A pack of Americans looks to make its mark as the Nordic world ski championships begin in Trondheim, where one of the sport’s most electric atmospheres awaits
Competing in a Nordic world ski championships is always special, but doing so in the heartland of cross-country skiing elevates the experience to a whole different level. This year’s edition kicks off in earnest on Thursday with the first medal events in Trondheim, the picturesque university town seated on the lip of a fjord in central Norway. More than 190,000 tickets have already been sold and the sport’s most passionate fans will spend the next week and a half packed into vertigo-triggering grandstands around the finishing area. The intensity and tradition of ski racing in Norway create an intoxicating backdrop for any athlete, a challenge an upstart American contingent is keen to embrace.
Jessie Diggins knows what’s coming and what’s required to meet the moment better than anyone. Reflecting on her first world championships at Oslo’s storied Holmenkollen when Norway last hosted, she recalled Tuesday in a conference call with reporters, “It’s quite painful for me to watch my technique [in 2011], but I skied with a lot of guts and that has not changed.” She was just 19 then, still seven years away from her historic Olympic gold at Pyeongchang. Now 33, Diggins has built a legacy unlike any other American in the sport’s history, but as she heads into this year’s worlds, her famous tolerance for discomfort will be put to the test like rarely before.
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