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  1. Yelena Valeryevna Välbe (Russian: Елена Валерьевна Вяльбе, née Trubitsyna; born 20 April 1968) is a Russian former cross-country skier. She won a record 14 gold medals (5 in relays) at the FIS World Championships , including all five golds in the 1997 edition .

  2. Oct 13, 2017 · Yelena Välbe was always known for her bold, no compromise performance on the ski tracks - the one that earned her 3 Olympic champion titles and incredible fourteen golds at the FIS World Championships. Now, running the Russian Cross Country Ski Federation and being the member of FIS cross count

  3. With 17 victories at the Olympic Games and World Championships, Yelena Välbe has won more major championships than any other female cross-country skier. She was World Cup champion in 1988-89, 1990-91 and 1991-92 and was favored to win several medals at the 1992 Olympic Winter Games. She succeeded in earning a medal in every event, but in the ...

    • Yelena Valeryevna•Välbe (Trubitsyna-)
    • Female
    • Competed in Olympic Games
    • Yelena•Välbe
  4. Nov 9, 2023 · Yelena Välbe, a Russian former cross-country skiing champion and current head of the Russian Ski Federation, has revealed her father is Ukrainian and her brother went to fight in Russia’s war ...

  5. Mar 4, 2021 · White Snow: Directed by Nikolay Khomeriki. With Olga Lerman, Fyodor Dobronravov, Nadezhda Markina, Anna Ukolova. A biographical sports drama about cross-country skier Yelena Välbe who became Olympic Champion and for the first time ever won 5 out 5 Gold medals at 1997 World Championship in Trondheim, Norway.

    • (185)
    • Biography, Drama, Sport
    • Nikolay Khomeriki
    • 2021-03-04
  6. Feb 20, 1998 · Yelena Välbe had won this event at the 1995 and 1997 World Championships, and won the 1996-97 distance World Cup. But her skiing in the 1997-98 was somewhat ordinary and she would not be a major factor, eventually finishing fifth, still her best individual finish in Hakuba.

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  8. 4 × 5 kilometres Relay, Women. Course Length: ? The heavy favorite was the Unified Team, which had won the 1991 World Championships as the Soviet Union. They were led by Lyubov Yegorova, who won five medals and three golds in Albertville, and Yelena Välbe, winner of five medals in 1992, with a bronze in every individual event.