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Siri Wigger Wins Back to Back Golds at Lausanne 2020

Jan 20, 2020·Cross-Country
Silver medal winner Anna Heggen (left) Gold medal winner Siri Wigger SUI (centre) and Bronze medal winner  Maerta Rosenberg SWE (right) at the mascot ceremony for the Cross-Country Skiing Women’s Sprint at the Vallee de Joux Cross-Country Centre. The Winter Youth Olympic Games, Lausanne, Switzerland, Sunday 19 January 2020. Photo: OIS/Ben Queenborough. Handout image supplied by OIS/IOC.

Switzerland’s Siri Wigger continued her fine performance at the Vallee de Joux by winning her second cross-country skiing gold medal of the weekend on Sunday.

The home favourite delivered another dominant display to win the women’s sprint free on a chilly and windy day. She finished ahead of Anna Heggen (NOR) and Maerta Rosenberg (SWE), who is now also a double medallist at the Lausanne 2020 Winter Youth Olympic Games.

The trio capitalised on the final’s dramatic start, when on the tight and fast first downhill turn two skiers tumbled, taking cross free bronze medallist Tove Ericsson (SWE) out of the running.

Siri Wigger SUI wins the Gold medal in  the Cross-Country Skiing Women’s Sprint at the Vallee de Joux Cross-Country Centre. The Winter Youth Olympic Games, Lausanne, Switzerland, Sunday 19 January 2020. Photo: OIS/Ben Queenborough. Handout image supplied by OIS/IOC.

Wigger was embraced by cheering friends at the finish line.

“It’s incredible that I could win today too,” she said, having also won the cross free gold on Saturday. “I just felt like I had a lot of energy left on the last lap so I pushed really hard and was able to get a little bit of a gap. I’m feeling really confident but we have another race to go [the 5km classic on Tuesday] so not too much celebration for now.”

The race’s early crash also helped Heggen. The Norwegian said: “That was a good thing for me [because] then we got some space and could race. Not so many people on the track and it’s not that much chaos.

“I was just trying to hang with Siri. I’m not so fast at the start but I had a good last lap. I didn’t realise [the result] until I had crossed the finish line but it was very fun. I had very high speed into the last metres of the race.”

Sweden’s Rosenberg said: “I’ve been so nervous the whole day. I’m just happy it’s over.”

Next up its the mens and womens individual on Tuesday, 21st January. Tune in for all the results and updates.

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