A personal account from a former runner underscores how cross-country skiing pushes human aerobic limits beyond typical endurance sports. Elite Nordic skiers routinely achieve VO2 max values in the 80s and 90s, far surpassing averages in other disciplines. This physiological edge stems from the sport's demanding full-body efforts over varied terrain.
VO2 max, or maximal oxygen intake, measures the peak oxygen a body can utilize during intense exercise, involving lungs, heart, blood, and muscles. In cross-country skiing, athletes constantly approach this limit during events ranging from sprints to 50km races on challenging, often high-altitude and cold courses. The sport requires simultaneous upper and lower body exertion, such as double poling and skating up steep climbs, fostering exceptional adaptations like increased heart stroke volume, expanded capillaries, and more mitochondria in muscles.
For context, average adults record 30 to 45 ml/kg/min, recreational endurance athletes 45 to 60, and competitive distance runners 60 to 75. Elite male Nordic skiers often hit 80 to 95 or higher, with women in the 70 to 85 range. Athletes like Klæbo and Johaug exemplify this, competing in a discipline that selects and amplifies extraordinary aerobic capacity through years of rigorous training.
However, VO2 max alone does not determine outcomes. As the account notes, it establishes a performance ceiling, while factors such as lactate threshold, skiing efficiency, and race tactics influence results. Two athletes with matching VO2 max can differ significantly; efficient gliding conserves energy, compounding advantages over long distances.
Training to improve VO2 max includes intervals, aerobic sessions, strength work, and altitude exposure, with largest gains early in an athlete's career due to genetic limits. A tragic reminder came with the death of Norwegian biathlete Sivert Guttorm Bakken during preparation for the 2026 Winter Olympics. He was reportedly using a high-altitude simulation mask, though authorities found no definitive connection to the device. This incident highlights the extremes some pursue for marginal gains.
Reflecting on a personal VO2 max of 65 ml/kg/min from running days, the author found elite skiing values humbling, appreciating the sport's unique brutality.