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'Witcher' medallion makes Russian shooter rage at Olympics

July 27, 2021 13:58 IST

Olympic Record holder Vitalina Batsarashkina of Team ROC celebrates with her coach following the 10m Air Pistol Women's event on day two of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at Asaka Shooting Range on in Asaka, Saitama, Japan, on Sunday

IMAGE: Olympic Record holder Vitalina Batsarashkina of Team ROC sportss a 'Witcher' medallion as she celebrates with her coach following the 10m Air Pistol Women's event on day two of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at Asaka Shooting Range on in Asaka, Saitama, Japan, on Sunday. Photograph: Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

Gold medallist Vitalina Batsarashkina's shooting skill is not the only thing about the Russian sharp-shooter that is attracting attention at the Tokyo Games.

The newly minted Olympic champion in women's 10-metre air pistol, who led her Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) team to the silver in the mixed team event on Tuesday, has been roaming the Asaka Shooting Range with a Witcher medallion dangling from her neck.

 

"The Witcher" is a popular series of fantasy novels by Polish author Andrzej Sapkowski, which has spawned a film, TV series, video games and graphic novels. In the books, "witchers" use supernatural abilities to hunt wild beasts and monsters.

Social media users zeroed in on the medallion worn by Batsarashkina, an avid gamer, that showed the stylised face of a wolf with its teeth bared.

"This is my Olympic crush now," said Twitter user "lana_del_prey".

A spokesperson of CD Projekt, the company behind the video game, dug out a 2018 photograph of the shooter in a Witcher-themed shirt, praising her "years-long commitment to the Witcher universe".

The 24-year-old, however, would not call it her lucky charm.

"It's not a talisman. It's a medallion from a video game," Batsarashkina said after the team event on Tuesday.

"I can't call it a talisman because even when I didn't even wear it or forgot it at home, I still got medals."

Russian athletes are competing in Tokyo under the ROC flag as part of sanctions for several doping scandals.

Gold medallist Vitalina Batsarashkina's

Source: REUTERS
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