Victories by Diggins and Schumacher Highlight American Birkebeiner

John TeafordFebruary 25, 2024
Gus Schumacher and Jessie Diggins celebrate their victories in the 50th American Birkebeiner. (Photo: (c) 2024 American Birkebeiner Ski Foundation)

It hasn’t always been the same race, but it has always been the American Birkebeiner. Courses have changed, directions have changed, ski techniques have changed, conditions have changed, field sizes have changed, reputations have changed. Thin snow conditions across the American Midwest even necessitated that his year’s race was not even contested on the Telemark trail between Cable and Hayward, but over five laps of a ten kilometer loop painstakingly preserved just for this event. Everything was quite different this year—one of the lowest snow-accumulation years in Wisconsin’s history—but the result may become the most memorable ever . . .

Hot on the heels of their podium performances at the World Cup events in Minneapolis, Jessie Diggins and Gus Schumacher raced to victory across the 50 kilometers of the 50th American Birkebeiner, authoring a suitable conclusion to the story of Team USA’s North American tour, and punctuating the success of America’s most loved, most famous, and most traditional cross-country ski race.

Gus Schumacher confirmed the fine form—and the world-beating potential—that he unveiled during his historic victory last week in the World Cup 10 k Freestyle at the Stifel Loppet Cup in Minneapolis. Evidently, his form is still holding as he handled the best efforts of a national-class field in this much longer 50 kilometer race. Sharing the American Birkebeiner podium with Schumacher were Sam Hendry (CAN/Univ. Utah) and David Norris (USA).

“I was planning on sticking around, no matter what,” commented Schumacher after Saturday’s race. “My mom was going to race and had already gotten a rental house, and it didn’t make sense to travel anywhere else when it was just a week gap. I was never really decided on whether I’d actually race, though. I mostly just wanted to stick around to have a chill week and see the spectacle that is the Birkie! My decision to race was ultimately decided by the race day conditions being fast and less hilly than the normal course, so it wouldn’t be too hard on my body. And also it has been a pretty tiring week post-Minneapolis but I’ve kept the training light and enjoyed it so I had plenty of energy this weekend and even today afterwards, so I think I’m set up nicely for the last few weeks of racing!!”
A childhood goal, a ski-career highlight, a lifetime in the making: Jessie Diggins stands atop the Elite Podium at the American Birkebeiner—with Flora Dolci second, and Alayna Sonnesyn third. (Photo: (c) 2024 American Birkebeiner Ski Foundation)

Way back in 2008, a teenage Jessie Diggins won the 23 kilometer Korteloppet. It’s likely that, at that time, a dream may have been born in the imagination of this talented young American skier: one day, she could stand atop the elite podium at the American Birkebeiner. 2024 will be remembered as the season when she realized that dream, standing on that podium with Flora Dolci (ITA) in second, and Alayna Sonnesyn (USA) third. While this podium will not be the most famous, the most coveted, or the most lauded of those in Diggins’ career, today’s podium certainly represented the realization of a long-cherished dream. Jessie Diggins came home to the American Midwest, and was crowned the champion she may always have imagined she could be. She’ll remember this podium for a long long time . . . and fans of the American Birkebeiner will always remember her standing atop it.

“The Birkie is a race that’s been a huge part of the winter for my family for as long as I’ve been alive,” commented Diggins. “I’ve always wanted to race it, but it lines up during World Championships or Olympics, so this year the stars finally aligned with a break in the world cups while I was back in Minnesota! I’m so glad I got to ski the race, it was an incredible experience and amazing atmosphere.”

2024 American Birkebeiner RESULTS

John Teaford

John Teaford—the Managing Editor of FasterSkier — has been the coach of Olympians, World Champions, and World Record Holders in six sports: Nordic skiing, speedskating, road cycling, track cycling, mountain biking, triathlon. In his long career as a writer/filmmaker, he spent many seasons as Director of Warren Miller’s annual feature film, and Producer of adventure documentary films for Discovery, ESPN, Disney, National Geographic, and NBC Sports.

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