Planica 1936

Coordinates: 46°28′43″N 13°43′16″E / 46.47861°N 13.72111°E / 46.47861; 13.72111
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Planica 1936
Host cityPlanica, Kingdom of Yugoslavia
SportsSki jumping, ski flying
EventsInternational
Main venueBloudkova velikanka K106
← 1935
1938 →

Planica 1936 was a ski jumping event, considered as the birth of ski flying, held on 15 March 1936 in Planica, Drava Banovina, Yugoslavia. Total of 16,000 people gathered to watch the competition.

Schedule[edit]

Date Event Rounds Longest jump of the day Visitors
13 March 1936   Training weather conditions; high temperatures
14 March 1936   Official training 1 93 metres (305 ft) by Birger Ruud (fall)
75 metres (246 ft) by Albin Novšak
N/A
15 March 1936   International event 2 85 metres (279 ft) by Gregor Höll 16,000
Afternoon record battle 2 101.5 metres (333 ft) by Josef Bradl (WR)

Competition[edit]

Training was scheduled, on 13 March, however warm weather with warm wind caused it to be cancelled. A few jumpers did few training jumps on a smaller hill in Rateče, but encountered problems with the wind.[1][2]

On 14 March, the only training was scheduled for the afternoon, after the weather finally cleared up. Birger Ruud made the longest jump at 93 metres.[3]

The novel discipline of ski flying is considered to have been started by Josef Bradl on 15 March. The trial round began at 10:30 AM and continued with two rounds of international competition. After that, the second round was a non-competitive event with a goal of setting new world records. In the last round of the day, Sepp Bradl became the first man in history to jump over one hundred metres while standing, landing at 101.5 metres.[4][5][nb 1]

Results[edit]

Official training[edit]

15:00 PM — 14 March 1936 — chronological order

Bib Name Country Dist.
1 Albin Novšak  Kingdom of Yugoslavia 75 m
2 Franc Pribošek  Kingdom of Yugoslavia 65 m
3 Jean Lesseur   Switzerland 69 m
4 Olav Ulland  Norway 68 m
5 Josef Bradl  Austria 70 m
6 Fritz Kainersdorfer   Switzerland 60 m
7 Henry Ødegård  Norway 75 m
8 Birger Ruud  Norway 93 m
9 Rudolf Rieger  Austria 74 m

Trial round[edit]

10:30 AM — 15 March 1936 — Trial jump — chronological order

Bib Name Country Dist.
1 Albin Novšak  Kingdom of Yugoslavia 72 m
2 Harald Reinl  Austria 67 m
3 Oldřich Buďárek  Czechoslovakia 73 m
4 Renné Léuba   Switzerland 55 m
5 Rudolf Vrána  Czechoslovakia 60 m
6 Franz Aschenwald  Austria 68.5 m
7 Jean Lesseur   Switzerland 61 m
8 Gregor Höll  Austria 71 m
9 Rudolf Rieger  Austria 58 m
10 Jaroslav Lukeš  Czechoslovakia 61 m
11 Josef Bradl  Austria 72 m
12 Gustl Maier  Austria 64 m

International competition[edit]

11:00 AM — 15 March 1936 — Two rounds — chronological order

Bib Name Country Dist.
First round
1 Harald Reinl  Austria 67.5 m
2 Oldřich Buďárek  Czechoslovakia 78 m
3 Renné Léuba   Switzerland 58 m
4 Rudolf Vrána  Czechoslovakia 63 m
5 Franc Pribošek  Kingdom of Yugoslavia 63 m
6 Albin Novšak  Kingdom of Yugoslavia 69.5 m
7 Franz Aschenwald  Austria 70.5 m
8 Jean Lesseur   Switzerland 64 m
9 Gregor Höll  Austria 72 m
10 Rudolf Rieger  Austria 71 m
11 Jaroslav Lukeš  Czechoslovakia 63 m
12 Josef Bradl  Austria 77 m
13 Gustl Maier  Austria 61 m
Second round
14 Harald Reinl  Austria 84 m
15 Oldřich Buďárek  Czechoslovakia 86 m
16 Renné Léuba   Switzerland 65.5 m
17 Rudolf Vrána  Czechoslovakia N/A
18 Franc Pribošek  Kingdom of Yugoslavia 63 m
19 Albin Novšak  Kingdom of Yugoslavia 77 m
20 Franz Aschenwald  Austria 77 m
21 Jean Lesseur   Switzerland 71 m
22 Gregor Höll  Austria 85 m
23 Rudolf Rieger  Austria 80 m
24 Jaroslav Lukeš  Czechoslovakia 63.5 m
25 Josef Bradl  Austria 78 m
26 Gustl Maier  Austria 65.5 m

