Norwegian skier Klaebo ties record for golds in multiple Winter Olympics

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TESERO, Italy — Friday the 13th will be remembered as a lucky day for Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo. Norway’s cross-country skiing star won an eighth gold medal at the Milan Cortina Olympics on Friday, tying the Winter Games record.

Klaebo, 29, claimed victory in the men’s 10-kilometer interval‑start race for his third gold at the 2026 Games.

Will three races still ahead of him, Klaebo shares the record with three other Norwegian athletes who have all retired: Marit Bjoergen and Bjoern Daehlie in cross-country skiing and Ole Einar Bjoerndalen in the biathlon.

Klaebo again gained vital ground on the final hill and clocked 20 minutes, 36.2 seconds, showing rare signs of fatigue as he collapsed at the finish line of the race considered to be his toughest challenge.

He was 4.9 seconds ahead of France’s Mathis Desloges and 14 in front of his main challenger, Einar Hedegart, also of Norway, who lost momentum on the last hill.

“It’s a special day,” Klaebo said. “This one means a lot for sure. … I’m lost for words.”

The Norwegian said he was happy with his tactics, racing the first half of the course with a controlled pace, saving energy for a burst up the last hill and home stretch.

“It was really hard out there today, so I’m very proud,” he said.

Over at the French camp, athletes and team officials celebrated as if they had won the race, linking arms and dancing on the snow after underdog Desloges won his second silver medal in his first Olympics.

“I trained incredibly hard for these races,” Desloges said. “I told people I was at this level, and now we are delivering.”

The 23-year-old Frenchman, like many other top racers in the interval start, was mostly unaware of his position during the race.

“I don’t really pay attention to what’s being shouted from the sidelines,” he said. “Honestly, I don’t listen to them. I just focus on my race. I know what I have to do, and I give it everything.”

On a blue-sky day in northern Italy, with the racetrack surrounded by the snow-capped Dolomite mountains, temperatures hovered around 40 degrees Fahrenheit. A few racers chose to compete wearing only their race bibs.

Organizers had treated the course with salt Thursday to harden the surface but left it untouched Friday — a decision that favored Klaebo, who started early among the seeded skiers.

Celebrations were led by Norwegian fans as national flags — red with a blue cross outlined in white — were draped over athletes and the railing on the spectators’ area. Klaebo’s grandfather, Kare Hoesflot, who helped launch his career, traveled to northern Italy to watch the race, while messages of congratulations poured in from back home, where cross-country skiing is a prime-time sport.

“Another show of strength from Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo. What a performance in a thriller of a race! Congratulations on gold number three in these Olympics!” Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere wrote on social media.



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