Russia at the 2012 Summer Olympics


The Russian Federation competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, United Kingdom, from 27 July to 12 August 2012. This was the nation's fifth consecutive appearance at the Summer Olympics as an independent nation. The Russian Olympic Committee sent a total of 436 athletes to the Games, 208 men and 228 women, to compete in 24 sports. For the first time in its Olympic history, Russia was represented by more female than male athletes.
Russia left London with a total of 82 medals, finishing fourth in the overall medal standings, but was later stripped of 15 medals for doping violations. Most of these medals were awarded to the team in athletics, wrestling, gymnastics, boxing and weightlifting. Of the twenty-four sports played by the Russian athletes, at least a single Olympic medal was won in sixteen of them. Russian athletes dominated in rhythmic gymnastics and synchronized swimming, where they won gold medals in all the events. Nine Russian athletes won more than a single Olympic medal in London. Russia's team-sport athletes also proved successful at these games, as the men's volleyball and basketball teams won gold and bronze medals, respectively. For the first time in its history, Russia won Olympic gold medals in judo, winning two golds in the men’s events. The success was attributed to an increased investment in the sport by the government and Vladimir Putin’s personal interest.
Among the nation's medalists were Aliya Mustafina, who emerged as one of the most successful Russian gymnasts in history, with a total of four Olympic medals at a single games, and Maria Sharapova, who won silver in the women's tennis singles against United States' Serena Williams. Anastasia Davydova became the most successful synchronized swimmer in Olympic history, with a total of five gold medals, while her compatriots Natalia Ishchenko and Svetlana Romashina managed to win gold medals in both duet and team events. Olga Zabelinskaya became the first Russian female cyclist to win two Olympic medals in road events. Diver Ilya Zakharov recaptured Russia's success in his sport after 12 years, as he won its first ever gold medal in men's springboard. Rhythmic gymnast Evgeniya Kanaeva made history by becoming the first back-to-back Olympic champion in the individual all-around event, while the Russian group in rhythmic gymnastics defended their Olympic title for the fourth consecutive time in the group all-around.

Medalists

MedalNameSportEventDate
JudoMen's 60 kg
JudoMen's 73 kg
JudoMen's 100 kg
WrestlingMen's Greco-Roman 74 kg
GymnasticsWomen's uneven bars
WrestlingMen's Greco-Roman 84 kg

Svetlana Romashina
Synchronized swimmingWomen's duet
DivingMen's 3 m springboard
AthleticsWomen's 400 m hurdles
WrestlingWomen's freestyle 72 kg

Maria Gromova
Natalia Ischenko
Elvira Khasyanova
Daria Korobova
Aleksandra Patskevich
Svetlana Romashina
Alla Shishkina
Angelika Timanina
Synchronized swimmingWomen's team
WrestlingMen's freestyle 55 kg

Alexander Dyachenko
CanoeingMen's K-2 200 m
GymnasticsWomen's rhythmic individual all-around
AthleticsWomen's 20 km walk
AthleticsWomen's high jump
BoxingMen's light heavyweight

Uliana Donskova
Ksenia Dudkina
Alina Makarenko
Anastasia Nazarenko
Karolina Sevastyanova
GymnasticsWomen's rhythmic group all-around

VolleyballMen's tournament
WrestlingMen's freestyle 120 kg

Anastasia Grishina
Viktoria Komova
Aliya Mustafina
Maria Paseka
GymnasticsWomen's artistic team all-around

Evgeny Kuznetsov
DivingMen's 3 m synchronized springboard
FencingWomen's sabre
GymnasticsWomen's artistic individual all-around

