Norwegian cross-country skier
Vegard Ulvang Country Norway Full name Vegard Ulvang Born (1963-10-10 ) 10 October 1963 (age 61) Kirkenes, Norway Spouse(s) Grete Ingeborg Nykkelmo Ski club Kirkenes & Omegn Skiklubb Seasons 14 – (1984 –1997 ) Indiv. starts 120 Indiv. podiums 34 Indiv. wins 9 Team starts 29 Team podiums 23 Team wins 9 Overall titles 1 – (1990 )
Vegard Ulvang (born 10 October 1963) is a retired Norwegian cross-country skier who won three Olympic gold medals, two silver, and one bronze. At the opening ceremony of the 1994 Winter Olympic Games , he took the ceremonial Olympic Oath on part of all the athletes. In addition to his Olympic achievements, he received the Holmenkollen medal in 1991 (shared with Trond Einar Elden , Ernst Vettori , and Jens Weißflog ), and won the World Cup in 1990. He has also won nine gold, six silver, and two bronze medals in the Norwegian Championships. He earned nine World Cup race victories. Ulvang also won the 50 km at the Holmenkollen ski festival in 1989, 1991 and 1992.
After retiring from professional skiing, he started his own clothing line.
On 25 May 2006, Ulvang was named chairman of the executive board of the International Ski Federation 's (FIS) cross-country committee, taking over from Peter Petriček of Slovenia , who decided to step down after four years in the job.
Ulvang was also a part of Norwegian TV 2 's television travel-series Gutta på tur , together with fellow skier Bjørn Dæhlie , TV personality Arne Hjeltnes and chef Arne Brimi . He is also the creator and organizer of the Tour de Ski .
Cross-country skiing results [ edit ] All results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS) .[ 1]
6 medals – (3 gold, 2 silver, 1 bronze) World Championships [ edit ] 8 medals – (2 gold, 2 silver, 4 bronze) Year Age 10 km 15 km classical 15 km freestyle Pursuit 30 km 50 km 4 × 10 km relay 1987 23 — 6 — — 5 7 Bronze 1989 25 — Bronze — — Silver — 4 1991 27 4 — — — Bronze 16 Gold 1993 29 Bronze — — 4 Silver 5 Gold 1995 31 12 — — — 8 — —
Season Discipline 1990 Overall
No. Season Date Location Race Level Place 1 1985–86 15 January 1986 Bohinj , Yugoslavia 5 km Individual F World Cup 3rd 2 14 March 1986 Oslo , Norway 50 km Individual C World Cup 3rd 3 1986–87 10 December 1986 Ramsau , Austria 15 km Individual F World Cup 3rd 4 14 March 1987 Kavgolovo , Soviet Union 15 km Individual C World Cup 2nd 5 1987–88 15 February 1988 Calgary , Canada 30 km Individual C Olympic Games[1] 3rd 6 1988–89 7 January 1989 Kavgolovo , Soviet Union 15 km Individual C World Cup 1st 7 13 January 1989 Nové Město , Czechoslovakia 15 km Individual F World Cup 3rd 8 15 January 1989 30 km Individual C World Cup 3rd 9 18 February 1989 Lahti , Finland 30 km Individual C World Championships[1] 2nd 10 22 February 1989 15 km Individual C World Championships[1] 3rd 11 4 March 1989 Oslo , Norway 50 km Individual C