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The Washington Times Online Edition

Head of Russian Olympic Committee resigns

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev speaks during a meeting at the Gorki presidential residence outside Moscow on Monday, March 1, 2010. He is demanding sports officials step down over the country's dismal performance at the Winter Olympics in Vancouver. Russia, a traditional winter sports powerhouse, won just 15 medals, with only three golds, in one of its worst-ever performances. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Dmitry Astakhov, Presidential Press Service)
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev speaks during a meeting at the Gorki presidential residence outside Moscow on Monday, March 1, 2010. He is demanding sports officials step down over the country’s dismal performance at the Winter Olympics in Vancouver. Russia, a traditional winter sports powerhouse, won just 15 medals, with only three golds, in one of its worst-ever performances. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Dmitry Astakhov, Presidential Press Service)

MOSCOW | The head of the Russian Olympic Committee resigned on Wednesday in the wake of the nation’s worst performance at the Winter Games, news agencies said, citing the committee’s spokesman.

When contacted by The Associated Press, however, the spokesman said only “that information is not confirmed,” before hanging up. He did not deny making the statements to the Russian media or say the information was incorrect.

Leonid Tyagachev, a former sports minister, took over as head of the Russian Olympic Committee in 2001. In the wake of the Vancouver Games, President Dmitry Medvedev has warned that sports officials would be fired if they failed to resign voluntarily.

The news agencies Interfax and ITAR-Tass cited Gennady Shvets as saying that Tyagachev had tendered his resignation. “This obviously concerns the Russian athletes’ performance at the Vancouver Olympic Games,” Interfax quoted the spokesman as saying.

Russia won just 15 medals in Vancouver — and only three golds — two fewer than its previous low in Salt Lake City in 2002. Officials said before the Olympics that 30 medals and a top-three finish in the medal standings were the targets.

Russia placed 11th for golds and sixth in the overall medal count, results which proved particularly embarrassing as the country takes the torch for the next Winter Olympics at its Black Sea resort of Sochi in 2014.

Tyagachev, 63, helped Russia win hosting rights to the Sochi Games. He is a personal friend and, according to some Russian news reports, a former ski instructor of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.

There was no word on any replacement.

Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko said on Tuesday in televised comments that he would “calmly leave” his post if Medvedev’s warnings were directed at him. Mutko — who has so far resisted calls to resign from a wide array of Russian politicians — on Monday blamed several factors for the Vancouver flop. He said the team was unlucky, that no one in Russia takes new winter sports such as freestyle skiing seriously, and that doping bans had deprived Russia of several leading medal contenders.

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