Subject: FW: Russian Olympic medalists gets luxury cars plus cash...
Subject: Russian Olympic medalists gets luxury cars plus cash -- in Moscow
Today's paper. Last Updated: 08/17/2012 |
Olympic Medalists Get Luxury Cars
16 August 2012
Vladimir Filonov / MT
Alexandra Patskevich, a member of the gold-medal-winning synchronized swimming team, posing on her car.
Vladimir Filonov / MT
Vladimir Filonov / MT
Dagestan-born judoka Mansur Isayev, who won gold in the men's 73-kilogram category, getting used to his new luxury car.
Vladimir Filonov / MT
A shimmering mass of Audis on Vasilyevsky
Spusk. Audi A8s were awarded to gold medalists, with silver and bronze
medalists receiving A7s and A6s, respectively.
Vladimir Filonov / MT
A trio of beauties on hand to guide medalists to their trophy automobiles.
This year’s Olympic medalists on Red Square on Wednesday preparing to receive black Audi
sedans for their performances in the London Games. The Russian Olympians Foundation,
financed by wealthy businessmen, gave them the cars to accompany cash prizes doled out
by the fund.
handsome cash prize and a new luxury car.
The Russian Olympians Foundation, financed by 15 of the nation's wealthiest businesspeople, presented the Audi sedans to the Olympians on Wednesday.
After a closed ceremony in the Kremlin hosted by President Vladimir Putin, the
athletes ventured out onto Red Square, where 129 black Audis, accompanied by
129 hired drivers, ties flapping in the wind, were waiting on the cobblestone slope
behind St. Basil's Cathedral.
With undisguised glee, the athletes posed for a haphazard photograph beside
the historic church, which was lined with cheering fans, including one who'd
come all the way from Murmansk.
Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko mingled with the athletes and their graying trainers,
at one point stopping to give a female Olympian a congratulatory, two-handed
pinch on the cheeks.
Then the cordon was opened and the athletes percolated through the lot, each
claiming a car.
Gold medal winners received Audi A8s, which sell new for $120,000.
Silver medalists got A7s ($75,000), and bronze medalists got A6s
($50,000).
The fund's executive director, Alexander Katushev, wouldn't say how much it had
spent on the cars, except that they were acquired through an open tender at a
"significant discount."
He added that elite athletes deserve elite cars.
"A fine athlete in a crappy car is like a beautiful girl who cusses. The exterior
doesn't match the interior, and this won't do," he told The Moscow Times,
adding that athletes in other countries enjoyed similar perks.
In addition to the cars, the fund is giving cash prizes to the medalists:
4 million rubles ($125,000) for gold, 2.5 million rubles for silver, and
1.7 million rubles for bronze.
Even though athletes interviewed by The Moscow Times said cars and cash didn't
motivate them to win, they happily accepted the gifts.
Volleyball player Alexei Obmochayev rifled through his car's glove compartment.
He took out the manual to look up the car's horsepower, which turned out to be
enough to elicit a devilish grin.
His teammate, Alexander Volkov, carefully folded his towering, 210-centimeter
frame into the back seat of one car. "Plenty of room here," he said, hunching
forward awkwardly.
One by one, the athletes were driven away by the hired drivers, with the exception
of several wrestlers, who insisted on getting behind the wheel.
Gymnast Alina Makarenko, 17, will only be sitting shotgun for the foreseeable future
— she doesn't have a driver's license. Makarenko said her mother would drive the
A8 until she received one.
"I think if they had been Russian cars, nobody would have shown up," said pole vaulter Yelena Isinbayeva, who won bronze after taking home gold in the last two Olympics.
The Russian Olympians Foundation includes Russia's richest man, Alisher Usmanov,
as well as tycoons Roman Abramovich, Viktor Vekselberg and Oleg Deripaska.
The nation finished fourth in the total medals count, with 82, including 24 golds, 26
silvers and 32 bronzes.
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