World Cup 1st 12 11 March 1989 Falun , Sweden 30 km Individual F World Cup 3rd 13 1989–90 9 December 1989 Soldier Hollow , United States 15 km Individual C World Cup 2nd 14 13 January 1990 Moscow , Soviet Union 30 km Individual F World Cup 2nd 15 17 February 1990 Campra , Switzerland 15 km Individual F World Cup 2nd 16 21 February 1990 Val di Fiemme , Italy 30 km Individual C World Cup 2nd 17 4 March 1990 Lahti , Finland 15 km + 15 km Pursuit F/C World Cup 2nd 18 1990–91 7 February 1991 Val di Fiemme , Italy 30 km Individual C World Championships[1] 3rd 19 16 March 1991 Oslo , Norway 50 km Individual C World Cup 1st 20 1991–92 7 December 1991 Silver Star , Canada 10 km Individual C World Cup 1st 21 8 December 1991 15 km Pursuit C World Cup 1st 22 14 December 1991 Thunder Bay , Canada 30 km Individual F World Cup 2nd 23 4 January 1992 Kavgolovo , Russia 30 km Individual C World Cup 2nd 24 10 February 1992 Albertville , France 30 km Individual C Olympic Games[1] 1st 25 13 February 1992 10 km Individual C Olympic Games[1] 1st 26 15 February 1992 15 km Pursuit F Olympic Games[1] 2nd 27 29 February 1992 Lahti , Finland 15 km Individual C World Cup 2nd 28 14 March 1992 Vang , Norway 50 km Individual C World Cup 1st 29 1992–93 12 December 1992 Ramsau , Austria 10 km Individual F World Cup 1st 30 13 December 1992 15 km Pursuit C World Cup 2nd 31 20 February 1993 Ulrichen , Switzerland 15 km Individual C World Cup 2nd 32 20 February 1993 Falun , Sweden 30 km Individual C World Championships[1] 2nd 33 22 February 1993 10 km Individual C World Championships[1] 3rd 34 1993–94 18 December 1993 Davos , Switzerland 15 km Individual F World Cup 2nd
No. Season Date Location Race Level Place Teammates 1 1984–85 17 March 1985 Oslo , Norway 4 × 10 km Relay World Cup 3rd Hole / Mikkelsplass / Aunli 2 1985–86 9 March 1986 Falun , Sweden 4 × 10 km Relay F World Cup 2nd Monsen / Mikkelsplass / Hole 3 1986–87 17 February 1987 Oberstdorf , West Germany 4 × 10 km Relay F World Championships[1] 3rd Aunli / Mikkelsplass / Langli 4 8 March 1987 Falun , Sweden 4 × 10 km Relay C World Cup 3rd Mikkelsplass / Aunli / Langli 5 1987–88 13 March 1988 Falun , Sweden 4 × 10 km Relay F World Cup 2nd Dæhlie / Bjørn / Mikkelsplass 6 17 March 1988 Oslo , Norway 4 × 10 km Relay C World Cup 1st Monsen / Mikkelsplass / Bjørn 7 1988–89 5 March 1989 Oslo , Norway 4 × 10 km Relay F World Cup 3rd Mikkelsplass / Dæhlie / Langli 8 12 March 1989 Falun , Sweden 4 × 10 km Relay C World Cup 3rd Langli / Mikkelsplass / Dæhlie 9 1989–90 11 March 1990 Örnsköldsvik , Sweden 4 × 10 km Relay C/F World Cup 2nd Skaanes / Sivertsen / Langli 10 16 March 1990 Vang , Norway 4 × 10 km Relay C World Cup 1st Skinstad / Langli / Skaanes 11 1990–91 15 February 1991 Val di Fiemme , Italy 4 × 10 km Relay C/F World Championships[1] 1st Skaanes / Langli / Dæhlie 12 1991–92 18 February 1992 Albertville , France 