World Cup standings after Canmore
Canmore, Canada, was the place for another stage of this year’s cross-country skiing World Cup. The Canmore World Cup started on Friday, February 9, with a 15km (4×3.75km) mass start race in freestyle technique (instead of a 10km interval start in freestyle technique initially planned), followed by a sprint race in freestyle technique on Saturday, February 10, a 20km mass start race in classic technique on Sunday, February 11, and a sprint race in classic technique on Tuesday, February 13.
The article continues below.
Below, you can check the rankings for the sprint, distance, overall competitions, U23, Nations Cup, and prize money standings after the Canmore World Cup.
FIS World Cup Standings after Canmore
Sprint World Cup – Standings after Sprint C Final Canmore
Women – Top 5
- Linn Svahn (SWE), 855 points
- Kristine Stavås Skistad (NOR), 677 points
- Emma Ribom (SWE), 621 points
- Jessie Diggins (USA), 605 points
- Jonna Sundling (SWE), 603 points
Men – Top 5
- Erik Valnes (NOR), 755 points
- Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR), 754 points
- Lucas Chanavat (FRA), 640 points
- Håvard Solås Taugbøl (NOR), 522 points
- Harald Østberg Amundsen (NOR), 510 points
Distance World Cup – Standings after 20km Mass Start C Canmore
Women – Top 5
- Jessie Diggins (USA), 1198 points
- Ebba Andersson (SWE), 977 points
- Rosie Brennan (USA), 940 points
- Victoria Carl (GER), 937 points
- Heidi Weng (NOR), 909 points
Men – Top 5
- Harald Østberg Amundsen (NOR), 1109 points
- Pål Golberg (NOR), 939 points
- Simen Hegstad Krüger (NOR), 793 points
- Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR), 789 points
- Martin Løwstrøm Nyenget (NOR), 734 points
Overall World Cup – Standings after Sprint C Final Canmore
Women – Top 5
- Jessie Diggins (USA), 2103 points
- Linn Svahn (SWE), 1843 points
- Frida Karlsson (SWE), 1675 points
- Rosie Brennan (USA), 1524 points
- Victoria Carl (GER), 1492 points
Men – Top 5
- Harald Østberg Amundsen (NOR), 1919 points
- Erik Valnes (NOR), 1643 points
- Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR), 1543 points
- Pål Golberg (NOR), 1422 points
- Friedrich Moch (GER), 1017 points
Overall World Cup U23 – Standings after Canmore
Women – Top 5
- Margrethe Bergane (NOR), 658 points
- Nadja Kälin (SUI), 215 points
- Novie McCabe (USA), 188 points
- Samantha Smith (USA), 187 points
- Maria Hartz Melling (NOR), 151 points
Men – Top 5
- Edvin Anger (SWE), 744 points
- Elia Barp (ITA), 552 points
- Matz William Jenssen (NOR), 363 points
- Niilo Moilanen (FIN), 247 points
- Zanden McMullen (USA), 241 points
World Cup Nations Cup – Standings after Canmore
Women – Top 5
- Sweden, 6755 points
- Norway, 5066 points
- United States of America, 4965 points
- Germany, 4215 points
- Finland, 3883 points
Men – Top 5
- Norway, 7227 points
- Sweden, 4196 points
- France, 3860 points
- Finland, 3198 points
- United States of America, 2623 points
Overall – Top 5
- Norway, 12293 points
- Sweden, 10951 points
- United States of America, 7588 points
- Finland, 7081 points
- Germany, 6439 points
World Cup Prize Money – Standings after Canmore
Women – Top 5
- Jessie Diggins (USA), CHF 201.300
- Linn Svahn (SWE), CHF 126.700
- Frida Karlsson (SWE), CHF 114.300
- Heidi Weng (NOR), CHF 96.350
- Kerttu Niskanen (FIN), CHF 78.300
Men – Top 5
- Harald Østberg Amundsen (NOR), CHF 160.700
- Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (NOR), CHF 145.150
- Erik Valnes (NOR), CHF 119.350
- Friedrich Moch (GER), CHF 78.025
- Pål Golberg (NOR), CHF 74.800
Nations Overall – Top 5
- Norway, CHF 12.293
- Sweden, CHF 10.951
- United States of America, CHF 7.588
- Finland, CHF 7.081
- Germany, CHF 6.439
Read More –World Cup calendar for the 2023/2024 Winter Season
After Canmore in Canada, the World Cup heads to the USA (Minneapolis).
After North America, the World Cup returns to Scandinavia to end the season with weekends in Finland (Lahti), Norway (Oslo and Drammen), and Sweden (Falun).
2023/2024 Cross-Country Skiing World Cup Calendar
Period I – Before Christmas
- November 24-26: Ruka, Finland
- November 24 – Sprint C
- November 25 – 10km C
- November 26 – 20km Mass Start F
- December 2-3: Gällivare, Sweden
- December 2 – 10km F
- December 3 – Relay 4×7.5km C/F
- December 9-10: Östersund, Sweden
- December 9 – Sprint C
- December 10 – 10km F
- December 15-17: Trondheim, Norway
- December 15 – Sprint F
- December 16 – 20km Skiathlon C/F
- December 17 – 10km C
Period II – Tour de Ski
- December 30: Toblach, Italy – Sprint F
- December 31: Toblach, Italy – 10km C
- January 1: Toblach, Italy – 25km Pursuit F
- January 3: Davos, Switzerland – Sprint F
- January 4: Davos, Switzerland – 20km Pursuit C
- January 6: Val di Fiemme, Italy – 15km Mass Start C
- January 7: Val di Fiemme, Italy – 10km Final Climb F
Period III – Two New Organizers
- January 19-21: Oberhof, Germany
- January 19 – Sprint C
- January 20 – 20km Mass Start C
- January 21 – Relay 4×7.5km C/F
- January 26-28: Goms, Switzerland
- January 26 – Mixed Relay 4×7.5km C/F
- January 27 Sprint F
- January 28 – 20km Mass Start F
Period IV – North America
- February 9-13: Canmore, Canada
- February 9 –
10km F15km Mass Start F - February 10 – Sprint F
- February 11 – 20km Mass Start C
- February 13 – Sprint C
- February 9 –
- February 17-18: Minneapolis, USA
- February 17 – Sprint F
- February 18 – 10km F
Period V – Scandinavia
- March 1-3: Lahti, Finland
- March 1 – Team Sprint C
- March 2 – 20km C
- March 3 – Sprint F
- March 9-10: Oslo, Norway
- March 9 – 50km Mass Start C Women
- March 10 – 50km Mass Start C Men
- March 12: Drammen, Norway
- March 12 – Sprint C
- March 15-17: Falun, Sweden
- March 15 – Sprint C
- March 16 – 10km C
- March 17 – 20km Mass Start F