VAL DI FIEMME, ITALY — Jens Luraas Oftebro has been the most complete Nordic combined athlete at these Games, and on Monday he proved it again. The Norwegian claimed his second gold medal at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics in the individual Gundersen event, closing a commanding gap in the 10km cross-country leg to surge past rivals who had held brief leading positions and cross the finish line with the clinical efficiency that has defined his entire campaign in Italy.
Oftebro now stands as the undisputed star of Nordic combined at these Games — two starts, two golds — and his performance across both events has reinforced Norway's long-standing stranglehold on a discipline that the country essentially invented and has dominated at the Olympic level for over a century.
How the Race Unfolded
Nordic combined's Gundersen format determines the cross-country starting order from ski jumping scores: the better you jump, the earlier you start. Oftebro's jumping performance in the morning session placed him among the leaders at the start of the 10km race, though not so far ahead that he could simply coast to victory.
The early leaders — a German athlete and Japan's Ryota Yamamoto — pushed the pace through the first half of the course, hoping to build a gap large enough to hold off whatever Oftebro would bring in the final kilometers. The Norwegian was methodical in the early laps, settling into a controlled rhythm and conserving what would become a devastating late surge.
With roughly four kilometers remaining, Oftebro shifted gears. The change in pace was unmistakable — his stride rate increased, his upper body relaxed, and the gap to the leaders began to close with a geometric efficiency that left television commentators reaching for superlatives. By the two-kilometer mark he had pulled even. By the final kilometer, he was ahead and accelerating.
He crossed the line alone, raising his poles to the crowd gathered at the Val di Fiemme stadium.
"I knew I had it in the last few kilometers," Oftebro said. "I felt strong. I just had to execute. When I passed the German guy I didn't look back. I just skied to the finish."
A Double Gold Campaign That Defines These Games
Oftebro's first gold came earlier in the Milano Cortina program, and the degree of difficulty in defending that level of performance — with competitors analyzing your racing style and jumping technique between events — is considerable. He managed it with apparent ease.
At 24 years old, Oftebro is already establishing himself as one of the all-time Norwegian figures in a discipline where the bar for greatness is set extraordinarily high. His jumping is technically sophisticated, his cross-country speed is world-class, and his competitive composure — particularly in the final kilometers of races — has been unflappable across both events in Italy.
The double gold places him among Milan 2026's most decorated individual athletes and contributes significantly to Norway's lead atop the overall medal standings. Norway entered Day 11 as the clear table leader and this result deepens that advantage.
Nordic Combined and the Women's Event Controversy
Oftebro's victory was also the backdrop for renewed debate about the continued absence of women's Nordic combined from the Olympic program — a controversy that has followed the Games for years and intensified during Milano Cortina 2026.
Women's Nordic combined made its Olympic debut as a demonstration event during these Games, with several athletes and national federations using the media attention around the men's gold medal races to call for full inclusion alongside the men's program at future Olympics. The advocacy has been prominent and public, with protests staged near the Val di Fiemme venue.
Oftebro himself addressed the issue briefly in his post-race press conference: "The women's athletes work just as hard as we do. They deserve to be at the Olympics. It's pretty simple."
The IOC and FIS — the international ski federation — have yet to confirm a timeline for women's Nordic combined's full Olympic inclusion, despite growing pressure from athletes, coaches, and fan communities across the sport.
Norway's Dominant Overall Campaign
This latest gold continues what has been an exceptional Games for Norway — a country whose Winter Olympic success is so consistent that it often understates the quality of individual performances within it. The Norwegians won six medals in a single day earlier in the competition window and have maintained their lead at the top of the standings despite competitive challenges from Italy, the USA, and Germany.
Nordic combined — along with cross-country skiing and biathlon — represents one of the disciplines where Norway's sporting culture provides the deepest competitive foundation. Children grow up on skis. The sport's culture is embedded at every level of Norwegian society. Oftebro is the latest expression of that culture performing at its highest level on the world's largest stage.