Jump to content

User:Don Garellos/Ski jumping

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

FIS Nordic World Ski Championships[edit]

Medals table[edit]

  1. 21 titles
     Norway (NOR)
  2. 19 titles
     Austria (AUT)
  3. 16 titles
     Germany (GER)
  4. 13 titles
     Finland (FIN)
  5. 8 titles
     Poland (POL)
  6. 6 titles
     East Germany (GDR)
  7. 5 titles
     Japan (JPN)
  8. 3 titles
     Switzerland (SUI)
  9. 2 titles
     Slovenia (SLO)
     Czechoslovakia (TCH)
     Soviet Union (URS)
     United States (USA)
  10. 1 title
     Sweden (SWE)
     Yugoslavia (YUG)

Most successful athletes[edit]

  1. 8 titles
    Austria Thomas Morgenstern
  2. 7 titles
    Austria Wolfgang Loitzl
  3. 6 titles
    Germany Markus Eisenbichler
    Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer
  4. 5 titles
    Finland Janne Ahonen
    Finland Matti Nykänen
  5. 4 titles
    Germany Katharina Althaus
    Germany Karl Geiger
    Poland Adam Małysz
    Finland Ari-Pekka Nikkola
    Finland Jari Puikkonen
    Germany Martin Schmitt
    Germany Carina Vogt

Men[edit]

Large hill[edit]

Games Athlete Points
1925 Janské Lázně (TCH) Czechoslovakia Willen Dick 18.985
1926 Lahti (FIN) Norway Jacob Tullin Thams 113.880
1927 Cortina d'Ampezzo (ITA) Sweden Tore Edman 18.420
1929 Zakopane (POL) Norway Sigmund Ruud 227.2
1930 Oslo (NOR) Norway Gunnar Andersen 224.4
1931 Oberhof (GER) Norway Birger Ruud 236.0
1933 Innsbruck (AUT) Switzerland Marcel Reymond 224.0
1934 Sollefteå (SWE) Norway Kristian Johansson 228.5
1935 Vysoké Tatry (TCH) Norway Birger Ruud 231.7
1937 Chamonix (FRA) Norway Birger Ruud 233.8
1938 Lahti (FIN) Norway Asbjørn Ruud 226.4
1939 Zakopane (POL) Germany Josef Bradl 224.7
1950 Lake Placid (USA) Norway Hans Bjørnstad 220.4
1954 Falun (SWE) Finland Matti Pietikäinen
1958 Lahti (FIN) Finland Juhani Kärkinen
1962 Zakopane (POL) East Germany Helmut Recknagel
1966 Oslo (NOR) Norway Bjørn Wirkola 215.3
1970 Vysoké Tatry (TCH) Soviet Union Gariy Napalkov 226.0
1974 Falun (SWE) East Germany Hans-Georg Aschenbach 240.4
1978 Lahti (FIN) Finland Tapio Räisänen 256.6
1982 Oslo (NOR) Finland Matti Nykänen 257.9
1985 Seefeld (AUT) Norway Per Bergerud 224.2
1987 Oberstdorf (GER) Austria Andreas Felder 216.0
1989 Lahti (FIN) Finland Jari Puikkonen 218.5
1991 Val di Fiemme (ITA) Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Franci Petek 217.5
1993 Falun (SWE) Norway Espen Bredesen 241.4
1995 Thunder Bay (CAN) Norway Tommy Ingebrigtsen 272.6
1997 Trondheim (NOR) Japan Masahiko Harada 252.1
1999 Ramsau (AUT) Germany Martin Schmitt 263.4
2001 Lahti (FIN) Germany Martin Schmitt 276.3
2003 Val di Fiemme (ITA) Poland Adam Małysz 289.0
2005 Oberstdorf (GER) Finland Janne Ahonen 313.2
2007 Sapporo (JPN) Switzerland Simon Ammann 266.1
2009 Liberec (CZE) Switzerland Andreas Küttel 141.3
2011 Oslo (NOR) Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer 277.5
2013 Val di Fiemme (ITA) Poland Kamil Stoch 295.8
2015 Falun (SWE) Germany Severin Freund 268.7
2017 Lahti (FIN) Austria Stefan Kraft 279.3
2019 Seefeld (AUT) Germany Markus Eisenbichler 279.4
2021 Oberstdorf (GER) Austria Stefan Kraft 276.5

Normal hill[edit]