4 × 10 km Relay C/F Olympic Games[1] 1st Langli / Skjeldal / Dæhlie 13 28 February 1992 Lahti , Finland 4 × 10 km Relay F World Cup 2nd Langli / Dæhlie / Skjeldal 14 8 March 1992 Funäsdalen , Sweden 4 × 10 km Relay C World Cup 1st Sivertsen / Langli / Dæhlie 15 1992–93 26 February 1993 Falun , Sweden 4 × 10 km Relay C/F World Championships[1] 1st Sivertsen / Langli / Dæhlie 16 1993–94 22 February 1994 Lillehammer , Norway 4 × 10 km Relay C/F Olympic Games[1] 2nd Sivertsen / Alsgaard / Dæhlie 17 13 March 1994 Falun , Sweden 4 × 10 km Relay F World Cup 1st Sivertsen / Jevne / Dæhlie 18 1994–95 26 March 1995 Sapporo , Japan 4 × 10 km Relay C/F World Cup 1st Dæhlie / Skjeldal / Alsgaard 19 1995–96 14 January 1996 Nové Město , Czech Republic 4 × 10 km Relay C World Cup 2nd Alsgaard / Jevne / Dæhlie 20 25 February 1996 Trondheim , Norway 4 × 10 km Relay C/F World Cup 1st Jevne / Dæhlie / Alsgaard 21 17 March 1996 Oslo , Norway 4 × 5 km Relay F World Cup 2nd Kristiansen / Eide / Dæhlie 22 1996–97 24 November 1996 Kiruna , Sweden 4 × 10 km Relay C World Cup 3rd Skjeldal / Eide / Dæhlie 23 8 December 1996 Davos , Switzerland 4 × 10 km Relay C World Cup 3rd Skjeldal / Eide / Sivertsen
^ "ULVANG Vegard" . FIS-Ski . International Ski Federation. Retrieved 6 January 2020 .
1936 : Sulo Nurmela , Klaes Karppinen , Matti Lähde , Kalle Jalkanen (FIN ) 1948 : Nils Östensson , Nils Täpp , Gunnar Eriksson , Martin Lundström (SWE ) 1952 : Heikki Hasu , Paavo Lonkila , Urpo Korhonen , Tapio Mäkelä (FIN ) 1956 : Fyodor Terentyev , Pavel Kolchin , Nikolay Anikin , Vladimir Kuzin (URS ) 1960 : Toimi Alatalo , Eero Mäntyranta , Väinö Huhtala , Veikko Hakulinen (FIN ) 1964 : Karl-Åke Asph , Sixten Jernberg , Janne Stefansson , Assar Rönnlund (SWE ) 1968 : Odd Martinsen , Pål Tyldum , Harald Grønningen , Ole Ellefsæter (NOR ) 1972 : Vladimir Voronkov , Yuri Skobov , Fyodor Simashev , Vyacheslav Vedenin (URS ) 1976 : Matti Pitkänen , Juha Mieto , Pertti Teurajärvi , Arto Koivisto (FIN ) 1980 : Vasily Rochev , Nikolay Bazhukov , Yevgeny Belyayev , Nikolay Zimyatov (URS ) 1984 : Thomas Wassberg , Benny Kohlberg , Jan Ottosson , Gunde Svan (SWE ) 1988 : Jan Ottosson , Thomas Wassberg , Gunde Svan , Torgny Mogren (SWE ) 1992 : Terje Langli , Vegard Ulvang , Kristen Skjeldal , Bjørn Dæhlie (NOR ) 1994 : Maurilio De Zolt , Marco Albarello , Giorgio Vanzetta , Silvio Fauner (ITA ) 1998 : Sture Sivertsen , Erling Jevne , Bjørn Dæhlie , Thomas Alsgaard (NOR ) 2002 : Anders Aukland , Frode Estil , Kristen Skjeldal , Thomas Alsgaard (NOR ) 2006 : Fulvio Valbusa , Giorgio Di Centa , Pietro Piller Cottrer , Cristian Zorzi (ITA ) 2010 : Daniel Rickardsson , Johan Olsson , Anders Södergren , Marcus Hellner (SWE ) 2014 : Lars Nelson , Daniel Rickardsson , Johan Olsson , Marcus Hellner (SWE ) 2018 : Didrik Tønseth , Martin Johnsrud Sundby , Simen Hegstad Krüger , Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR ) 2022 : Aleksey Chervotkin , Alexander Bolshunov , Denis Spitsov , Sergey Ustiugov (ROC )
