lashed out at Russian Olympic 
Committee head Leonid Tyagachev, a close friend of Putin and his personal ski 
coach.

"Do you think that those who are responsible for the results are upset? I saw 
Tyagachev in the Russian House restaurant yesterday. He had a good appetite," 
Rodnina told the Sovietsky Sport newspaper.

Sports federations are independent, although most of their financial support 
comes from the state. The state allocations are disproportional, with the 
majority going to hockey, biathlon, ski racing and ice skating, while far less 
goes to short track, ski jumping and luge.?

Of the three golds that Russia won, two were in biathlon and one was in ski 
racing.

Former ice skating champion and State Duma Deputy Anton Sikharulidze described 
the situation inside the federations and the Olympic committee as "wild," in an 
interview with Ekho Moskvy radio.

Federation Council Speaker Sergei Mironov and other politicians have called on 
Tyagachev and Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko to resign, and 54 percent of 
Russians feel likewise, according to an Interfax poll last week.

Tyagachev and Mutko have been summoned to give a briefing to the Duma in early 
April, but neither has given any indication that they might quit.

Mutko said last week that Russia's problem in Vancouver was that it was "trying 
to use simple methods and trying to find people to blame," RIA-Novosti reported.

The Audit Chamber has promised to check to make sure that government funds 
earmarked for Olympic training were spent properly.

Roman Kostomarov, who won gold in ice dancing for Russia in the 2006 Winter 
Olympics in Turin, Italy, said Russia should have placed more emphasis on 
training than on calculating how many medals to get. The Sports Ministry 
published a plan in 2008 that foresaw Russia winning 11 golds.

"The Olympic Games are not something that can be blueprinted in advance," he 
told The Moscow Times. "This is like selling a bearskin before the bear is 
caught." 

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