Photographs: Alex Livesey/Getty Images
The sight of a Russian athlete crossing herself before a race was one small example among many of how the country has changed in the generation since it last hosted the Olympic Games.
Elena Nikitina, 21, performed the ritual gesture before setting off in her fourth and final skeleton run at the Sanki sliding centre on Friday evening, where she ended up with the bronze medal.
Communist philosopher Karl Marx described religion as the "opium of the people" and it was harshly suppressed in Soviet times.
Sign of the times as Russian athlete shows faith
Image: Bronze medalist Elena Nikitina of Russia celebrates.Photographs: Julian Finney/Getty Images
Young Communists were brought up to be atheists, churches operated under close state surveillance and worshippers could expect to draw the unwelcome attention of the KGB security police.
Since the fall of Communism, however, the Orthodox Church has enjoyed a resurgence and President Vladimir Putin has cultivated close ties with it, saying it should be given more say over family life, education and even the armed forces.
"It just really helps me," said Nikitina, who was born in 1992, one year after the Soviet Union collapsed and 12 years after the 1980 Moscow Olympics, the only other time that Russia has hosted the Games.
Sign of the times as Russian athlete shows faith
Image: From left, Silver medalist Noelle Pikus-Pace of the United States, gold medalist Lizzy Yarnold of Great Britain and bronze medalist Elena Nikitina of Russia celebrate on the podiumPhotographs: Julian Finney/Getty Images
"I feel if I cross myself, I immediately get the confidence and feel on the track and I know everything will work out for me," she said.
Nikitina clinched the bronze medal by finishing just four-hundredths of a second ahead of Katie Uhlaender of the United States and narrowly behind her fellow American Noelle Pikus-Pace, a devout Mormon, who took the silver.
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