Games Athlete Points
1962 Zakopane (POL) Norway Toralf Engan
1966 Oslo (NOR) Norway Bjørn Wirkola 234.6
1970 Vysoké Tatry (TCH) Soviet Union Gariy Napalkov 240.6
1974 Falun (SWE) East Germany Hans-Georg Aschenbach 258.9
1978 Lahti (FIN) East Germany Matthias Buse 253.2
1982 Oslo (NOR) Austria Armin Kogler 249.3
1985 Seefeld (AUT) East Germany Jens Weißflog 225.6
1987 Oberstdorf (GER) Czechoslovakia Jiří Parma 224.4
1989 Lahti (FIN) East Germany Jens Weißflog 114.5
1991 Val di Fiemme (ITA) Austria Heinz Kuttin 222.9
1993 Falun (SWE) Japan Masahiko Harada 237.8
1995 Thunder Bay (CAN) Japan Takanobu Okabe 266.0
1997 Trondheim (NOR) Finland Janne Ahonen 263.5
1999 Ramsau (AUT) Japan Kazuyoshi Funaki 255.0
2001 Lahti (FIN) Poland Adam Małysz 246.0
2003 Val di Fiemme (ITA) Poland Adam Małysz 279.0
2005 Oberstdorf (GER) Slovenia Rok Benkovič 256.0
2007 Sapporo (JPN) Poland Adam Małysz 277.0
2009 Liberec (CZE) Austria Wolfgang Loitzl 282.0
2011 Oslo (NOR) Austria Thomas Morgenstern 269.2
2013 Val di Fiemme (ITA) Norway Anders Bardal 252.6
2015 Falun (SWE) Norway Rune Velta 252.7
2017 Lahti (FIN) Austria Stefan Kraft 270.8
2019 Seefeld (AUT) Poland Dawid Kubacki 218.3
2021 Oberstdorf (GER) Poland Piotr Żyła 268.8

Team large hill[edit]

Games Athlete Points
1982 Oslo (NOR) Norway Norway 718.5
1984 Engelberg (SUI) Finland Finland 618.3
1985 Seefeld (AUT) Finland Finland 583.0
1987 Oberstdorf (GER) Finland Finland 634.1
1989 Lahti (FIN) Finland Finland 645.0
1991 Val di Fiemme (ITA) Austria Austria 567.6
1993 Falun (SWE) Norway Norway 821.5
1995 Thunder Bay (CAN) Finland Finland 889.0
1997 Trondheim (NOR) Finland Finland 955.3
1999 Ramsau (AUT) Germany Germany 988.9
2001 Lahti (FIN) Germany Germany 939.8
2003 Val di Fiemme (ITA) Finland Finland 1046.6
2005 Oberstdorf (GER) Austria Austria 1137.3
2007 Sapporo (JPN) Austria Austria 1000.2
2009 Liberec (CZE) Austria Austria 1034.3
2011 Oslo (NOR) Austria Austria 500.0
2013 Val di Fiemme (ITA) Austria Austria 1135.9
2015 Falun (SWE) Norway Norway 872.6
2017 Lahti (FIN) Poland Poland 1104.2
2019 Seefeld (AUT) Germany Germany 987.5
2021 Oberstdorf (GER) Germany Germany 1046.6

Team normal hill[edit]

Games Athlete Points
2001 Lahti (FIN) Austria Austria 953.5
2005 Oberstdorf (GER) Austria Austria 970.5
2011 Oslo (NOR) Austria Austria 1025.5

Women[edit]

Normal hill[edit]

Games Athlete Points
2009 Liberec (CZE) United States Lindsey Van 243.0
2011 Oslo (NOR) Austria Daniela Iraschko 231.7
2013 Val di Fiemme (ITA) United States Sarah Hendrickson 253.7
2015 Falun (SWE) Germany Carina Vogt 236.9
2017 Lahti (FIN) Germany Carina Vogt 254.6
2019 Seefeld (AUT) Norway Maren Lundby 259.6
2021 Oberstdorf (GER) Slovenia Ema Klinec 279.6

Team normal hill[edit]

Games Athlete Points
2019 Seefeld (AUT) Germany Germany 898.9
2021 Oberstdorf (GER) Austria Austria 959.3

Mixed[edit]

Team normal hill[edit]

Games Athlete Points
2013 Val di Fiemme (ITA) Japan Japan 1011.0
2015 Falun (SWE) Germany Germany 917.9
2017 Lahti (FIN) Germany Germany 1035.5
2019 Seefeld (AUT) Germany Germany 1012.2
2021 Oberstdorf (GER) Germany Germany 1000.8

FIS Ski Jumping World Cup[edit]

