- Source: Olga Brusnikina
- Olga Brusnikina
- Olga (name)
- Brusnikin
- Synchronized swimming at the 2004 Summer Olympics
- List of Russian sportspeople
- List of Olympic medalists in artistic swimming
- Synchronized swimming at the 2000 Summer Olympics
- List of people from Moscow
- Olga Sedakova (synchronised swimmer)
- Russian State University of Physical Education, Sport, Youth and Tourism
Olga Aleksandrovna Brusnikina (Russian: Ольга Александровна Брусникина; born 9 November 1978) is a Russian competitor in synchronised swimming and three times Olympic champion.
She first attracted attention when, at the age of 14, she performed a solo routine at the 1993 World Junior Synchro championships. Upon the addition of team synchronised swimming to the list of Olympic events in 1996, Brusnikina was a member of the Russian team which came fourth. She won gold medal in duet with Mariya Kiselyova at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. She was part of the Russian winning team in 2000, and again at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens.
In September 2001, Brusnikina married Sergey Yevstigneyev, an Olympic water polo player and national coach whom she first met in 1994. After marriage, they lived for a few years in Italy, where Yevstigneyev played for a local team and Brusnikina coached synchronized swimming.
Brusnikina retired shortly after the 2004 Olympics, and on 14 August 2006 gave birth to a son, Iliya. After that she coached synchronized swimming in Moscow Oblast and worked as an international referee. Currently, she is a member of the Government Commission on Physical Education and Sport and of the Russian Olympic Committee.
Since December 6, 2022, she has headed the Synchronized Swimming Federation of the Russian Federation.
Awards
In 2001, she was awarded the Order of Honour.
See also
List of members of the International Swimming Hall of Fame
References
External links
Olga Brusnikina at World Aquatics
Olga Brusnikina at the International Swimming Hall of Fame
Olga Brusnikina at Olympics.com
Olga Brusnikina at Olympedia