Athletes prepare for strong winds in mass start, Niskanen off Finnish lineup

Gold medallist, Iivo Niskanen of Team Finland celebrates with their medal during the Men's 15km Classic medal ceremony on Day 7 of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games

Gold medallist, Iivo Niskanen of Team Finland celebrates with their medal during the Men's 15km Classic medal ceremony on Day 7 of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games

**NOTE: This article was updated on Feb. 19 at 12:20 a.m. ET after the men’s cross-country skiing 50km freestyle mass start event at 1:00 a.m. ET was shortened to 30km to reduce the time of exposure of athletes to extreme conditions. The race was rescheduled and will now start at 2:00 a.m. ET. Second update on Feb. 19 at 2:18 a.m. ET to reflect Iivo Niskanen not participating in mass start.  

The past two years have been some of the most turbulent times for Olympic cross-country skiers, including Finland’s Iivo Niskanen. Niskanen is arguably the best classic skier of this modern era and proved it in his gold medal performance during the men’s individual 15km classic race.

SEE MORE: Olympic gold falls into the pocket of Finland’s Niskanen in 15km classic

Niskanen will come into the last men’s cross-country skiing race at the 2022 Winter Olympics as the reigning champion of the 50k classic mass start from 2018. He defeated ROC’s Alexander Bolshunov to gold four years ago and faces a slight disadvantage in the upcoming men’s 30km mass start, skiing freestyle. 

This is his weaker of the two techniques and every other Olympic cycle, the race switches between classic and freestyle to incorporate both techniques. Despite Niskanen’s ability to find more power in his legs in the classic technique, he has proved that he is a top contender in both and earned bronze in the men’s skiathlon. The 30km skiathlon tested athletes’ abilities in both techniques and required them to ski classic in the first half and freestyle in the back half. However, Niskanen’s road to winning a full color run of medals at the 2022 Winter Olympics was not easy.

SEE MORE: Cross-Country Skiing 101: Competition format

Niskanen is all too familiar with the impact COVID-19 can have on a team when he saw it wreak havoc on the Norwegians after their pre-Olympic training camp in Italy. The outbreak effectively wiped out three of their skiers and one coach, as all either tested positive or were close contacts.

Prior to the beginning of the 2022 Winter Olympics, Niskanen didn’t know if he would meet his Norwegian rivals at the start line. Norway’s Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo who was not directly impacted by the outbreak has been one of Niskanen’s biggest rivals on the course. Klaebo has won four Olympic medals during these Games, two of them gold from the men’s team sprint and individual sprint free.

Niskanen felt healthy coming into the men’s 15km classic race on Friday and was able to function to his highest athletic capability in the high altitude and long hills. After the race, a relieved Niskanen said he savors his 2022 Olympic gold medal more than the ones he won at Sochi 2014 in the team sprint and at PyeongChang 2018 in the mass start.

“It has been a stressful two years with COVID, and I have been worried about my health here. When I woke up today and I felt healthy, I knew I would have a chance to take the gold medal today. Now I managed to win, I can’t be any happier than this.”

The 2022 Games has extra significance for Niskanen and he will make his final cross-country skiing appearance at this year’s Winter Olympics on Feb. 19 at 2:00 a.m. ET in the men’s 30km freestyle mass start.

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