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Countdown is Over: Diggins, Brennan Top 10 in First Race of 2024-25 World Cup Season 

By Leann Bentley - Stifel U.S. Ski Team
November, 29 2024
Rosie Brennan
Rosie Brennan races in the 10k classic in Ruka, Finland. (NordicFocus)

The 2024-25 season officially began with the 10k classic individual start in Ruka, Finland, with two in the top ten, including Jessie Diggins in seventh and Rosie Brennan in ninth. Schumacher led the men’s team in 18th.

This season, athletes will compete in 15 weeks of races, including the annual Tour de Ski and then World Championships, totaling more than 30 competitions. Kicking off in Ruka, the home of the first World Cup of the season, the Finnish crowds welcomed back the best skiers in the world to their course, which included some of the steepest hills and ripping descents on the circuit. Athletes kicked out the start gate every 30 seconds in the individual start format. 

For the women, the U.S. athletes competing included Haley Brewster, Julia Kern, Sydney Palmer-Leger, Brennan, Diggins, Sophia Laukli, and Alayna Sonnesyn of Team Birkie. For the men, Ben Ogden was back in the start gate after a season cut short due to illness, alongside teammates Schumacher, Zanden McMullen, Michael Earnhart, and Alaska Pacific University athlete Hunter Wonders. John Steel Hagenbuch did not start. 

Women Take on Ruka 10k

The women started the day with U.S. National Champion and University of Vermont athlete Haley Brewster out first for the team. As athlete after athlete left the start, one name that stood out was Norway’s Therese Johaug. Johaug retired in 2022 and is back on the World Cup circuit. Her storied career includes 83 individual World Cup wins, six Olympic medals (four gold) and 14x World Championship medals. Through the various checkpoints on the course, the U.S. women were putting up solid splits, led by Diggins and Brennan. Brennan, who started last season with a podium result in this specific race, showed consistent times among the strong field. Then came Frida Karlsson of Sweden. 25-year-old Karlsson, coming off a competitive 2023-24 season, skied a strong race and put down split times that Diggins, Brennan, or Johaug couldn’t catch. 

At the finish line, Karlsson was the ultimate victor by 46 seconds, ahead of Johaug in second and Norway’s Astrid Oyere Slind in third. Diggins, whose summer training focused on classic skiing, put up a seventh-place time to secure her first top 10 of the World Cup season. Brennan was eight seconds behind Diggins, putting up a ninth-place result, notching another top 10 to her strong results list. As veterans of the Stifel U.S. Ski Team, with  331 career World Cup starts for Diggins and 247 for Brennan, today's results further solidify their competitiveness on the world stage. For the team, with Diggins and Brennan in the top 10, Laukli followed in 31st, Sonnesyn in 48th, Kern 49th, Palmer-Leger 56th, and Brewster 57th. 

“Today felt like a decent start to the season,” said Brennan. “I felt strong but didn’t quite have the pace I knew I needed to compete with the top. There were no major red flags, so I am taking it as a good place to start, move forward, and work toward the rest of the season!” 

“I was stoked on my classic skiing today,” Diggins said. “I think this was the first time in my career that I could kick up the entire north hill on my first lap - definitely not on my second lap because I went out really hard and was tired! But i was honestly really happy with today and really excited for the rest of the season.” 

Men’s Turn in Ruka
The snow began to fall harder for the men, the tracks became more slick, and the kick wax became even more critical for a good race. For the Americans, Ogden was out at the start first. Ogden, whose 2023-24 season was cut short due to illness, put together a strong summer of training, leading him to be more than ready to get back to competing - evidenced by his smile on the start line and ripping tempo out of the gate. Ogden was followed by teammate McMullen and Schumacher, who threw down solid times through the checkpoints. 

More on Ogden being back, “I certainly missed the people most. Being back with everyone on the U.S. team and beyond is so much fun. I missed chumming with the whole World Cup squad, and cross country skiing is a small community. Sometimes, I don’t appreciate how awesome everyone from all the nations is until I have to leave them for a while. Congratulating everyone after the races and getting fired up is just so fun.”

Livo Niskanen of Finland was putting on a clinic for his hometown crowd, leading the charge through the checkpoints. Niskanen stood atop the podium, Amundsen took second place, and Nyenget third. Schumacher put together a strong race for the Americans, adding another top 20 with his 18th place result to his resume, and is going into tomorrow’s classic sprint on the right foot. The U.S. men put three in the top 30, including Ogden in 29th and McMullen in 30th. Ketterson was 36th, Wonders 46th, and Earnhart 53rd. 

Next is the classic sprint tomorrow, Nov. 30th, with qualifications kicking off at 3:00 AM ET and heats/finals at 5:30 a.m. ET. Watch LIVE on skiandsnowboard.live

RESULTS
Women
Men