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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Bryan Armen Graham at the Zhangjiakou National Cross-Country Skiing Centre

Beijing 2022’s first gold medal won by convicted doper Therese Johaug

Therese Johaug celebrates her emotional triumph as she crossed the finish line of the women's skiathlon 7.5km+7.5km skiathlon at the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games.
Therese Johaug celebrates as she crosses the finish line of the 7.5km+7.5km skiathlon at the Beijing Winter Olympics. Photograph: Odd Andersen/AFP/Getty Images

Any hope of the controversies that have dogged the Beijing Winter Games fading into a feelgood blur of medals once the torch was lit was quickly swept aside on Saturday as the first gold went to a convicted doper.

Therese Johaug, the decorated Norwegian cross-country skier who was barred from competing at the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics while serving an 18-month suspension for a positive drugs test, obliterated the field to win the 7.5km+7.5km skiathlon on a windblown afternoon in the tiny village of Taizicheng in the mountains roughly 120km northwest of Beijing.

Few, if any, of the 109 gold medals that will be handed out in 15 sports over the next two and a half weeks will be won in more dominant fashion. The 33-year-old, who tucked herself into the leading pack from the mass start before opening a lead of nearly a minute on a chasing group of four during the final lap, raised her arms in jubilation as she crossed the line in 44min 13.7sec to win the contest regarded as cross-country’s ultimate test.

Natalia Nepryaeva, the Russian perched atop the overall World Cup leaderboard, rallied to overtake a pair of skiers in the final kilometre to win the silver, coming in 30.2sec off the pace.

Austria’s Teresa Stadlober settled for bronze after she was pipped by 0.3sec at the finish by Nepryaeva. Kerttu Niskanen of Finland finished fourth and Frida Karlsson of Sweden was fifth, eight seconds ahead of sixth-place Jessie Diggins, who became the first American to win a gold medal in cross-country in the team sprint at Pyeongchang.

Norway’s Therese Johaug (centre), second-placed Natalia Nepryaeva (L) and thirdplaced Teresa Stadlober celebrate their medals.
Norway’s Therese Johaug (centre), second-placed Natalia Nepryaeva (L) and thirdplaced Teresa Stadlober celebrate their medals. Photograph: Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images

The skiathlon race is designed to determine the best all-around skier. That mantle belongs to Johaug after her runaway victory, which played out in punishing conditions of icy gusts and -1C (30F) temperatures, but not without the spectre of controversy. For Johaug, it was her fourth Olympic medal and second gold after helping Norway to a 4×5km relay win at the 2010 Vancouver Games. The 14-times world champion also won a silver and bronze in team events at Sochi four years later.

But she was forced out of the 2018 Olympics due a lengthy suspension after testing positive for the anabolic steroid clostebol, which she claimed was the result of a lip ointment bought by the team doctor, Fredrik Bendiksen, on short notice to treat sunburn during high-altitude training in Italy.

Her explanation was deemed implausible by skiing’s international governing body – not least because the cream in question included a doping warning label on the box – which appealed against the 13-month suspension initially handed down by Norwegian anti-doping authorities.

The court of arbitration for sport subsequently tacked on five months to the punishment, acknowledging Johaug’s “otherwise clean anti-doping record” but citing her negligence in missing a clear warning label and ruling one of the sport’s biggest names out of Pyeongchang.

“Johaug failed to conduct a basic check of the packaging, which not only listed a prohibited substance as an ingredient but also included a clear doping cautionary warning,” the court said in a press release.

Bendiksen resigned after taking the blame for Johaug’s positive test.

Since returning from her suspension, Johaug has finished off the podium once in 53 races. She is widely expected to add to her medal haul in the coming days as the women’s cross-country programme moves forward.

“It means a lot,” Johaug said. “I’ve never had an [individual] Olympic gold medal. I’m so happy.

“At first I was really happy just to come here because we have the Covid in our team. And today when I’m reaching my goal, I’m so happy. I’ve trained thousands of hours for this and been away from home a lot over the years. So it’s beautiful to reach this goal.”

Johaug’s win came shortly before speed skater Irene Schouten of the Netherlands won the second gold of the Beijing Games in the women’s 3,000m.

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