Riiber-less Norway wins gold in Nordic combined team event
4-time Olympic champions Graabak, Oftebro, Bjoernstad, Ande win by 54.9 seconds
Norway won Olympic gold in the Nordic combined team competition on Thursday, overcoming the COVID-related loss of Jarl Magnus Riiber.
The team of four-time Olympic gold medallist Joergen Graabak, Jens Luraas Oftebro, Espen Bjoernstad and Espen Andersen pulled away late in the cross-country race, winning by 54.9 seconds.
"It was actually possible to enjoy the last kilometres and just savour the moment," said Graabak, who was the final Norwegian skier.
It was an impressive result after Riiber, a three-time champion, chose to go home earlier in the day because he didn't feel fit to compete.
Riiber took the wrong turn early in a 10K cross-country race and lost a large lead he earned in ski jumping on Tuesday, a day after getting out of COVID isolation. That mistake helped Graabak win gold, making him the first two-time Nordic combined Olympic champion on the large hill after winning the event in 2014.
Graabak also helped Norway win the team event eight years ago and with another first-place finish, he's the first to win four Olympic gold meals in the sport that combines ski jumping and cross-country skiing.
Germany won silver, giving Eric Frenzel a seventh Olympic medal in Nordic combined to match the record set by Austrian great Felix Gottwald.
Frenzel had only one day to train for the final Nordic combined event of the 2022 Olympics because he was in isolation after testing positive for COVID-19 upon arrival in China.
"It was a long time and it's a good feeling to be back," he said.
WATCH l Full event replay: Nordic Combined - Men's Team 4x5KM Final:
The Germans' performance also gave Vinzenz Geiger more hardware to go with the gold he won on the normal hill at the Beijing Games.
Japan finished third, getting an Olympic medal in a Nordic combined competition for the first time since winning gold at the 1994 Lillehammer Games.
"We were working hard in the last four years," said Akito Watabe, who won bronze on the normal hill.
Austria could not keep the eight-second lead it earned in ski jumping, or the advantage it had on the cross-country course midway through the race and finished fourth. The traditional power failed to medal for the first time since 1994.
Austria's jumpers combined for 475.4 points earlier in the day thanks to jaw-dropping distances, including one that went 141 meters (463 feet), and graceful style through the air. That gave them the lead for the cross-country ski race with four skiers racing 5K each.
Norway's four-man team started second, followed closely by Germany and Japan.
Franz-Josef Rehrl helped Austria start strong, turning an eight-second lead into 19 seconds at the 2.5K mark.
Manuel Faisst of Germany, who replaced Terence Weber after he tested positive for COVID-19 and didn't recover quickly, rallied to put his team in the lead at the first exchange five kilometers into the 20K race. Lamparter gave Austria a slim lead at the midway mark and teammate Lukas Greiderer maintained it before the Norwegians took over.
"Coming in as a backup for Jarl and not sure if I was able to be on the team, and standing here now being an Olympic champion, it's emotional just talking about it," Bjoernstad said.
China's young and inexperienced team included two skiers who competed on a major, international circuit for the first time this season.
"Our team is bringing more glory to our nation," 17-year-old Haibin Fan, who competed with a trio of 21-year-old teammates, said through an interpreter.
The Chinese team had to wait more than six minutes to start the race and finished last, nearly 14 minutes behind Norway.