Program, startlister og resultater fra Verdenscup langrenn Davos som arrangeres 12.-14. desember 2025.
Verdenscup langrenn Davos 2025
Dato
12. – 14. desember
Sted
Davos – Sveits
På TV
Rennene sendes direkte på Vsport1 og Vsport+ (fredag) og TV3 (lørdag og søndag). Alt streames på Viaplay.
Norges tropp
Startlister alle dager
Program og resultater
Fredag 12. desember
- Kl 15.00: Lagsprint fri teknikk prolog
- Kl 17.00: Lagsprint fri teknikk finaler
Lørdag 13. desember
- Kl 13.45: Sprint fri teknikk prolog
- Kl 16.15: Sprint fri teknikk finaler
Søndag 14. desember
- Kl 09.50: 10 km intervallstart fri menn
- Kl 13.45: 10 km intervallstart fri kvinner
Værmelding
Om rennet
Menn
● Davos has hosted a World Cup race almost every year since 1982. Despite being one of the
most prestigious World Cup races in the calendar, Davos has never hosted a Nordic Ski World
Championships so far. Davos is also one of the highest-altitude venues on the World Cup
circuit.
● Norway started the season winning all three men’s events of both the first and second
World Cup stages in Ruka and Trondheim, winning six out of six World cup races so far. The
same streak happened in the 2022/23 season, and was broken by Richard Jouve (FRA) who
won the first race of the third World Cup stage.
● Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) won his 100th individual World Cup victory in his
hometown of Trondheim last weekend. Klaebo became the first male athlete to reach this
landmark and second overall, joining retired compatriot Marit Bjoergen (NOR), who had 114
World Cup wins before ending her career in 2018.
● Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) has won the overall World Cup title five times between
2017/18 and 2024/25. If he wins the 2025/26 overall Crystal Globe, he will equal his
countryman Bjoern Daehlie (NOR), who currently holds the record with the six overall titles
won between 1991/92 and 1998/99. Klaebo is currently tied with Gunde Svan (SWE) on five
titles. No other active men’s cross-country skier has more than two Crystal Globes.
● Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) has held the record for most individual World Cup wins
in a single season since 2022/23, when he topped the podium 19 times. Klaebo’s 16 World
Cup victories in the 2023/24 season is the second-highest number of World Cup wins in a
single season.
● Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) also holds the record for most individual podiums in a
single season since 2022/23, when he made it to the podium in 23 individual World Cup
podiums.
● Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) won the Sprint Classic in Trondheim last weekend, with
Oskar Opstad Vike (NOR) in second place and Alvar Myhlback (SWE) third. Klaebo also won
the first Sprint race in Ruka, making it his fifth including last season. Klaebo won six out of six
Sprint Freestyle races last season, and three out of five Sprint Classic races.
● At just 19 years old, Alvar Myhlback (SWE) was on a World Cup podium for the first time
in his career last weekend in Trondheim when he came third in the Sprint Classic race.
● Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) won the 20km Skiathlon in Trondheim last weekend, with
Harald Oestberg Amundsen (NOR) in second place and Emil Iversen (NOR) third, to mark
another podium clean sweep for Norway. The top eight athletes in this race were
Norwegians, and there were no non-European athletes in the top-20. Norway already has
three podium clean sweeps out of six World Cup races so far.
● Einar Hedegart (NOR) won the 10km Interval Start Freestyle in Trondheim last weekend,
with Andreas Fjorden Ree (NOR) in second place and Martin Loewstroem Nyenget (NOR)
third, to mark another podium clean sweep for Norway, the second one in Trondheim. This
was the first World Cup win for Hedegart, who had one second place last season and another
the previous weekend in Ruka.
● This was just the fourth World Cup start for Einar Hedegart (NOR), just one month after
announcing he was quitting biathlon to dedicate himself to cross-cross skiing full-time. He
now has three podiums in just four World Cup starts.
Kvinner
● Davos has hosted a World Cup race almost every year since 1982. Despite being one of the
most prestigious World Cup races in the calendar, Davos has never hosted a Nordic Ski World
Championships so far. Davos is also one of the highest-altitude venues on the World Cup
circuit.
● Sweden started the season winning two out of three women’s events at the World Cup
stage in Ruka (FIN) and then at the second one in Trondheim (NOR).
● No athlete has won more than one race out of six World Cup races so far, but only three
countries have been represented on the podium so far: Sweden, Norway and the United
States of America.
● Johanna Hagstroem (SWE) won the Sprint Classic race in Trondheim last weekend, with
Emma Ribom (SWE) second and Linn Svahn (SWE) third, for the first podium clean sweep of
the season. It was Hagstroem’s second career World Cup win, after she won the Ruka
opening Sprint last season. This is the first podium clean sweep for Sweden since the 2023/24
season, as they were not able to achieve it in any race last season.
● Jessie Diggins (USA) won the 20km Skiathlon in Trondheim last weekend, with Heidi Weng
(NOR) in second place and Ebba Andersson (SWE) third. It was the 28th individual World
Cup win for Diggins, and the first one ever in Skiathlon.
● Ebba Andersson (SWE) won the 10km Interval Start Freestyle race in Trondheim last
weekend, with Moa Ilar (SWE) in second place and Jessie Diggins (USA) third. This was
Andersson ninth individual World Cup win, and the third one in 10km Interval Start Free.
● Jessie Diggins (USA) is the only active athlete with more than 20 individual World Cup
victories. She has won 28.
● Jessie Diggins (USA) has won three overall World Cup titles, including two in the past two
seasons. If she wins a third consecutive overall title this season, it would be her fourth in
total, placing her just behind Elena Vaelbe Trubitsina (RUS), who won five titles between
1988/89 and 1996/97.
● Jessie Diggins (USA) has also won the last two distance titles. If she wins the distance title
again this season, it would be her fourth distance title, tying her with Justyna Kowalczyk
(POL), just behind the all-time best Therese Johaug (NOR), who has won it five times.
● Jasmi Joensuu (FIN) won the Sprint World Cup title in 2024/25; her first World Cup title.
She did not win an individual race across the season and was on the podium in just one
Sprint race – a second place in Toblach (ITA).
● Sweden dominated the women’s side of last season’s World Championships in
Trondheim, winning all six events, with Jonna Sundling (SWE) and Ebba
Andersson (SWE) claiming three gold medals each.