Inna Deriglazova
Kamila Gafurzyanova
Larisa Korobeynikova
FencingWomen's team foil
GymnasticsMen's trampoline
JudoMen's +100 kg
SwimmingWomen's 200m backstroke
SwimmingMen's 100m butterfly
TennisWomen's singles
WeightliftingWomen's +75 kg
GymnasticsMen's vault
WrestlingMen's Greco-Roman 96 kg
AthleticsWomen's long jump
BoxingWomen's lightweight
BoxingWomen's middleweight
GymnasticsWomen's rhythmic individual all-around
WrestlingMen's freestyle 60 kg
AthleticsWomen's 800 m
AthleticsWomen's 1500 m
FencingMen's sabre

Andrey Grechin
Danila Izotov
Yevgeny Lagunov
Nikita Lobintsev
Vladimir Morozov
SwimmingMen's 4 × 100 m freestyle relay
CyclingWomen's road race
JudoMen's 81 kg
CyclingWomen's time trial
ShootingMen's double trap
GymnasticsWomen's artistic individual all-around
SwimmingWomen's 200 m breaststroke

Nina Vislova
BadmintonWomen's doubles
AthleticsWomen's marathon
GymnasticsMen's floor
GymnasticsWomen's vault

Nadia Petrova
TennisWomen's doubles
WrestlingMen's Greco-Roman 55 kg
WrestlingMen's Greco-Roman 60 kg
AthleticsWomen's pole vault
GymnasticsWomen's floor
WeightliftingMen's +105 kg
WrestlingWomen's freestyle 63 kg
TaekwondoMen's 58 kg

Ilya Pervukhin
CanoeingMen's C-2 1000 m
BoxingMen's light flyweight
WrestlingMen's freestyle 74 kg
BoxingMen's flyweight
BoxingMen's welterweight
CanoeingMen's C-1 200 m
TaekwondoWomen's +67 kg

BasketballMen's team

Competitors

The Russian Olympic Committee selected a team of 436 athletes, 208 men and 228 women, to compete in all sports except field hockey and football; it was the nation's third-largest team sent to the Olympics, tying its record with Sydney in 2000. Athletics was the nation's largest team by sport, with a total of 104 competitors.
The Russian team featured twelve defending champions from Beijing, including pole vaulter Yelena Isinbayeva, synchronized swimmer Anastasia Davydova, race walkers Olga Kaniskina and Valeriy Borchin, modern pentathlete Andrey Moiseev and rhythmic gymnast Evgeniya Kanaeva. Among these champions, Isinbayeva, Davydova and Kanaeva managed to defend their Olympic titles for the second consecutive time in their events. Kanaeva became the first rhythmic gymnast to win back to back gold medal at the Olympics. Volleyballer Yevgeniya Estes became the first Russian athlete to compete in six Olympic games, although she first appeared as part of the Unified Team. Meanwhile, rifle shooters Artem Khadjibekov and Sergei Kovalenko, and volleyballer Sergey Tetyukhin made their fifth Olympic appearance. Equestrian show jumper Vladimir Tuganov, at age 51, was the oldest athlete of the team, while relay swimmer Mariya Baklakova was the youngest at age 15.
Other notable Russian athletes featured NBA basketball players Andrei Kirilenko and Timofey Mozgov, high jumpers Ivan Ukhov and Anna Chicherova, US-based swimmers Vladimir Morozov and Arkady Vyatchanin, and gymnast and world individual all-around champion Aliya Mustafina. World number-one female tennis player Maria Sharapova, who competed at her first Olympics, became Russia's first female flag bearer at the opening ceremony.
The following is the list of number of competitors participating in the Games:
SportMenWomenTotal
Archery033
Athletics4361104
Badminton336
Basketball121224
Boxing7310
Canoeing15621
Cycling11718
Diving437
Equestrian303
Fencing7815
Gymnastics71421
Handball01414
Judo7512
Modern pentathlon224
Rowing415
Sailing5510
Shooting14822
Swimming191635
Synchronised swimming099
Table tennis325
Taekwondo224
Tennis4610
Triathlon325
Volleyball141630
Water polo01313
Weightlifting6410
Wrestling13316
Total208228436

Archery

Russian athletes have qualified a team of 3 through 2011 World Archery Championships.

