Six Races, Six Golds: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Go Down in Winter Olympics History at Milan-Cortina 2026

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Norwegian Superstar Breaks 46-Year-Old Record with Sixth Gold Medal at a Single Match

Johannes Høsflot Klæbo has secured his place in the olympic history. The 29-year-old Norwegian cross-country skiing thriller  gained  his sixth gold medal of the 2026 Winter Olympics, setting a new record for the most golds won at a single Winter Games.

Contesting  at the Winter Olympics 2026 in Milan-Cortina, Klæbo sealed his dominance by winning the grueling 50km mass start classic — completing a overwhelming  victory of all six cross-country events.

Winter Olympics

Winter Olympics

The Race That Made History

In the men’s 50km mass start classic, Klæbo delivered a masterclass in stamina and strategic skiing:

Gold: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (2:06:44.8)

Silver: Martin Loewstroem Nyenget (+8.9s)

Bronze: Emil Iversen

Winter Olympics

Winter Olympics

Breaking a 46-Year-Old Olympic Record

Klæbo surpassed the long-standing Winter Olympic record of five gold medals at a single Games, past held by American speed skating legend Eric Heiden, set at the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics.

6 gold medals at one Winter Olympics (New Record)

11 career Winter Olympic gold medals

First athlete to win all six cross-country events at a single Match

Among all Olympians in history, only swimming icon Michael Phelps has won more Olympic gold medals  (23).

What This Means for Winter Sports History

Klæbo’s six-gold haul reshape the history who hold power at the Winter Olympics. In endurance winter sport, where marginal gains and altitude factors play key roles, winning six gold medals across multiple  formats is unprecedented.

Winter Olympics

Winter Olympics

This achievement will probably  stand for decades — especially given the physical toll of the 50km finale after an already packed Olympic schedule.

Strategic  Brilliance Behind Klæbs Sweep