Oliver Solberg and co-driver Elliott Edmondson celebrate Monte Carlo Rally victory with family on the podium amid confetti and cheers.
Oliver Solberg and co-driver Elliott Edmondson celebrate Monte Carlo Rally victory with family on the podium amid confetti and cheers.
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Oliver Solberg wins Monte Carlo rally after dramatic finish

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The 24-year-old Swede Oliver Solberg has secured victory in the Monte Carlo rally, the first for a Swedish driver since 1971. With co-driver Elliott Edmondson, he celebrated with family after a demanding season opener. Legend Stig Blomqvist hails the feat as completely incredible.

Oliver Solberg, 24 years old and living in Mitandersfors in Arvika municipality, won the Monte Carlo rally in the World Rally Championship. It is the first Swedish victory in the rally since Ove Andersson won in 1971, following previous wins by Erik Carlsson in 1962 and 1963, and Björn Waldegård in 1969 and 1970. Solberg, who is doing his first full season in the top class WRC1 with Toyota, was seen as a favorite ahead of the opener.

After the 17th stage, where he set the second-best time, victory was secured. Britain's Elfyn Evans finished second, 51.8 seconds behind, while reigning world champion Sébastien Ogier came third, over two minutes back. Solberg and Edmondson climbed onto the car's roof to celebrate their joy.

"It is so emotional, it has been so demanding and stressful," Solberg said to TV4 Play. "I can hardly understand what has happened. It became another emotional day... It is the hardest rally I have done in my entire life." The celebration was interrupted by family: first father Petter Solberg, a former rally world champion, then girlfriend Chloe and mother Pernilla.

Stig Blomqvist, a rally legend from Örebro, praised Solberg: "Completely incredible," he told Radiosporten. Blomqvist himself never won Monte Carlo despite his career. Ogier, who watched the finish with Petter Solberg, commended: "He has done better than anyone expected." Second-place Evans added: "It is his first real rally. He has worked hard for this and is of course deserving of the win."

Solberg debuted in WRC2 in 2019, won the title in 2025, and took his first WRC1 win in Estonia last year. The next rally is in Sweden in February.

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Reactions on X to Oliver Solberg's Monte Carlo Rally victory are overwhelmingly positive, celebrating it as a historic achievement: the first Swedish win since 1971, the youngest winner ever at 24, and a dominant performance in tough snowy conditions on his full-time WRC debut with Toyota. Users from fans, journalists, and officials praise his talent, the teamwork with co-driver Elliott Edmondson (first British co-driver win in 40+ years), and Toyota's podium sweep. No significant negative or skeptical sentiments found.

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Henrik Kristoffersen celebrates emotional slalom victory at floodlit Schladming night race.
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Kristoffersen claims emotional fifth Schladming slalom victory

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Henrik Kristoffersen of Norway ended an 11-month winless streak by taking the men's slalom at the Audi FIS Ski World Cup in Schladming, Austria, on January 28, 2026. The victory marked his 34th career World Cup win and a record fifth at the traditional night race, securing a Norwegian one-two finish ahead of teammate Atle Lie McGrath. France's Clément Noël rounded out the podium with the fastest second run.

Swedish driver Oliver Solberg has started the Monte Carlo Rally with a dream performance, leading overwhelmingly after Thursday's stages. The 24-year-old from Värmland impressed especially on the second special stage in the French Alps. He now leads by 44.2 seconds ahead of second-place Elfyn Evans.

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Sebastian Samuelsson led the sprint cup going into the season's final sprint in Holmenkollen but finished seventh with one miss, losing the title to Norwegian Sturla Holm Lægreid. Both ended on the same points, but Lægreid prevailed with more wins. “It's so damn bitter,” Samuelsson told SVT.

Sandra Naeslund of Sweden claimed her record-extending 45th World Cup victory in the women's ski cross big final at Kopaonik, Serbia, leading from start to finish. In the men's event, Tim Hronek of Germany earned his first World Cup win after a chaotic crash elevated him to the top spot. The races marked the first World Cup at the venue, following the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympics.

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Loic Meillard of Switzerland won gold in the men's slalom at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Bormio, Italy, completing a medal sweep with his third podium of the Games. Norway's Atle Lie McGrath, who led after the first run, suffered a disqualification early in his second run and walked off the course in distress. Austria's Fabio Gstrein took silver, while teammate Henrik Kristoffersen earned bronze for Norway.

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IndyCar star Marcus Ericsson and his team took a chance to win the Daytona 24 Hours but had to settle for eighth place. It was his third attempt at the prestigious endurance race, second only to Le Mans in status. Ericsson believes the risk was worth taking.

 

 

 

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