From Norway’s Fjords to the Top of the World

Sport

11/06/2026 - 08:30
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Pia Dahl Andersen and Nora Edland crossed the finish line first in the final race of the 49erFX World Championships in Quiberon, France, clinching Norway’s first-ever 49erFX world title by a single point over Spain’s Paula Barceló and Maria Cantero.

They were the only Norwegian FX team at the Worlds. And they are now World Champions.

A Friendship Forged on the Water
The story of Pia and Nora starts not on the race course, but in Asker, a small sailing community outside Oslo, where both girls first climbed into an Optimist dinghy at the age of five. Their families have deep roots in the sport: both have parents who are accomplished sailors, and both have older sisters who came before them on the water. Emilie (Pia’s sister) and Maren (Nora’s sister) even teamed up together in the 29er class, inadvertently laying the path for their younger siblings to follow.

Pia and Nora did the same, joining forces in the 29er at 15 and 14 years old. In 2018, they won the World Sailing Junior World Championship — a gold medal that signalled bigger things ahead. “We’ve sailed together since 2015, so we know each other inside out,” says Nora. “We’re like sisters, but also best friends.”

Building Towards the Top

In 2019, they made the jump to the 49erFX, starting with the Junior World Championship held on home waters in Norway. They entered a Norwegian sailing world with imposing standard-bearers in Helene Næss and Marie Rønningen, two-time Olympians and among the world’s strongest FX teams. Rather than be intimidated, Pia and Nora embedded themselves alongside that group, training with Thomas Guttormsen’s squad and top teams from the Netherlands, Sweden, and Poland. “Being surrounded by such strong teams helped us develop faster and take important steps towards the top level of the sport,” says Nora.

The other crucial ingredient was coach Gasper, whom they first met at the 2020 European Championships in Austria. By the 2023 Worlds in The Hague — where they finished 8th — he had become their dedicated coach. “It feels more like a family than just a coach-athlete relationship,” says Nora. “He has a unique way of getting the best out of us, and we’re incredibly grateful to have him in our corner.”

U23 World Champions in 2022. 8th at the senior Worlds in 2023. Country qualification for Paris 2024. Step by step, 200 sailing days a year, more than 1,000 hours of training. Nothing left to chance.

The Cruelty of 2025

At the 2025 World Championships in Cagliari, Pia and Nora led after day two — a two-point advantage over the Spanish, all the more remarkable given that Nora had been battling dehydration all day and went to hospital that evening.

To be leading a World Championship while your crewmate is seriously ill takes a particular kind of mental strength. Ultimately, the illness took its toll. The lead slipped away, and the gold went to the Spanish.

But they came back.

The 2026 Redemption

Quiberon, May 2026. No compatriots, no safety net — just themselves and a boat they’ve now sailed together for seven years. A training partnership formed with Belgium and Canada in 2025 proved its value during the week itself, when equipment damage mid-regatta saw both teams step in without hesitation to lend a gennaker bag and a replacement gennaker. “That kind of support means a lot to us,” says Nora.

They raced with measured consistency all week, then won the final race to clinch gold. Equal on points with Spain, it was that last race victory that made the difference. One point. One race. A lifetime of preparation.

What Makes Them Work

Eight years in the same boat gives you something no training plan can replicate. “To be honest, we can hardly remember ever arguing on land,” says Nora. “Since the very beginning, we’ve had one simple rule: before we get back to shore, we have to be friends again. It’s probably one of the reasons we’ve managed to stay such a strong team for so many years.”

Off the water, both are studying — Pia finishing a Bachelor’s in Business Administration, Nora a year and a half into Digital Marketing and Management — while continuing to chase their dream. “Our dream is to one day make a living from sailing,” says Nora. “But we’re not there yet.”

A Landmark for Norwegian Sailing

Norway is not a large 49erFX nation. Næss and Rønningen carried the flag for many years with distinction. Now, Pia Dahl Andersen and Nora Edland have done something the entire Norwegian class had never done before: won a senior 49erFX World Championship.

They did it on Norway’s national day. They did it as the only Norwegian team in the fleet. And after the heartbreak of 2025, they did it the hard way.

The 2026 49er, 49erFX and Nacra 17 World Championships were held in Quiberon, France, 12–17 May 2026.

 

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