Women’s Nordic Combine Fights for their Place in the Olympic Games

Nordic Combined USA and Nordic Combined News Launch Campaign to Demand Gender Equality at 2030 Olympics and beyond

An updated petition and advocacy efforts call on the IOC to add women’s Nordic Combined and preserve men’s tradition as a decision looms.

Nordic Combined USA and Nordic Combined News announced a joint campaign urging the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to include Women’s Nordic Combined in the 2030 Olympic Winter Games program while maintaining the men’s event that has been part of the Games since 1924.

 Nordic Combined is a winter sport combining ski jumping and cross-country skiing. It has been part of the Winter Olympics since 1924, making it one of the original Olympic winter sports. Women’s World Cup competition began in 2020 and has experienced rapid growth in participation, viewership, and competitive depth.

 In 2022, the IOC rejected women’s Nordic Combined for the 2026 Games, citing concerns about the sport’s readiness. Since then, women athletes have systematically responded to and resolved each of those concerns:

World Cup events nearly doubled from nine in the 2021-22 season to 17 in 2025-26

Viewership increased: Women’s Nordic Combined viewership grew 25% in the 2024-25 season

12 nations competed at the 2025 World Championships in front of an estimated 20,000 fans.

6 different nations in the top 6 current World Cup Standings, and three US women finished in the top 10 at the January 2026 World Cups in Otepää, Estonia and Seefeld, Austria.

   Three American women are currently ranked in the world’s top 11: Alexa Brabec #2, Annika Malacinski #10, Tara Geraghty-Moats #11. All would be legitimate medal contenders if given the opportunity to compete.

   The situation is particularly striking for the Malacinski family. While Annika’s brother will represent Team USA in men’s Nordic Combined at the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympics, Annika, despite her world-class ranking, will watch from the sidelines.

Campaign Elements

The joint campaign includes:

Updated petition calling on the IOC to add women’s Nordic Combined and preserve men’s Nordic Combined

Digital advocacy toolkit for influencers and supporters to share the athletes’ stories

Outreach to the 21,000 petition signers from 2022, mobilizing them to amplify their voices

Social media campaign featuring athlete stories, including the film Where She Lands about Annika Malacinski’s journey

Rather than adding women’s events to achieve the gender parity the IOC has promised, the organization is considering eliminating men’s Nordic Combined, a foundational winter sport that has been part of every Winter Olympics since the first Games in Chamonix in 1924.

“Removing a century-old Olympic tradition doesn’t solve inequality. It compounds it,” said Brabec. “Nordic Combined uses existing facilities. It requires no additional infrastructure. There is no reason to eliminate the men’s event when the right solution is so clear: add the women.”

Nordic Combined is uniquely cost-efficient, utilizing existing ski jumping hills and cross-country courses already built for Olympic venues. Adding women’s events requires no new facilities or infrastructure investment, making it one of the most economical ways to advance gender equality in the Winter Games.

Nordic Combined USA is the national governing body for Nordic Combined in the United States, supporting athlete development, competition, and advocacy for the sport at all levels.

Nordic Combined USA and Nordic Combined News are calling on supporters to:

Sign and share the updated petition at:

https://c.org/Xn5njYN2hh 

Watch and share Where She Lands, the film about Annika Malacinski’s journey:

https://youtu.be/MC6naKkdo1c?si=TMA7ySponc4cGGVz 

Contact the IOC via social media (@olympics) to show your support,

And -Tune in to the men’s Nordic Combined events during the Winter Olympics to show there is interest in the sport. 



SPONSOR


MTN Town Media Productions | Celebrating the Colorado mountain lifestyle for 15 Years

Copyright ©2026 MTN Town Media Productions, all rights reserved