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Daily Record
Daily Record
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Daniel Moxon & Hannah Mackenzie Wood

Skier suffers frozen penis at Winter Olympics leaving him in 'unbearable' pain

A cross-country skier was left in 'unbearable' pain after sustaining a brutal injury while competing at the Winter Olympics in Beijing.

In freezing-cold climates, racers must complete a lengthy course where they burn more than 1,000 calories per hour.

This year's 50km men's mass start event was made even more dangerous by piercing winds which battered athletes during the competition.

Organisers made the decision to shorten the distance to 30km to minimise the risk of frostbite, however the ruling was unpopular with some including Team GB's Andrew Musgrave.

Unfortunately for Remi Lindholm, the measure didn't stop the plummeting temperatures from freezing his private parts during the event, the Mirror reports.

The Finnish skier revealed after the race he had suffered a frozen penis during his 76 minutes on the course.

"You can guess which body part was a little bit frozen when I finished," he told Finnish outlet IL .

"It was one of the worst competitions I've been in. It was just about battling through."

Incredibly, it is not the first time he has suffered from such a bizarre injury – he first experienced a similar problem while racing in Ruka, in his homeland, last year.

Lindholm quickly to apply a heat pack once he had completed the course. (Getty Images)

That previous experience helped him to know what to do to remedy the problem when the race was over, but when he applied a heat pack the pain was worse this time.

"When the body parts started to warm up after the finish, the pain was unbearable," he added.

Sadly Lindholm could not take a medal in the event to make up for his discomfort, finishing 28th and some way off the leaders in the truncated race.

It was won by Russian Olympic Committee athlete Alexander Bolshunov, who collected a third cross-country skiing gold medal of these Games after dominating the field.

In total he won five medals in Beijing, added to the four he took home from PyeongChang in 2018 to make what has become an impressive personal haul of nine.

He won this race by being patient and waiting for the final lap of the 7.1km course to pounce and race clear of the rest of the front-runners.

Fellow ROC skier Ivan Yakimushkin finished six seconds behind in second place, just ahead of Norway's Simen Hegstad Krueger who took bronze.

Britain's Andrew Musgrave put in an admirable performance to finish 12th out of the 61-strong field, a significant improvement on his 46th-placed finish in the 15km classic event.

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