Athletics

Russian athletes have so far achieved qualifying standards in the following athletics events : 26 Russian track and field athletes failed doping tests in the aftermath of the London Olympics, nine medals were rescinded. On 1 May 2013, discus thrower Darya Pishchalnikova stripped off her silver medal and thereby received a 10-year ban by the International Olympic Committee for a positive doping test on oxandrolone. On January 30, 2015 3000 m steeplechaser Yuliya Zaripova received a 2 years and 6 months ban from the Russian Anti-Doping Agency after a positive doping test for blood doping. Afterwards, it was that said Russia “sabotaged” the 2012 Olympics by allowing athletes who should have been banned for doping violations to compete in the London Olympics, with RUSADA covering up positive tests and punishing only those athletes that would have been banned anyway.
;Key
in men's marathon
;Men
;Track & road events
;Field events
;Combined events – Decathlon
AthleteEvent100 m400 m1500 mFinalRank
Ilya ShkurenevResult11.017.2512.892.0249.81 PB14.3943.515.1053.814:42.80794816
Ilya ShkurenevPoints858874661822823925736941645663794816
Sergey SviridovResult10.78 PB7.4514.421.99 PB48.9115.4247.434.60 PB68.424:36.6382198
Sergey SviridovPoints91092275479486679981779086570282198

and her teammate Ekaterina Poistogova in the women's 800 metres.
;Women
;Track & road events
;Field events
;Combined events – Heptathlon
AthleteEvent200 m800 mFinalRank
Tatyana ChernovaResult13.481.8014.17 SB23.676.5446.292:09.566628
Tatyana ChernovaPoints1053978805101310207889716628
Olga KurbanResult13.561.8013.7123.885.8340.362:19.82608420
Olga KurbanPoints1041978775992798674826608420
Kristina SavitskayaResult13.37 PB1.8314.77 PB24.46 PB6.21 PB43.702:12.27 PB64528
Kristina SavitskayaPoints1069101684593791573893264528

Badminton

Basketball

qualified for the event by win the EuroBasket Women 2011. The men qualified through the world qualification tournament.
;Roster
;Group play
;Quarter-final
;Semifinal
;Bronze medal game

Women's tournament

;Roster
;Group play
;Quarterfinals
;Semifinals
;Bronze medal match

Boxing

Russia has so far qualified boxers for the following events
;Men
;Women

Canoeing

Slalom

Russia has qualified boats for the following events

Sprint

Russia has qualified 15 athletes quota places through 2011 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships held at Szeged, Hungary.
;Men
;Women
Qualification Legend: FA = Qualify to final ; FB = Qualify to final B

Cycling

Russia has qualified cyclists for the following events

Road

;Men
AthleteEventTimeRank
Vladimir IsaichevRoad race5:46:3751
Alexandr KolobnevRoad race5:46:0523
Denis MenchovRoad race5:46:5197
Denis MenchovTime trial54:59.2620

;Women
AthleteEventTimeRank
Tatiana AntoshinaRoad race3:35:5625
Tatiana AntoshinaTime trial40:12.4912
Larisa PankovaRoad race3:37:2238
Olga ZabelinskayaRoad race3:35:31
Olga ZabelinskayaTime trial37:57.35

Track

;Sprint
;Team sprint
;Pursuit
;Keirin
AthleteEvent1st roundRepechage2nd roundFinal
AthleteEventRankRankRankRank
Sergey BorisovMen's keirin5 R5Did not advance15
Ekaterina GnidenkoWomen's keirin2 Q4

;Omnium

Mountain biking

AthleteEventTimeRank
Evgeny PecheninMen's cross-country1:41:4037
Irina KalentievaWomen's cross-country1:32:334

Diving

Russia has qualified a maximum of 7 divers from 2011 World Aquatics Championships in Shanghai. Russia also qualified another diver in the men's 10 m platform and the men's 10 m platform synchronised team at the 2012 Diving World Cup.
;Men
;Women

Equestrian

Eventing

Show jumping

Fencing

Russia has qualified 15 fencers.
;Men
;Women

Gymnastics

Artistic

;Men
;Team
;Individual finals
;Women
;Individual finals

Rhythmic

Trampoline

Handball

;Group play
;Quarterfinals

Judo

Russia has qualified 7 men and 5 women for the olympics.
;Men
;Women

Modern pentathlon

Russia has qualified two men and two women.