1933: Per-Erik Hedlund , Sven Utterström , Nils-Joel Englund , Hjalmar Bergström 1934: Sulo Nurmela , Klaes Karppinen , Martti Lappalainen , Veli Saarinen 1935: Mikko Husu , Klaes Karppinen , Väinö Liikkanen , Sulo Nurmela 1937: Annar Ryen , Oskar Fredriksen , Sigurd Røen , Lars Bergendahl 1938: Jussi Kurikkala , Martti Lauronen , Pauli Pitkänen , Klaes Karppinen 1939: Pauli Pitkänen , Olavi Alakulppi , Eino Olkinuora , Klaes Karppinen 1950: Nils Täpp , Karl-Erik Åström , Martin Lundström , Enar Josefsson 1954: August Kiuru , Tapio Mäkelä , Arvo Viitanen , Veikko Hakulinen 1958: Sixten Jernberg , Lennart Larsson , Sture Grahn , Per-Erik Larsson 1962: Lars Olsson , Sture Grahn , Sixten Jernberg , Assar Rönnlund 1966: Odd Martinsen , Harald Grønningen , Ole Ellefsæter , Gjermund Eggen 1970: Vladimir Voronkov , Valery Tarakanov , Fyodor Simashev , Vyacheslav Vedenin 1974: Gerd Heßler , Dieter Meinel , Gerhard Grimmer , Gert-Dietmar Klause 1978: Sven-Åke Lundbäck , Christer Johansson , Tommy Limby , Thomas Magnuson 1982: Lars Erik Eriksen , Ove Aunli , Pål Gunnar Mikkelsplass , Oddvar Brå 0 and Vladimir Nikitin , Oleksandr Batyuk , Yuriy Burlakov , Alexander Zavyalov 1985: Arild Monsen , Pål Gunnar Mikkelsplass , Tor Håkon Holte , Ove Aunli 1987: Erik Östlund , Gunde Svan , Thomas Wassberg , Torgny Mogren 1989: Christer Majbäck , Gunde Svan , Lars Håland , Torgny Mogren 1991: Øyvind Skaanes , Terje Langli , Vegard Ulvang , Bjørn Dæhlie 1993: Sture Sivertsen , Vegard Ulvang , Terje Langli , Bjørn Dæhlie 1995: Sture Sivertsen , Erling Jevne , Bjørn Dæhlie , Thomas Alsgaard 1997: Sture Sivertsen , Erling Jevne , Bjørn Dæhlie , Thomas Alsgaard 1999: Markus Gandler , Alois Stadlober , Mikhail Botvinov , Christian Hoffmann 2001: Frode Estil , Odd-Bjørn Hjelmeset , Thomas Alsgaard , Tor Arne Hetland 2003: Anders Aukland , Frode Estil , Tore Ruud Hofstad , Thomas Alsgaard 2005 : Odd-Bjørn Hjelmeset , Frode Estil , Lars Berger , Tore Ruud Hofstad 2007 : Eldar Rønning , Odd-Bjørn Hjelmeset , Lars Berger , Petter Northug 2009 : Eldar Rønning , Odd-Bjørn Hjelmeset , Tore Ruud Hofstad , Petter Northug 2011 : Martin Johnsrud Sundby , Eldar Rønning , Tord Asle Gjerdalen , Petter Northug 2013 : Tord Asle Gjerdalen , Eldar Rønning , Sjur Røthe , Petter Northug 2015 : Niklas Dyrhaug , Didrik Tønseth , Anders Gløersen , Petter Northug 2017 : Didrik Tønseth , Niklas Dyrhaug , Martin Johnsrud Sundby , Finn Hågen Krogh 2019 : Emil Iversen , Martin Johnsrud Sundby , Sjur Røthe , Johannes Høsflot Klæbo 2021 : Pål Golberg , Emil Iversen , Hans Christer Holund , Johannes Høsflot Klæbo 2023 : Hans Christer Holund , Pål Golberg , Simen Hegstad Krüger , Johannes Høsflot Klæbo
Note: Until 1981/82, World Cup was being held unofficially.
