Eero Mäntyranta (born November 20, 1937, Pello, Finland—died December 30, 2013, Oulu) was a Finnish Nordic skier who took part in four Olympic Games, winning a total of seven medals. One of the outstanding Nordic skiers of the 1960s, he also won two 30-km world championships (1962 and 1966).
To support himself in his training, Mäntyranta worked as a border patrol officer in his native country. He began his Olympic career at the 1960 Games in Squaw Valley, California, U.S., winning a gold medal for his part in the 4 × 10-km relay but placing a disappointing sixth in the 15-km event. At the 1964 Olympics in Innsbruck, Austria, he established himself in the individual events with two formidable performances, taking the gold in the 15-km and 30-km races. Again taking part in the 4 × 10-km relay, he won the silver medal with his team, this time as the anchor. In the 1968 Games in Grenoble, France, Mäntyranta took the silver medal in the 15-km race, less than two seconds behind his friend and rival, the Norwegian skier Harald Grönningen, and in the 30-km race he won the bronze. As the anchor in the 4 × 10-km relay, he edged out the Soviet team to win his seventh Olympic medal, the bronze.
Mäntyranta also participated in the 1972 Olympic Games at Sapporo, Japan, but he did not place. After Sapporo, he retired from cross-country skiing, his Olympic record distinguishing him as one of the outstanding Nordic skiers in a country that has a long history of success in the sport.