Rowing

;Men
;Women
Qualification Legend: FA=Final A ; FB=Final B ; FC=Final C ; FD=Final D ; FE=Final E ; FF=Final F ; SA/B=Semifinals A/B; SC/D=Semifinals C/D; SE/F=Semifinals E/F; QF=Quarterfinals; R=Repechage

Sailing

Russia has qualified 1 boat for each of the following events
;Men
;Women
M = Medal race; EL = Did not advance
;Match racing

Shooting

Russia has earned 24 quotas in shooting events:
;Men
;Women

Swimming

Russian swimmers have so far achieved qualifying standards in the following events, and 1 at the Olympic Selection Time ):
;Men
;Women

Synchronized swimming

Russia has qualified 9 quota places in synchronized swimming at the 2012 Olympics.

Table tennis

Russia has qualified two athletes for singles table tennis events. Based on their world ranking as of 16 May 2011 Alexey Smirnov and Alexander Shibaev have qualified for the men's event.

Taekwondo

Russia has ensured berths in the following events of taekwondo by reaching the top 3 of the 2011 WTF World Qualification Tournament: Russia also qualified in two more events in the European Championships.

Tennis

;Men
;Women
;Mixed

Triathlon

AthleteEventSwim Trans 1Bike Trans 2Run Total TimeRank
Alexander BryukhankovMen's17:220:4058:510:3230:101:47:357
Dmitry PolyanskiMen's17:140:381:00:350:2930:281:49:2421
Ivan VasilievMen's17:030:4659:040:2831:221:47:3513
Irina AbysovaWomen's19:200:461:05:340:3135:412:01:5213
Alexandra RazarenovaWomen's19:470:511:10:360:3037:272:09:1147

Volleyball

Russia has qualified a men's team and a women's team for the indoor tournaments.

Men's indoor tournament

;Team roster
;Group play
;Quarterfinal
;Semifinal
;Final

Women's indoor tournament

;Team roster
;Group play
;Quarterfinals

Water polo

;Group play
;Quarterfinals
;5–8th place semifinals
;Fifth place game

Weightlifting

Russia has qualified 6 men and 4 women.
;Men
;Women

Wrestling

;Men's freestyle
;Men's Greco-Roman
;Women's freestyle

Russian doping scandal

Media attention began growing in December 2014 when German broadcaster ARD reported on state-sponsored doping in Russia, comparing it to doping in East Germany. In November 2015, the World Anti-Doping Agency published a report and the International Association of Athletics Federations suspended Russia indefinitely from world track and field events. The 335-page report, compiled following a nearly yearlong investigation by a commission led by former anti-doping agency President Dick Pound, urged the International Association of Athletics Federations to suspend Russia from competition, including the Olympics in Brazil. The report said Russia “sabotaged” the 2012 Olympics by allowing athletes who should have been banned for doping violations to compete in the London Games. It recommended the anti-doping agency impose lifetime suspensions for 10 Russian coaches and athletes, including women’s 800-meters gold medalist Mariya Savinova. The United Kingdom Anti-Doping agency later assisted WADA with testing in Russia. In June 2016, they reported that they were unable to fully carry out their work and noted intimidation by armed Federal Security Service agents.
After a Russian former lab director made allegations about the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, WADA commissioned an independent investigation led by Richard McLaren. McLaren's investigation found corroborating evidence, concluding in a report published in July 2016 that the Ministry of Sport and the FSB had operated a "state-directed failsafe system" using a "disappearing positive methodology" from "at least late 2011 to August 2015".