Happy Birthday : |
Longest winning time in Tour
Men
1. 2012, Dario Cologna
(SUI) 4.33.17,2
2. 2011, Dario Cologna
(SUI) 4.28.02,0
3. 2010, Lukas Bauer
(CZE) 4.13.10,6
Ladies
1. 2012, Justyna Kowalczyk
(POL) 2.52.45,0
2. 2011, Justyna Kowalczyk
(POL) 2.47.31,0
3. 2008, Charlotte Kalla
(SWE) 2.43.01,0
*à noter que l'édition 2018 a été raccourcie d'une étape à cause du mauvais temps ; l'édition 2022 ne comptait que six étapes.
Shortest Winning time in the Tour
Men
1. 2009, Dario Cologna
(SUI) 2.56.05,4
2. 2014, Martin J. Sundby (NOR) 3.05.52,2
3. 2017, Martin J. Sundby (NOR) 3.24.47,9
Ladies
1. 2014, Therese Johaug
(NOR) 2.04.16,4
2. 2009, Virpi Kuitunen
(FIN) 2.06.41,4
3. 2007, Virpi Kuitunen
(FIN) 2.20.15,3
Biggest winning margin Tour de Ski
Men
2016: Martin Johnsrud Sundby
(NOR) 3,15,7 ahead of Finn Hågen Krogh (NOR)
Ladies
2016: Therese Johaug
(NOR) 2,20,9 ahead of Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (NOR)
Smallest winning margin Tour de Ski
Men
2015: Petter Northug (NOR) 0,16,6 ahead of Evgeniy Belov (RUS)
Ladies
2009: Virpi Kuitunen
(FIN) 0.07,2 ahead of Aino Kaisa Saarinen (FIN).
Athletes winning the Overall Tour when NOT leading before the last stage
Men
2010: Lukas Bauer
, started 8,3 seconds behind Petter Northug
2013: Alexander Legkov
, started 6,5 seconds behind Dario Cologna
Ladies
2008: Charlotte Kalla
, started 39,7 seconds behind Virpi Kuitunen
2016: Therese Johaug
, started 38,7 seconds behind Ingvild Flugstad Østberg
2010: Justyna Kowalczyk
, started 31,4 seconds behind Petra Majdic
2014: Therese Johaug
, started 23,8 seconds behind Astrid Uhrenholdt Jacobsen
Biggest lead ahead of the last stage
Men
2016: Martin Johnsrud Sundby
: 2 minutes 51 seconds.
Ladies
2015: Marit Bjoergen
: 2 minutes 11 seconds.
Youngest overall Tour winner
Men
2019: Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) 22y 76 days ; 2009: Dario Cologna
(SUI) 22y 299 days
Ladies
2008: Charlotte Kalla
(SWE) 20y 168 days
Oldest overall Tour winner
Men
2010: Lukas Bauer
(CZE) 32y 145 days
Ladies
2015: Marit Bjoergen
(NOR) 34y 296 days
Youngest athletes to finish Tour de Ski
Men
1. 2008: Andrey Parfenov (RUS) 20y 020 days
2. 2007: Ilia Chernousov (RUS) 20y 153 days
3. 2009: Andrey Gridin (KAZ) 20y 195 days
Ladies
1. 2010: Lisa Larsen (SWE) 19y 016 days
2. 2010: Marina Matrossova (KAZ) 19y 192 days
3. 2008: Therese Johaug
(NOR) 19y 195 days
Youngest athletes to participate in a Tour de Ski stage
Men
1. 2015: Yordan Chuchuganov (BUL) 18y 312 days
2. 2009: Tim Tscharnke (GER) 19y 014 days
3. 2008: Andrey Parfenov (RUS) 20y 011 days
Ladies
1. 2014: Chi Chunxue (CHN) 15y 358 days
2. 2013: Victoria Carl (GER) 17y 151 days
3. 2011: Helene Jacob (GER) 18y 289 days
Oldest athletes to participate in a stage
Men
1. 2016: Sergei Dolidovich (BLR) 42y 236 days
2. 2015: Giorgio Di Centa
(ITA) 42y 096 days
3. 2011: Jaak Mae (EST) 38y 318 days
Di Centa and Mae finished the Tour, while Dolidovich did not finish the second last stage. Dolidovich is still the second oldest to complete a Tour de Ski: 40y 232 days in 2014.
Ladies
1. 2014: Valentina Shevchenko
(UKR) 38y 095 days
2. 2010: Sabina Valbusa (ITA) 37y 354 days
3. 2009: Elena Antonova (KAZ) 37y 250 days
The first two also finished the Tour. The third oldest to finish a Tour de Ski is: 2010: Olga Savialova
(RUS) 37y 139 days
Most stage wins Tour de Ski
Men
1. Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) 21
2. Petter Northug (NOR) 13
3. Sergey Ustiugov (RUS) 9
4. Dario Cologna
(SUI) 7
4. Martin J. Sundby (NOR) 7
4. Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) 7
7. Alexey Poltoranin (KAZ) 6
7. Alexander Bolshunov (RUS) 6
8. Lukas Bauer
(CZE) 5
Ladies
1. Therese Johaug
(NOR) 16
1. Justyna Kowalczyk
(POL) 14
3. Marit Bjoergen
(NOR) 11
4. Ingvild Flugstad Ostberg (NOR) 11
5. Virpi Kuitunen
(FIN) 7
6. Petra Majdic
(SLO) 6
6. Stina Nilsson
(SWE) 6
Fastest time of Final Climb, last stage (only time on last stage, does not take into account possibly different courses):
Men
2018: Martin Johnsrud Sundby
(NOR) 28:36,4
Ladies
2018: Heidi Weng
(NOR) 32:11,5
Athletes who have finished 10 editions of the TDS
1: Petter Northug (NOR)
Athletes who have started 12 editions of the TDS
Ladies
1: Stefanie Böhler (GER)
Men
1: Devon Kershaw (CAN) & Jean Marc Gaillard (FRA)
Athletes who started in the most Tour de Ski stages
Ladies
1: Justyna Kowalczyk
68
2: Therese Johaug
67
3: Aino-Kaisa Saarinen
66
4: Stefanie Böhler 63
5: Valentina Shevchenko
60
5: Riitta-Liisa Roponen 60
Men
1: Petter Northug 75
2: Giorgio Di Centa
& Dario Cologna
67
3: Devon Kershaw
66
3: Jean Marc Gaillard 66
5: Alexander Legkov
61
5: Ivan Babikov 61
Most stage wins in one edition
Ladies
5: Marit Bjoergen
(2015)
Also most consecutive stage wins.
Men
5: Sergey Ustiogov (2017), Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (2019) & Alexander Bolshunov (2021)
Most consecutive stage wins men
5: Sergey Ustiogov (2017)
3: Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (2019)
2: Petter Northug (2010), Lukas Bauer (2010), Alexey Poltoranin (2013), Martin Johnsrud Sundby (2016, 2 times).
Overall winner of the Tour without winning a single stage
2013: Alexander Legkov
(RUS)