Sergei Aschwanden has been elected as the new President of the Swiss Judo Federation ©SVJ

Olympic bronze medallist Sergei Aschwanden has been elected as the new President of the Swiss Judo Federation.

The 44-year-old is the most successful judoka in the country's history and was chosen to head a new-look Board at the governing body.

He has targeted increasing participation numbers as a key goal while he also wants to set-up a judo foundation.

"We have lost more than 6,000 members in the last years and the main aim is that the number of members should grow again," Aschwanden said. 

"My idea is also to centralise the training for the high-performance athletes and to decentralise the young talents.

"They should train near their residence or in regional judo centres. 

"We should concentrate the financial resources in one national training centre, to encourage competition among the champions.

Sergei Aschwanden is an Olympic bronze medallist from Beijing 2008 ©Getty Images
Sergei Aschwanden is an Olympic bronze medallist from Beijing 2008 ©Getty Images

"Judo is a great sport for children, the socially underprivileged, disabled persons and refugees. 

"It is important that we train and bring everybody with judo passion together. 

"Athletes of all generations and provenance, professionals and amateurs, should be united to support the federation."

Aschwanden will be assisted by vice-presidents Linus Bruhin, Jacqueline de Quattro, Yu Higashigaito and David Sigos.

Samuel Knoepfel is the general secretary.

At the Beijing 2008 Olympics, Aschwanden won bronze in the under-90 kilograms class.

He won two European titles and two World Championship medals at under-81kg.