Tour de Ski: Katharina Hennig succeeds in historic cross-country skiing triumph

Winter sports Ski tour

Katharina Hennig achieves historic cross-country triumph

Cheers from the bottom of my heart: Katharina Hennig celebrates her victory over 15 kilometers Cheers from the bottom of my heart: Katharina Hennig celebrates her victory over 15 kilometers

Cheers from the bottom of my heart: Katharina Hennig celebrates her victory over 15 kilometers

Those: AFP/MARCO BERTORELLO

While the German ski jumpers are giving up riddles, a cross-country skier celebrates sensationally: Katharina Hennig celebrates the first World Cup victory in her career. And thus ended a long dry spell in Germany.

NOnly a few 100 meters to the finish of this 15 kilometer race, in front a quartet is fighting for stage victory in the Tour de Ski. The last little climb. “Gas on, straighten up, come on,” yells national coach Peter Schlickenrieder. And Katharina Hennig does exactly that. In the easy descent, the 26-year-old cross-country skier rushes to the top, pushes herself further and further down the home straight from Val di Fiemme with powerful use of poles, gains a three-meter lead – and finally throws her arms up.

It is the first World Cup victory of her career. “I’m just blissful,” she said shortly after the mass start race on ZDF. “It was very tough, but I felt really good and knew what was important in the end. Super cool that my whole family was at the track. It’s really nice to experience that together.” And then she adds, looking at the German team: “I think that’s good for all of us. Big thanks to our technicians and trainers.”

Because the successful years of German cross-country skiing are ages ago. The fact that Hennig won gold in the team sprint together with Victoria Carl at the Olympic Games in Beijing last year was more than a sensation. A fairy tale no one dared to dream of. Yes, they had hoped for a medal, but that would have been a success too. Now Hennig is following suit with the first World Cup victory by a German cross-country skier in almost 14 years.

also read

Beijing 2022 - Nordic skiing/cross-country skiing

In the overall classification, she moved up to fourth place and surprisingly has the chance to make it onto the podium before the last stage. It’s a bit of an upside-down world these winter sports days: while the German ski jumpers did as badly at the Four Hills Tournament as they did more than a decade ago and the mood is gloomy given the large gap to the world’s best, the cross-country skiers are celebrating.

“It’s great what she did there”

In recent years, Hennig has become more and more the most stable German runner, has always been able to get involved at the front and has fought her way into the extended world elite. But the last step to really count among the best was still missing. But, Schlickenrieder had long been certain: she has what it takes.

Now Hennig has duped the entire international competition in this 15-kilometer Tour de Ski stage. In the end she won ahead of Sweden’s Frida Karlsson, Finland’s Kerttu Niskanen and Rosie Brennan from the USA. After the Olympic gold in the team sprint and Olympic silver in the relay, it is the biggest success of her career. Behind the winner of the day, Laura Gimmler (14th place) and Pia Fink (15th) also showed decent performances.

also read

The moment that made Jens-Jörg Rieck freak out: Victoria Carl is the first to cross the finish line

Ecstasy des ARD-Kommentators

“What Katharina showed today was unique. It’s great that she stayed calm here and followed the tactics of the coaches. It’s really great what she did there,” said team boss Schlickenrieder. With a view to a podium finish at the end of the Tour de Ski, he added: “Of course I trust her. But she should enjoy it tomorrow. What comes next is an encore.”

The so-called final climb is scheduled for Sunday in Italy, and Hennig’s starting position is promising. “Of course that gives motivation, tomorrow I’ll scrape the last baskets together,” she says. “Now I’ll just cuddle the family and be happy with them.”

also read

That was nothing: Karl Geiger had imagined the tour differently

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *