Fossavatngangan | |
Status: | active |
Genre: | sporting event |
Date: | April |
Frequency: | annual |
Location: | Ísafjörður |
Country: | Iceland |
Fossavatnsgangan is an annual ski marathon held in Ísafjörður, in the Westfjords of Iceland. The event has been a part of Worldloppet since 2014.[1] [2]
It is the oldest ski race in Iceland, held since 1935.[3] [4] [2] Although it was cancelled several times in the 1940s and 1950s, the race has been held every year since 1956.
Initially a 20 km race, a shorter distance of 10 km was added in 1987, and in 1989 a 7 kilometre course followed to attract children and beginners.[3] The currently longest race over the distance of 50 km has only been held since 2004 and due to its challenges and difficulties has increasingly attracted international professional skiers, particularly Norwegians.[3] In 2005 this 50 km marathon was added to the FIS, and that same year Fossavatn became a founding partner of the FIS Nordic Ski Marathon Cup, a series which includes the Holmenkollen Skimaraton in Norway, Tornedalsloppet in Sweden, Oulun Tervahiihto in Finland and the Fossavatn Ski Marathon in Iceland.[3]
The most successful athlete of the marathon since its inception in 1935 is a local skier named Kristján Rafn Gudmundsson, 12 times winner of the Fossavatn Ski Marathon in the 1960s and 1970s.[3] The most prolific competitor is another local named Sigurður Jónsson who first competed in 1938.[3] [4]
Year | Name | Nation | |
---|---|---|---|
1994 – 21 km | Gísli Einar Árnason | Iceland | |
1995 – 21 km | Einar Ólafsson | Iceland | |
1996 – 21 km | Gísli Einar Árnason | Iceland | |
1997 – 21 km | Einar Ólafsson | Iceland | |
1998 – 21 km | Iceland | ||
1999 – 21 km | Iceland | ||
2000 – 21 km | Iceland | ||
2001 – 21 km | Iceland | ||
2002 – 21 km | Iceland | ||
2003 – 21 km | Iceland | ||
2004 | Iceland | ||
2005 | Atle Bjerkli | Norway | |
2006 | Jørgen Aukland | Norway | |
2007 | Oskar Svärd | Sweden | |
2008 | Svein Tore Sinnes | Norway | |
2009 | Oskar Svärd | Sweden | |
2010 | Markus Jönsson | Sweden | |
2011 | Vadim Gusev | Lithuania | |
2012 | Markus Jönsson | Sweden | |
2013 | Toni Livers | Switzerland | |
2014 | Petter Soleng Skinstad | Norway | |
2015 | Ilia Chernousov | Russia | |
2016 | Markus Ottosson | Sweden | |
2017 | Petter Northug | Norway | |
2018 | Ilia Chernousov | Russia | |
2019 | Morten Eide Pedersen | Norway | |
2020 | |||
2021 | Snorri Einarsson | Iceland | |
2022 | Snorri Einarsson | Iceland | |
2023 | Mathias Aas Rolid | ||
2024 | Magnus Waaler | ||
Year | Name | Nation | |
---|---|---|---|
1995 – 21 km | Vigdís Harðardóttir | Iceland | |
1996 – 21 km | Helga Margrét Malmquist | Iceland | |
1997 – 21 km | Stella Hjaltadóttir | Iceland | |
1998 – 21 km | Sigrún Sólbjört Halldórsdóttir | Iceland | |
1999 – 21 km | Stella Hjaltadóttir | Iceland | |
2000 – 21 km | Katrín Árnadóttir | Iceland | |
2001 – 21 km | Stella Hjaltadóttir | Iceland | |
2002 – 21 km | Sanda Dís Steinþórsdóttir | Iceland | |
2003 – 21 km | Jóna Lind Karlsdóttir | Iceland | |
2004 | Linda Ramsdell | United States | |
2005 | Linda Ramsdell | United States | |
2006 | Mary Beth Tuttle | United States | |
2007 | Susanne Nyström | Sweden | |
2008 | Lina Andersson | Sweden | |
2009 | Kim Rudd | United States | |
2010 | Mary Beth Tuttle | United States | |
2011 | Hólmfríður Vala Svavarsdóttir | Iceland | |
2012 | Aino-Kaisa Saarinen | Finland | |
2013 | Seraina Boner | Switzerland | |
2014 | Mary J Young | Canada | |
2015 | Riitta-Liisa Roponen | Finland | |
2016 | Justyna Kowalczyk | Poland | |
2017 | Britta Johansson Norgren | Sweden | |
2018 | Maria Gräfnings | Sweden | |
2019 | Marine Dusser | France | |
2020 | |||
2021 | Iris Pessey | France | |
2022 | Andrea Kolbeinsdóttir | Iceland | |
2023 | Nadja Kaelin | Switzerland | |
2024 | Anikken Gjerde Alnæs | Norway | |