Øystein Pettersen Explained

Øystein Pettersen
Nationality:
Birth Date:19 January 1983
Birth Place:Linderud, Oslo, Norway
Height:1.81m (05.94feet)
Club:Bækkelagets SK, Oslo
Lillomarka SK, Oslo
Seasons:12 – (20032014)
Wins:0
Teamwins:1
Totalpodiums:6
Teampodiums:3
Individual Starts:88
Team Starts:7
Wcoveralls:0 – (28th in 2008)
Wctitles:0
Show-Medals:yes

Øystein "Pølsa" Pettersen (born 19 January 1983 in Linderud) is a former Norwegian cross-country skier, television personality and podcast host who competed professionally from 2002 to 2019. He has six World Cup podiums, his best finish being second in individual sprint events. Together with Petter Northug he won gold medal in the team sprint event at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Canada. In the Individual Sprint he was one of three Norwegians to reach the six-man final.

In 2020 he was a contestant in the celebrity edition of the norwegian TV show, 71° Nord[1] and in 2021 he took part in Mesternes Mester.[2]

Pettersen also hosts his own podcast called Skipodden.[3] A comedy style podcast about training and life, with an extra focus on winter sports. Skipodden has had many prominent guests including John Arne Riise, Marit Bjørgen, Gunde Svan and Petter Northug.

Athletic career

Pettersen began competing in national events in 2002 and in junior international events in 2003. Although he has competed in dozens of events, he only finished in the top three at World Cup events five times, including second-place finished in Germany in 2006 and in Estonia in 2009. He did not compete in the 2006 Winter Olympics, but did win a gold medal that year in the Scandinavian championships.

Pettersen was selected to join the Norwegian team at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Canada. In his first Olympic event, the individual sprint, he placed sixth, one of three Norwegians who made it to the final competition round.[4] He later won a gold medal with teammate Petter Northug in the team sprint event in a close finish with teams from Germany and Russia. Originally, Pettersen was not going to compete in the event, but a last-minute withdrawal by world champion Ola Vigen Hattestad due to illness left a slot open, and Pettersen was chosen to fill it.[5] A number of teams were in contention following Pettersen's performance during the first leg of the race, and it was not until the last hill that Northug passed his opponents and took the lead entering the stadium where the race finished.[5]

Cross-country skiing results

All results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS).[6]

Olympic Games

World Cup

Season standings

 Season  Age Discipline standingsSki Tour standings
OverallDistanceSprintNordic
Opening
Tour de
Ski
World Cup
Final
20 119 62
21 141 63
22
23 68 26
24 28 54 12 53
25 40 13
26 44 13
27 34 88 1418
28 57 20 32
29 53 19
30 73 33
31 111 94 66 32

Individual podiums

No.SeasonDateLocationRaceLevelPlace
1  2006–07 28 October 2006 Düsseldorf, Germany 1.5 km Sprint FWorld Cup 2nd
2  2007–08 16 December 2007 Rybinsk, Russia 1.2 km Sprint FWorld Cup 3rd
3  2008–09 25 January 2009 Otepää, Estonia 1.4 km Sprint CWorld Cup 2nd
4  2009–10 28 November 2009 Rukatunturi, Finland 1.4 km Sprint CWorld Cup 2nd
5  2010–11 4 December 2010 Düsseldorf, Germany 1.7 km Sprint FWorld Cup 3rd
6  2011–12 25 November 2011 Rukatunturi, Finland 1.4 km Sprint CStage World Cup 3rd

Team podiums

No.SeasonDateLocationRaceLevelPlaceTeammate(s)
1  2006–07 29 October 2006 Düsseldorf, Germany 6 × 1.5 km Team Sprint F World Cup 2nd Rønning
2 25 March 2007 Falun, Sweden 4 × 10 km Relay C/F World Cup 1st Hjelmeset / Estil / Northug
3  2013–14 22 December 2013 Asiago, Italy 6 × 1.65 km Team Sprint C World Cup 3rd Brandsdal

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Øystein Pettersen er i risikogruppen: Her er hans oppfordring. 14 April 2021. www.vg.no. 28 March 2020 . nb.
  2. Web site: Eilertsen. Henriette. 1 January 2021. Trakk seg: – Gråt av smerte. 14 April 2021. dagbladet.no. no.
  3. Web site: Hansen. Ole Jonny Eriksrud. 17 November 2020. Niklas Dyrhaug avslører bekymring. Får klar støtte av ekspert: – Risikerer å gå på en kjempesmell. 14 April 2021. Nettavisen. no.
  4. Web site: Men's Individual Sprint Classic – Finals . Vancouver 2010 . 17 February 2010 . 22 February 2010.
  5. News: Cross-Country Skiing: Norway storm to men's team sprint gold . Agence France-Presse . Vancouver 2010 . 22 February 2010 . 22 February 2010.
  6. Web site: PETTERSEN Oeystein. . FIS-Ski . International Ski Federation . 6 January 2020.