Québec: the grand World Cup finals - pre comp facts
Mar 21, 2019·Cross-CountryPre-competition facts FIS Cross-Country Overall World Cup finals
22nd to 24th March 2019
Therese Johaug
Therese Johaug is hoping to claim her second World Cup Final victory after 2013/14. Johaug can become the second athlete with multiple overall wins in the competition after Marit Bjørgen (6 wins).
The last seven World Cup Finals have been won by either Johaug (1) or Bjørgen (6). In 2008/09, Poland's Justyna Kowalczyk was the last non-Norwegian winner of the competition.
Only Bjørgen (7) has claimed more podium finishes in the World Cup Final than Johaug (4), Kowalczyk (4) and Charlotte Kalla (4).
Johaug, winner of this season's 3-Days Tour, has claimed 16 podium spots in one of the Tours (3-Days Tour, Tour de Ski, World Cup Final, Ski Tour Canada), joint-most all-time along with Bjørgen (16).
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg won this season's Tour de Ski and finished in third place in the 3-Days Tour. Only Heidi Weng (2016/17), Therese Johaug (2013/14), Marit Bjørgen (2011/12) and Justyna Kowalczyk (2010/11) managed to claim a top-three finish in the three big Tours (3-Days Tour, Tour de Ski, World Cup Final) in a single season.
Only Johaug in 2013/14 managed to win both the Tour de Ski and World Cup Final in the same season. Johaug also claimed the overall World Cup title that campaign.
Overall World Cup leader Østberg can claim her first crystal globe. She finished in the overall top-three in each of the last three World Cup seasons.
Østberg is hoping to hand Norway its sixth consecutive ladies' overall World Cup title. Johaug (2), Weng (2) and Bjørgen (1) claimed the last five.
Other contenders
Four of the nine previous winners of the World Cup Final also won the overall World Cup title that season - Virpi Kuitunen in 2007/08, Justyna Kowalczyk in 2008/09, Marit Bjørgen in 2011/12 and Therese Johaug in 2013/14.
Bjørgen, Charlotte Kalla, Aino-Kaisa Saarinen and Katja Višnar are the only athletes to have appeared in all previous nine editions of the World Cup Final.
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (27) and Vesna Fabjan (27) can both join Stefanie Böhler on a record 28 appearances in one of the Tours (3-Days Tour, Tour de Ski, World Cup Final, Ski Tour Canada).
Jessica Diggins is hoping to become the first non-European winner of one of the Tours (3-Days Tour, Tour de Ski, World Cup Final, Ski Tour Canada).
Krista Pärmäkoski can become the second athlete from Finland to win one of the Tours (3-Days Tour, Tour de Ski, World Cup Final, Ski Tour Canada) after Kuitunen, who won three Tours including the 2007/08 World Cup Final.
Natalia Nepryaeva finished in second place in this season's Tour de Ski to hand Russia its first podium finish in one of the Tours (3-Days Tour, Tour de Ski, World Cup Final, Ski Tour Canada).
Nepryaeva can become the first athlete representing Russia to win the overall World Cup title since Julija Tchepalova in 2000/01.
Nepryaeva is hoping to become the first non-Norwegian winner of the ladies' overall World Cup since Kowalczyk in 2012/13.
Alexander Bolshunov & Johannes Høsflot Klæbo
Defending champion Alexander Bolshunov and 2016/17 winner Johannes Høsflot Klæbo are both hoping to join Dario Cologna (2) and Petter Northug (3) as the only multiple winners of the World Cup Final.
Last year's winner Bolshunov can become the second athlete to win the World Cup Final in back-to-back seasons after Northug in 2010-2011.
Klæbo won this season's Tour de Ski and can now join Martin Johnsrud Sundby (2013/14) and Cologna (2008/09 and 2011/12) as the only athletes to win both the Tour de Ski and World Cup Final in the same season.
Only Alex Harvey (4), Northug (4) and Cologna (3) have won more stages in the World Cup Final (excluding overall wins) than Klæbo (2).
Overall World Cup leader Klæbo is hoping to retain his crystal globe. Last season, Klæbo became the youngest ever winner of the men's overall World Cup, aged 21.
Norway has claimed five of the last six men's overall World Cup titles, including each of the last three. Germany was the last country to claim four in a row, between 2003/04 and 2006/07.
Bolshunov can become the first athlete representing Russia (including Soviet Union) to win the men's overall World Cup title since Vladimir Smirnov in 1990/91. Smirnov won the crystal globe in 1993/94 while representing Kazakhstan.
Bolshunov is hoping to become the first non-Norwegian winner of the men's overall World Cup since Cologna in 2014/15.
Five of the nine overall winners of the World Cup Final also won the overall World Cup title that season - Sundby in 2013/14, Northug in 2009/10 and 2012/13, and Cologna in 2008/09 and 2011/12.