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Finland Takes Olympic Chill To The Next Level: Team Knitting

Finnish snowboard coach Antti Koskinen, who knits during competition, has become an Olympic folk hero.
Screengrab by NPR
/
NBC
Finnish snowboard coach Antti Koskinen, who knits during competition, has become an Olympic folk hero.

Finland has a tendency to beguile. Saunas are so important that both the president and prime minister keep official ones. The country has the most heavy metal bands per capita. It's experimenting with a basic income. Its language has no future tense.

And in an unexpected moment during the weekend's Olympic slopestyle competition, the Nordic nation showed off another delightful quality: a passion for knitting.

In a video on NBC's website, snowboarding coach Antti Koskinen is seen nonchalantly knitting at the top of the course while Finnish snowboarder Roope Tonteri gets ready to ride.

Koskinen glances up from his project (something involving black yarn), passes the needles to one hand, and fist-bumps Tonteri. Then he goes back to knitting.

People watching at home went wild for the contented crafter, and the feverish screen-grabbing began.

"The Finnish coach is KNITTING at the top of the slopestyle course. Someone please find out what this man is making!!!" tweeted one Canadian fan.

Finland's Olympic team was quick to demonstrate that the love for knitting is not limited to Koskinen: It posted photos of its team hanging out in sock feet, working on a blanket for its president's newborn son. (The project has become something of a tradition: at Sochi, the team worked to knit a giant scarf.)

"This is lovely," replied one Canadian fan. "Will we get to see the blanket when it's completed?"

"Of course!" the team answered, adding a little blue heart and the Finnish flag.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Laurel Wamsley is a reporter for NPR's News Desk. She reports breaking news for NPR's digital coverage, newscasts, and news magazines, as well as occasional features. She was also the lead reporter for NPR's coverage of the 2019 Women's World Cup in France.
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