Medals table[edit]

  1. 14 titles
     Austria (AUT)
  2. 8 titles
     Finland (FIN)
  3. 6 titles
     Norway (NOR)
     Poland (POL)
  4. 5 titles
     Japan (JPN)
  5. 3 titles
     Germany (GER)
     Slovenia (SLO)
  6. 1 title
     Czech Republic (CZE)
     East Germany (GDR)
     Switzerland (SUI)
     Sweden (SWE)
     United States (USA)

Most successful athletes[edit]

  1. 4 titles
    Poland Adam Małysz
    Finland Matti Nykänen
    Japan Sara Takanashi
  2. 3 titles
    Austria Andreas Goldberger
    Norway Maren Lundby
  3. 2 titles
    Finland Janne Ahonen
    Austria Armin Kogler
    Austria Stefan Kraft
    Austria Thomas Morgenstern
    Slovenia Primož Peterka
    Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer
    Germany Martin Schmitt
    Poland Kamil Stoch
  4. 1 title
    Switzerland Simon Ammann
    Norway Anders Bardal
    Sweden Jan Boklöv
    Norway Espen Bredesen
    Austria Andreas Felder
    Germany Severin Freund
    United States Sarah Hendrickson
    Austria Daniela Iraschko-Stolz
    Czech Republic Jakub Janda
    Japan Ryōyū Kobayashi
    Austria Hubert Neuper
    Finland Toni Nieminen
    Finland Ari-Pekka Nikkola
    Norway Vegard Opaas
    Slovenia Peter Prevc
    East Germany Jens Weißflog

Men[edit]

Games Athlete
1980 Austria Hubert Neuper
1981 Austria Armin Kogler
1982 Austria Armin Kogler
1983 Finland Matti Nykänen
1984 East Germany Jens Weißflog
1985 Finland Matti Nykänen
1986 Finland Matti Nykänen
1987 Norway Vegard Opaas
1988 Finland Matti Nykänen
1989 Sweden Jan Boklöv
1990 Finland Ari-Pekka Nikkola
1991 Austria Andreas Felder
1992 Finland Toni Nieminen
1993 Austria Andreas Goldberger
1994 Norway Espen Bredesen
1995 Austria Andreas Goldberger
1996 Austria Andreas Goldberger
1997 Slovenia Primož Peterka
1998 Slovenia Primož Peterka
1999 Germany Martin Schmitt
2000 Germany Martin Schmitt
2001 Poland Adam Małysz
2002 Poland Adam Małysz
2003 Poland Adam Małysz
2004 Finland Janne Ahonen
2005 Finland Janne Ahonen
2006 Czech Republic Jakub Janda
2007 Poland Adam Małysz
2008 Austria Thomas Morgenstern
2009 Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer
2010 Switzerland Simon Ammann
2011 Austria Thomas Morgenstern
2012 Norway Anders Bardal
2013 Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer
2014 Poland Kamil Stoch
2015 Germany Severin Freund
2016 Slovenia Peter Prevc
2017 Austria Stefan Kraft
2018 Poland Kamil Stoch
2019 Japan Ryōyū Kobayashi
2020 Austria Stefan Kraft

Women[edit]

Games Athlete
2012 United States Sarah Hendrickson
2013 Japan Sara Takanashi
2014 Japan Sara Takanashi
2015 Austria Daniela Iraschko-Stolz
2016 Japan Sara Takanashi
2017 Japan Sara Takanashi
2018 Norway Maren Lundby
2019 Norway Maren Lundby
2020 Norway Maren Lundby

Four Hills Tournament[edit]

Medals table[edit]

  1. 16 titles
     Austria (AUT)
     Finland (FIN)
  2. 11 titles
     East Germany (GDR)
  3. 10 titles
     Norway (NOR)
  4. 5 titles
     Germany (GER)
     Poland (POL)
  5. 2 titles
     Czech Republic (CZE)
     Japan (JPN)
     Slovenia (SLO)
  6. 1 title
     Soviet Union (URS)

Most successful athletes[edit]

