Norwegian men, German women win Olympic gold in cross-country team sprint

Norwegian skier Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo completed a second straight Olympic cross-country sprint double on Wednesday and Victoria Carl of Germany barely edged Swedish rival Jonna Sundling at the line in the women's race at the Beijing Olympics.

Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo 1st man to win both team & individual sprint at 2 straight Games

Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo of Norway, right, celebrates a gold-medal finish with teammate Erik Valnes, left, in the men's team sprint classic cross-country skiing competition at the 2022 Winter Olympic Games on Wednesday in Zhangjiakou, China. (Alessandra Tarantino/The Associated Press)

Norwegian skier Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo completed a second straight Olympic cross-country sprint double on Wednesday and Victoria Carl of Germany barely edged Swedish rival Jonna Sundling at the line in the women's race at the Beijing Olympics.

Klaebo is the first man to win both the team and individual sprint at two straight Olympics. Bjorn Lind won both sprint races at the 2006 Turin Games but failed to repeat four years later in Vancouver.

Klaebo and Norwegian teammate Erik Valnes won Wednesday's race in 19 minutes, 22.99 seconds.

"To do it as a team, it's something we have been working really hard for," Klaebo said. "We have been training together for a couple of years now and it's an amazing feeling."

Joni Maki of Finland stayed ahead of Russian skier Alexander Terentev to take silver, 2.46 seconds behind the Norwegians. The Russians earned bronze, 4.29 seconds behind.

Maki teamed with Iivo Niskanen, who won gold in the 15-kilometre classic race and bronze in the skiathlon.

"It was nice to get it and, well, it's quite easy with the world's best classic skier," Maki said. "I'm happy with this medal."

WATCH | Cross-country skiing - team sprint classic final:

Terentev's teammate was Alexander Bolshunov, who won gold in the skiathlon.

The three leaders broke away from a group of eight on the final lap. Sweden finished fourth, 15.06 seconds behind.

The Canadian duo of Antoine Cyr from Gatineau, Que., and Graham Ritchie of Parry Sound, Ont., came in fifth, 22.31 behind.

In the women's race, Victoria Carl outpaced Swedish sprint champion Jonna Sundling to the finish line to give Germany the gold medal.

Carl and teammate Katharina Henning won in 22:09.85. Sundling and Maja Dhalqvist ended up second, only .17 seconds behind.

"It means a lot for us, also the silver medal in relay and today the gold medal in team sprint," Henning said. "It means a lot and we are very thankful for the whole team. It's very important for cross-country in Germany."

Victoria Carl of Germany, right, and teammate Katharina Hennig celebrate a gold-medal finish in the women's team sprint classic cross-country skiing competition at the 2022 Winter Olympic Games on Wednesday in Zhangjiakou, China. (Aaron Favila/The Associated Press)

The race was a bit of an upset for Sweden. Sundling and Dahlqvist finished 1-2 in the sprint race.

"It was a tough fight for me and Maja," Sundling said. "We did all we could in the last lap, and for me when I came to the finish line, it was a really tough fight against Germany. Victoria Carl was a little bit stronger today in the end. But I'm really satisfied with my race and glad to share this with Maja."

The Russian team of Natalia Nepryaeva and Yulia Stupak took bronze, .71 seconds behind.

"It was a good finish but also a really hard race for us," Stupak said. "But after some years with fourth place, it's good for us because we have a medal."

Finland finished fourth, just ahead of the defending champion United States. Jessie Diggins, who won gold four years ago with Kikkan Randall, teamed up with Rosie Brennan for the Americans this year.

Diggins won bronze in the individual sprint at the Beijing Games.

Add some “good” to your morning and evening.

Get up to speed on what's happening in sports. Delivered weekdays.

...

The next issue of The Buzzer will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in the Subscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.