Until 1900 1900–1950 1901: Aksel Refstad (NOR) 1903: Karl Hovelsen (NOR) 1904: Harald Smith (NOR) 1905: Jonas Holmen (NOR) 1907: Per Bakken 1908: Einar Kristiansen (NOR) 1909: Thorvald Hansen 1910: Lauritz Bergendahl 1911: Otto Tangen (NOR), Knut Holst (NOR) 1912: Olav Bjaaland (NOR) 1914: Johan Kristoffersen (NOR) 1915: Sverre Østbye (NOR) 1916: Lars Høgvold (NOR) 1918: Hassa Horn (NOR), Jørgen Hansen (NOR) 1919: Thorleif Haug (NOR), Otto Aasen (NOR) 1923: Thoralf Strømstad (NOR) 1924: Harald Økern (NOR), Johan Grøttumsbråten (NOR) 1925: Einar Landvik (NOR) 1926: Jacob Tullin Thams 1927: Hagbart Haakonsen (NOR), Einar Lindboe (NOR) 1928: Torjus Hemmestveit (NOR), Mikkjel Hemmestveit (NOR) 1931: Hans Vinjarengen (NOR), Ole Stenen (NOR) 1934: Oddbjørn Hagen (NOR) 1935: Arne Rustadstuen (NOR) 1937: Olaf Hoffsbakken (NOR), Birger Ruud (NOR), Martin P. Vangsli (NOR) 1938: Reidar Andersen (NOR), Johan R. Henriksen (NOR) 1939: Sven Selånger (SWE), Lars Bergendahl (NOR), Trygve Brodahl (NOR) 1940: Oscar Gjøslien (NOR), Annar Ryen (NOR) 1947: Elling Rønes (NOR) 1948: Asbjørn Ruud (NOR) 1949: Sigmund Ruud (NOR) 1950: Olav Økern (NOR) 1951–2000 1951: Simon Slåttvik (NOR) 1952: Stein Eriksen (NOR), Torbjørn Falkanger (NOR), Heikki Hasu (FIN), Nils Karlsson (SWE) 1953: Magnar Estenstad (NOR) 1954: Martin Stokken (NOR) 1955: Haakon VII (NOR), Hallgeir Brenden (NOR), Veikko Hakulinen (FIN), Sverre Stenersen (NOR) 1956: Borghild Niskin (NOR), Arnfinn Bergmann (NOR), Arne Hoel (NOR) 1957: Eero Kolehmainen (FIN) 1958: Inger Bjørnbakken (NOR), Håkon Brusveen (NOR) 1959: Gunder Gundersen (NOR) 1960: Helmut Recknagel (GDR), Sixten Jernberg (SWE), Sverre Stensheim (NOR), Tormod Knutsen (NOR) 1961: Harald Grønningen (NOR) 1962: Toralf Engan (NOR) 1963: Alevtina Kolchina (URS), Pavel Kolchin (URS), Astrid Sandvik (NOR), Torbjørn Yggeseth (NOR) 1964: Veikko Kankkonen (FIN), Eero Mäntyranta (FIN), Georg Thoma (FRG), Halvor Næs (NOR) 1965: Arto Tiainen (FIN), Bengt Eriksson (SWE), Arne Larsen (NOR) 1967: Toini Gustafsson (SWE), Ole Ellefsæter (NOR) 1968: Olav V (NOR), Assar Rönnlund (SWE), Gjermund Eggen (NOR), Bjørn Wirkola (NOR) 1969: Odd Martinsen (NOR) 1970: Pål Tyldum (NOR) 1971: Marjatta Kajosmaa (FIN), Berit Mørdre (NOR), Reidar Hjermstad (NOR) 1972: Rauno Miettinen (FIN), Magne Myrmo (NOR) 1973: Einar Bergsland (NOR), Ingolf Mork (NOR), Franz Keller (FRG) 1974: Juha Mieto (FIN) 1975: Gerhard Grimmer (GDR), Oddvar Brå (NOR), Ivar Formo (NOR) 1976: Ulrich Wehling (GDR) 1977: Helena Takalo (FIN), Hilkka Kuntola (FIN), Walter Steiner (SUI) 1979: Ingemar Stenmark (SWE), Erik Håker (NOR), Raisa Smetanina (URS) 1980: Thomas Wassberg (SWE) 1981: Johan Sætre (NOR) 1983: Berit Aunli (NOR), Tom Sandberg (NOR) 1984: Lars Erik Eriksen (NOR), Jakob Vaage (NOR), Armin Kogler (AUT) 1985: Anette Bøe (NOR), Per Bergerud (NOR), Gunde Svan (SWE) 1986: Brit Pettersen (NOR) 1987: Matti Nykänen (FIN), Hermann Weinbuch (FRG) 1989: Marja-Liisa Kirvesniemi (FIN) 1991: Vegard Ulvang (NOR), Trond Einar Elden (NOR), Ernst Vettori (AUT), Jens Weißflog (GER) 1992: Yelena Välbe (RUS) 1993: Emil Kvanlid (NOR) 1994: Lyubov Yegorova (RUS), Vladimir Smirnov (KAZ), Espen Bredesen (NOR) 1995: Kenji Ogiwara (JPN) 1996: Manuela Di Centa (ITA) 1997: Bjarte Engen Vik (NOR), Stefania Belmondo (ITA), Bjørn Dæhlie (NOR) 1998: Fred Børre Lundberg (NOR), Larisa Lazutina (RUS), Alexey Prokurorov (RUS), Harri Kirvesniemi (FIN) 1999: Kazuyoshi Funaki (JPN) Since 2001 2001: Adam Małysz (POL), Bente Skari (NOR), Thomas Alsgaard (NOR) 2003: Felix Gottwald (AUT), Ronny Ackermann (GER) 2004: Yuliya Chepalova (RUS) 2005: Andrus Veerpalu (EST) 2007: Frode Estil (NOR), Odd-Bjørn Hjelmeset (NOR), Harald V (NOR), Sonja (NOR), Simon Ammann (SUI) 2010: Marit Bjørgen (NOR) 2011: Ole Einar Bjørndalen (NOR), Michael Greis (GER), Andrea Henkel (GER), Janne Ahonen (FIN) 2012: Magdalena Neuner (GER), Emil Hegle Svendsen (NOR) 2013: Tora Berger (NOR), Martin Fourcade (FRA), Therese Johaug (NOR), Gregor Schlierenzauer (AUT) 2014: Magnus Moan (NOR), Eric Frenzel (GER), Thomas Morgenstern (AUT), Darya Domracheva (BLR) 2015: Eldar Rønning (NOR), Anders Bardal (NOR), Anette Sagen (NOR), Kamil Stoch (POL) 2016: Noriaki Kasai (JPN), Tarjei Bø (NOR) 2017: Marie Dorin Habert (FRA), Sara Takanashi (JPN) 2018: Charlotte Kalla (SWE), Princess Astrid (NOR), Hannu Manninen (FIN), Kaisa Mäkäräinen (FIN) 2021: Maren Lundby (NOR), Johannes Thingnes Bø (NOR), Dario Cologna (SWI), Johannes Rydzek (GER) 2022: Tiril Eckhoff (NOR), Marte Olsbu Røiseland (NOR), Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR), Jørgen Graabak (NOR) 2023: Maiken Caspersen Falla (NOR), Stefan Kraft (AUT) 2024: Jessie Diggins (USA), Simen Hegstad Krüger (NOR), Jarl Magnus Riiber (NOR)