Key Highlights
- But beautiful conditions and good to be racing distance again in Trondheim," Klæbo said. Defending champion Jessie Diggins of the United States claimed her first win of the season with victory in the women's skiathlon in 50:29.5."It was so cool to come here and have a race I know I was capable of.
- And when it's your last year, it's always nice to leave a place with a good memory," Diggins said. AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementThe cross country icon has already announced that she will retire after the 2026 Olympics. Diggins won Olympic team sprint gold in 2018 but had most success on the World Cup circuit, scooping three overall titles, including the last two seasons. Two-time World Cup winner Heidi Weng of Norway was second, followed by Sweden's Ebba Andersson. Also in Trondheim, Austrian Katharina Gruber snatched what appeared to be a sure win for Norwegian star Ida Marie Hagen in the women's Nordic combined. Hagen led after the 5km cross country portion, but 17-year-old Gruber took her maiden World Cup podium and win with a 97-metre jump and 111.8 points. AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementHagen had to settle for second, while defending champion Nathalie Armbruster of Germany was third. There was also a premiere in the men's event as Gruber's compatriot Thomas Rettenegger won the mass start to celebrate his first-ever World Cup victory. Germany's Wendelin Thannheimer was second for a first World Cup podium and Austrian Franz-Josef Rehrl finished third. Defending champion Vinzenz Geiger on Germany was only 19th. The men's ski jumping event in Wisla, Poland was won by world champion Domen Prevc of Slovenia, who jumped 136 and 130 metres. German Philipp Raimund was second and Olympic champion Ryōyū Kobayashi of Japan was third.
- Title holder Daniel Tschofenig was sixth. Johannes Hosflot Klaebo in action during the men's 20km skiatholon of the the FIS Cross-Country World Cup in Trondheim.
- Geir Olsen/NTB/dpa.