At the same time as the ladies have lined up podium places and gold medals in recent years, the Swedish men have had it all the tougher.   

When Oskar Svensson first went to the last hill and then sprinted down the opposition in the race during the classic sprint at the Tour de Ski last year, it was the first blue-yellow sprint World Cup victory on the men's side since 2014.   

The documentary shows how much the victory meant, not only for Oskar Svensson but the entire Swedish length squad.   

- I never think I have been as euphoric as I was that day.

He did something no one else did: he first ran down the hill.

It's so cocky, it's so cool that he succeeded, says Linn Svahn.  

The winning tactics were carefully planned

The jerk in the last downhill run, when the riders played cat and rat with each other, was a well-worked out plan according to Oskar Svensson himself.   

- Many thought it was an impulse thing, but really every meter from the top to the finish was exactly what we stood and reasoned about before the start, he says in the documentary.   

The 25-year-old Falu skier also received an unexpected gift during the celebration in the wall bus: a wall can where the team had scraped down the retaining wall from the skis he used during the race, as a memory from the day of victory.   

- The best thing about the whole day has been the reactions afterwards.

To get to the finish line for this atmosphere, says a smiling Oskar Svensson.