Saudi Prince Khaled bin Alwaleed joins board of directors of function fitness firm iF3

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Saudi Arabia’s Prince Khaled bin Alwaleed has joined the board of directors at US-based International Functional Fitness Federation (iF3), the firm announced on Tuesday. (Supplied)
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Prince Khaled, who is president of the Saudi Sports for All Federation, is a dedicated athlete. The SFA joined as a member of iF3 last month. (Supplied)
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Updated 09 July 2024
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Saudi Prince Khaled bin Alwaleed joins board of directors of function fitness firm iF3

  • Saudi Sports for All Federation joined iF3 as a member last month

LONDON: Saudi Arabia’s Prince Khaled bin Alwaleed has joined the board of directors at US-based International Functional Fitness Federation (iF3), the firm announced on Tuesday.

Prince Khaled, who is president of the Saudi Sports for All Federation, is a dedicated athlete. The SFA joined as a member of iF3 last month.

Prince Khaled, who is also on the board of directors at the Saudi Olympic and Paralympic Committee and the Saudi Universities Sports Federation, said he sees physical activity and sports participation as integral to his daily life, having found functional fitness in 2016.

He credited his fitness routine as one of the main drivers of his continued physical and mental health, and said it helps with his other physical pursuits, which range from obstacle and endurance-based challenges to golf, tennis, and running.

Prince Khaled also serves on the Saudi Arabian Health in All Policies committee, tasked with ensuring that health and wellness metrics are considered in all of the country’s policy formation.

He expressed his excitement about joining the iF3 board, and said that he will begin work immediately.

“I hope to play a role in the iF3’s aims to increase awareness, participation, and proliferation of functional fitness globally, and contribute to the board’s successful track record of establishing a global footprint,” he said.

iF3 President Gretchen Kittelberger welcomed the prince to the board.

“We are thrilled to have Prince Khaled joining the iF3 board of directors,” she said.

“His love and understanding for the sport, coupled with his experience in the sports governance sector and his knowledge of business, make him an invaluable asset to iF3. We know he will make a lasting impact on the iF3 board and help us elevate our sport to the next level.”


Klaebo becomes 1st athlete to win 6 golds at a Winter Games as Norway sweeps 50km mass start

Updated 21 February 2026
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Klaebo becomes 1st athlete to win 6 golds at a Winter Games as Norway sweeps 50km mass start

  • Klaebo’s victory in the 50-kilometer mass start race shattered the nearly 50-year record
  • Klaebo said he was overwhelmed with emotions crossing the finish line

TESERO, Italy: Norway’s Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo completed his historic gold medal sweep of the men’s cross-country skiing events on Saturday by winning his sixth race and setting the record for the most golds by one athlete in a single Winter Olympics.
Klaebo’s victory in the 50-kilometer mass start race shattered the nearly 50-year record set by American speed skater Eric Heiden, who won five golds in the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics.
All of Heiden’s wins were in individual races and two of Klaebo’s have come in team events, so Heiden’s record for individual wins still stands.
Klaebo said he was overwhelmed with emotions crossing the finish line and couldn’t describe how he felt after repeating the feat he accomplished at last year’s world championships in Trondheim, Norway, when he won all six events.
“It’s unbelievable,” he said. “It still feels really good to race, and I’m always looking forward to going out there and fighting for the medal.”
Klaebo’s teammates, Martin Loewstroem Nyenget, took silver, and Emil Iversen, won bronze in a Norwegian sweep.
“I’m starting to believe maybe he is a machine,” Nyenget said of Klaebo, who sprinted uphill past him at the end to win in his trademark fashion. “It’s close to impossible to beat him in the finish.”
The three Norwegians broke out to an early lead and then continued to build the gap on their chasers.
In the final lap, Nyenget and Klaebo pushed uphill and dropped Iversen. Klaebo stayed in second waiting to launch his winning move.
As the two reached the final hill, Klaebo literally ran away from Nyenget and was bound for glory.
As he glided toward the finish, he pointed his fingers toward the sky, took one stride across the line, toppled over on his right hip and rolled onto his back.
France’s Theo Schely finished fourth, nearly three minutes back and Savelii Korostelev, a Russian competing as an individual neutral athlete, finished fifth at 3:38.3 back.
The highest-placed US skier was Gus Schumacher, who won a silver in a team relay, in 13th place.
The win extends Klaebo’s record for most career Winter Olympic gold medals to 11 over three Games. The previous record had been eight, which Klaebo broke Feb. 15.
Klaebo has the second-most Olympic golds overall. US swimming great Michael Phelps has 23.
The win gave Norway a record 18th gold medal and further increased their lead in the total medal count in these games to 40 overall.
The country set the record Friday for the most gold medals won by a nation at a single Winter Olympics when biathlete Johannes Dale-Skjevdal won the 15-kilometer mass start race.