MILAN, Italy — Nikita Volodin's career had stalled in Russia. Then came a move to Germany, which made him an Olympic medal contender.
Volodin teamed up with German skater Minerva Hase in 2022, after nearly four years out of elite-level competition skating in ice shows.
He'd come close to giving up on dreams of skating success before Hase's coach arranged a tryout with the German, whose 2022 Olympics had been derailed by a positive COVID test for her previous partner.
''I tried to forget it,'' Volodin said of his ambitions after his first practice at the Olympic rink last week. ''But now I'm standing here and I can skate on Olympic ice and it's wonderful.''
Volodin is one of at least 30 Winter Olympians who were born in Russia or used to compete for Russia, and who now represent other countries. Some had family ties, many didn't.
They outnumber by more than two to one the 13 ''individual neutral athletes with Russian passports," as Olympic organizers refer to Russians given permission to compete during the war in Ukraine.
Russia was excluded after the Ukraine invasion
Days after the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing ended, Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine which soon led to Russian athletes being excluded from a range of sports. Many winter sports didn't allow neutral athletes in international events until last year, so a change of nationality was a way to continue competing.