Non-competition record hunting event[edit]

Josef Bradl became the first man in history perform a standing jump over 100 metres and won the competition.[6]

13:45 PM — 15 March 1936 — Two rounds — chronological order

Bib Name Country Dist.
First round, 13:45 PM
1 Jean Lesseur   Switzerland 72 m
2 Renné Léuba   Switzerland 70 m
3 Josef Bradl  Austria 88 m
4 Oldřich Buďárek  Czechoslovakia 90 m
5 Gustl Maier  Austria 70 m
6 Franz Aschenwald  Austria 74 m
7 Rudolf Rieger  Austria 82 m
8 Harald Reinl  Austria 87 m
9 Franc Pribošek  Kingdom of Yugoslavia 71 m
10 Albin Novšak  Kingdom of Yugoslavia 80 m
Second round, 14:10 PM
11 Jean Lesseur   Switzerland 77 m
12 Renné Léuba   Switzerland 72 m
13 Josef Bradl  Austria 101.5 m
14 Oldřich Buďárek  Czechoslovakia 95 m
15 Franz Aschenwald  Austria 96 m
16 Rudolf Rieger  Austria 88 m
17 Harald Reinl  Austria 98 m
18 Franc Pribošek  Kingdom of Yugoslavia 77 m
19 Albin Novšak  Kingdom of Yugoslavia 89.5 m

  World record and first recorded standing jump over 100 m
  Fall or touch

Official results[edit]

International competition[edit]

Rank Name Points
1 Austria Josef Bradl 213.6
2 Austria Gregor Höll 208.6
3 Austria Rudolf Rieger 203.1
4 Austria Harald Reinl 198.5
5 Austria Franz Aschenwald 195.9
6 Switzerland Jean Lesseur 188.9
7 Kingdom of Yugoslavia Albin Novšak 188.8
8 Czechoslovakia Rudolf Vrána 179.2
9 Austria Gustl Maier 178.2
10 Czechoslovakia Jaroslav Lukeš 175.7
11 Kingdom of Yugoslavia Franc Pribošek 174.9
12 Czechoslovakia Oldřich Buďárek 151.5
13 Switzerland Renné Léuba 0.0

Also applied this year[edit]

But non of them haven't jumped at all these days:

  • Norway — Sigmund Ruud, Gunnar. K. Hagen, Björn Karlson, Kaarby (four chosen boycott)
  • Austria — Walter Delle Karth Sr., Walter Weissenbacher, Erwin Ludescher
  • Switzerland — Marcel Raymond, Walter Kuster

Ski flying world record[edit]

Date Name Country Metres Feet
15 March 1936 Josef Bradl  Austria 101.5 333

Boycott by Norway[edit]

Four competitors from Norway who were chosen to compete boycotted the event. They objected because the hill was bigger than allowed at the time. They demanded a hill rearrangement to the K80 standard. When negotiation with the organizers failed, they left the event the middle of the trial round and under the leadership of Sigmund Ruud.

Footnotes[edit]

  1. ^ Bradl's world record distance was published only as 101 meters, as the scoreboard allowed only three numbers to be shown. Slovene daily news Jutro published the figure and international news media cited it. The figure to full precision was 101.5 metres.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Pred veliko prireditvijo v Planici, p.7" (in Slovenian). Slovenski narod. 14 March 1936.
  2. ^ "Pravilnik tekmovanja za kraljev pokal v Planici, p.2" (in Slovenian). Jutro. 13 March 1936.
  3. ^ "Sport: Tretji planiški praznik, p.11" (in Slovenian). Jutro. 15 March 1936.
  4. ^ "Planica -- 101 m!, p.1,2" (in Slovenian). Jutro (Monday edition). 16 March 1936.
  5. ^ "Smuške tekme na Planici brez Norvežanov, p.1" (in Slovenian). Ponedeljski Slovenec. 16 March 1936.
  6. ^ "Josef Bradl -- 101.5 metres -- Planica -- 15th March 1936". YouTube. 15 March 1936.

46°28′43″N 13°43′16″E / 46.47861°N 13.72111°E / 46.47861; 13.72111