Norway's Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo seeks to complete a sweep of all six Olympic cross-country skiing events with a victory in the men's 50km classic on February 21. Having already won five golds at these Games, Klaebo would become the first athlete to claim six medals at a single Winter Olympics. The race marks his final event in Milan Cortina.
The men's 50km mass start classic, often dubbed the ski marathon, features athletes completing six laps on an 8.3km course, totaling 31.1 miles. The event begins with a mass start, positioning the highest-ranked skiers at the front, and the first to cross the finish line claims victory. Scheduled for 5 a.m. ET on Saturday, February 21, it is Klaebo's last competition at the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics.
Klaebo, described as a once-in-a-generation talent, has already secured five golds in cross-country events at these Games, bringing his career Olympic total to 10—the same as Michael Phelps, the only other athlete with that many. A win here would make him the first to earn six medals of any color in one Winter Games. His performance in the classic sprint, where he reached a 5:19 mile pace uphill on skis, underscores his dominance.
Klaebo's history in the 50km is varied: he won the 2025 world championship and two recent World Cup races but faced a disqualification in 2021 worlds and abandoned the Beijing 2022 race mid-way due to feeling unwell. He has yet to win this event at the Olympics, though his skiathlon success shows resilience.
Norway could claim an all-Norwegian podium, having swept the 50km in all four World Cups this Olympic cycle. Teammates Martin Loewstroem Nyenget, who took bronze in the skiathlon, Harald Oestberg Amundsen, and Emil Iversen are strong contenders. Italy, performing on home snow, has earned bronzes in the men's 4x7.5km relay and team sprint free. The United States, with silvers in the sprint classic and team sprint free, fields Gus Schumacher, Ben Ogden, and Hunter Wonders for a solid finish.
Klaebo's bid draws parallels to running greats like Emil Zatopek, who swept the 5,000m, 10,000m, and marathon in 1952, highlighting the versatility across distances from 1.6km to 50km.