  1. 5 titles
    Finland Janne Ahonen
  2. 4 titles
    Germany Jens Weißflog
  3. 3 titles
    East Germany Helmut Recknagel
    Norway Bjørn Wirkola
    Poland Kamil Stoch
  4. 2 titles
    East Germany Jochen Danneberg
    Austria Andreas Goldberger
    Finland Veikko Kankkonen
    Austria Hubert Neuper
    Finland Matti Nykänen
    Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer
    Austria Ernst Vettori
  5. 1 title
    East Germany Hans-Georg Aschenbach
    Norway Olav Bjørnstad
    Germany Max Bolkart
    Austria Sepp Bradl
    Norway Torgeir Brandtzæg
    Norway Espen Bredesen
    East Germany Manfred Deckert
    Austria Thomas Diethart
    Norway Toralf Engan
    Japan Kazuyoshi Funaki
    Germany Sven Hannawald
    Norway Anders Jacobsen
    Czech Republic Jakub Janda
    Soviet Union Nikolay Kamenskiy
    Finland Eino Kirjonen
    Japan Ryōyū Kobayashi
    Austria Andreas Kofler
    Finland Pentti Kokkonen
    Austria Stefan Kraft
    Poland Dawid Kubacki
    Finland Risto Laakkonen
    Austria Wolfgang Loitzl
    Poland Adam Małysz
    Austria Thomas Morgenstern
    Norway Ingolf Mork
    Finland Toni Nieminen
    Slovenia Primož Peterka
    Norway Sigurd Pettersen
    Slovenia Peter Prevc
    Austria Willi Pürstl
    East Germany Horst Queck
    Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška
    East Germany Rainer Schmidt
    Finland Hemmo Silvennoinen
    Germany Dieter Thoma
    Finland Pentti Uotinen
    Austria Andreas Widhölzl
    Finland Kari Ylianttila

Winners[edit]

Games Athlete
1953 Austria Sepp Bradl
1953-54 Norway Olav Bjørnstad
1954-55 Finland Hemmo Silvennoinen
1955-56 Soviet Union Nikolay Kamenskiy
1956-57 Finland Pentti Uotinen
1957-58 Germany Helmut Recknagel
1958-59 Germany Helmut Recknagel
1959-60 Germany Max Bolkart
1960-61 East Germany Helmut Recknagel
1961-62 Finland Eino Kirjonen
1962-63 Norway Toralf Engan
1963-64 Finland Veikko Kankkonen
1964-65 Norway Torgeir Brandtzæg
1965-66 Finland Veikko Kankkonen
1966-67 Norway Bjørn Wirkola
1967-68 Norway Bjørn Wirkola
1968-69 Norway Bjørn Wirkola
1969-70 East Germany Horst Queck
1970-71 Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška
1971-72 Norway Ingolf Mork
1972-73 East Germany Rainer Schmidt
1973-74 East Germany Hans-Georg Aschenbach
1974-75 Austria Willi Pürstl
1975-76 East Germany Jochen Danneberg
1976-77 East Germany Jochen Danneberg
1977-78 Finland Kari Ylianttila
1978-79 Finland Pentti Kokkonen
1979-80 Austria Hubert Neuper
1980-81 Austria Hubert Neuper
1981-82 East Germany Manfred Deckert
1982-83 Finland Matti Nykänen
1983-84 East Germany Jens Weißflog
1984-85 East Germany Jens Weißflog
1985-86 Austria Ernst Vettori
1986-87 Austria Ernst Vettori
1987-88 Finland Matti Nykänen
1988-89 Finland Risto Laakkonen
1989-90 Germany Dieter Thoma
1990-91 Germany Jens Weißflog
1991-92 Finland Toni Nieminen
1992-93 Austria Andreas Goldberger
1993-94 Norway Espen Bredesen
1994-95 Austria Andreas Goldberger
1995-96 Germany Jens Weißflog
1996-97 Slovenia Primož Peterka
1997-98 Japan Kazuyoshi Funaki
1998-99 Finland Janne Ahonen
1999-2000 Austria Andreas Widhölzl
2000-2001 Poland Adam Małysz
2001-02 Germany Sven Hannawald
2002-03 Finland Janne Ahonen
2003-04 Norway Sigurd Pettersen
2004-05 Finland Janne Ahonen
2005-06 Finland Janne Ahonen
Czech Republic Jakub Janda
2006-07 Norway Anders Jacobsen
2007-08 Finland Janne Ahonen
2008-09 Austria Wolfgang Loitzl
2009-10 Austria Andreas Kofler
2010-11 Austria Thomas Morgenstern
2011-12 Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer
2012-13 Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer
2013-14 Austria Thomas Diethart
2014-15 Austria Stefan Kraft
2015-16 Slovenia Peter Prevc
2016-17 Poland Kamil Stoch
2017-18 Poland Kamil Stoch
2018-19 Japan Ryōyū Kobayashi
2019-20 Poland Dawid Kubacki
2020-21 Poland Kamil Stoch