FIS Ski Jumping World Cup












































Ski Jumping World Cup
Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1989-0131-036, Oberwiesenthal, Jens Weißflog.jpg
Genre
ski jumping (1808)
ski flying (1936)
Location(s)
Europe
Japan
Russia
Canada (rare)
Kazakhstan (rare)
South Korea (rare)
United States (rare)
Inaugurated 27 December 1979 (27 December 1979) (men)
12 January 1992 (12 January 1992) (men's team)
3 December 2011 (3 December 2011) (ladies)
23 November 2012 (23 November 2012) (mixed)
16 December 2017 (16 December 2017) (ladies's team)
Founder
Norway Torbjørn Yggeseth
Most recent 2017–18 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup
Next event 2018–19 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup
Organised by International Ski Federation
People
Austria Walter Hofer (men)
Japan Chika Yoshida (ladies)
Sponsor
Viessmann, Konica Minolta

The FIS Ski Jumping World Cup is the world's highest level of ski jumping and the FIS Ski Flying World Cup as the subdivisional part of the competition. It was founded by Torbjørn Yggeseth for the 1979/80 season and organized by the International Ski Federation. Ladies began competing during the 2011/12 season.[1]


The rounds are hosted primarily in Europe, with regular stops in Japan and rarely in North America. These have been hosted in 20 different countries around the world for both men and ladies: Austria, Bosnia, Canada, Czech Republic, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Norway, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Korea, Sweden, Switzerland and the United States.[2][nb 1]


Summer Grand Prix is the top level summer competition on plastic. The lower competitive circuits include the Continental Cup, the FIS Cup, the FIS Race and the Alpen Cup.




Contents






  • 1 Global map of all world cup hosts


  • 2 Scoring system


    • 2.1 Men's Individual


    • 2.2 Ladies's Individual


    • 2.3 Men's team


    • 2.4 Ladies's team


    • 2.5 Mixed team




  • 3 Men's standings


    • 3.1 Overall


    • 3.2 Nations Cup


    • 3.3 Ski Flying


    • 3.4 Ski Jumping (JP) Cup




  • 4 Men's tournaments


    • 4.1 K.O.P. International Ski Flying Week


    • 4.2 Nordic Tournament


    • 4.3 Raw Air


    • 4.4 Planica7


    • 4.5 Swiss Tournament


    • 4.6 Bohemia Tournament


    • 4.7 FIS Team Tour


    • 4.8 Willingen Five




  • 5 Ladies' standings


    • 5.1 Overall


    • 5.2 Lillehammer Triple


    • 5.3 Nations Cup




  • 6 Titles


    • 6.1 Overall


    • 6.2 Ski Flying


    • 6.3 Ski Jumping (JP) Cup




  • 7 Men's general statistics


    • 7.1 Wins


    • 7.2 Podiums


    • 7.3 Top ten appearances




  • 8 Ski flying section


    • 8.1 Wins


    • 8.2 Podiums


    • 8.3 Top ten appearances




  • 9 Ladies' statistics


    • 9.1 Wins


    • 9.2 Wins per season


    • 9.3 Podiums


    • 9.4 Podiums per season


    • 9.5 Consecutive wins


    • 9.6 Average points per season




  • 10 Team events


    • 10.1 Individual team wins


    • 10.2 Ladies' team


    • 10.3 Men's team


    • 10.4 Mixed




  • 11 Various


    • 11.1 Youngest winners


    • 11.2 Youngest on podium


    • 11.3 Oldest winners


    • 11.4 Oldest on podium


    • 11.5 Wins per season


    • 11.6 Podiums per season


    • 11.7 Most points per season


    • 11.8 Highest overall advantage


    • 11.9 Average points per season


    • 11.10 Consecutive wins


    • 11.11 Overall leader by total events


    • 11.12 Individual starts


    • 11.13 Consecutive podiums


    • 11.14 Ski flying leader by total events




  • 12 World Cup winners by nations


    • 12.1 Men


    • 12.2 Ladies


    • 12.3 Ladies' team


    • 12.4 Men's team


    • 12.5 Mixed




  • 13 Hosts


    • 13.1 Men


    • 13.2 Men's team


    • 13.3 Ladies' team


    • 13.4 Ladies


    • 13.5 Mixed




  • 14 Timeline calendar


  • 15 World Cup all-time records


  • 16 Shared wins


    • 16.1 Men


    • 16.2 Ladies




  • 17 Key people


    • 17.1 Men


    • 17.2 Ladies




  • 18 Notes


  • 19 References


  • 20 External links





Global map of all world cup hosts


The maps display all 64 locations around the globe that have hosted World Cup events for men (57) and ladies (20) at least one time in the history of the competition. Pyeongchang in 2017 was the latest new host.











FIS Ski Jumping World Cup is located in Europe

Kuusamo/Ruka

Kuusamo/Ruka



Klingenthal

Klingenthal



Sochi

Sochi



Nizhny Tagil

Nizhny Tagil



Engel

Engel



Obe

Obe



GaPa

GaPa



Inn

Inn



Bis

Bis



Wisła

Wisła



Zakopane

Zakopane



Willingen

Willingen



Holmenkollen

Holmenkollen



Lillehammer

Lillehammer



Sarajevo

Sarajevo



Trondheim

Trondheim



Vikersund

Vikersund



Kuopio

Kuopio



Lahti

Lahti



Moritz

Moritz



Schonach

Schonach



Hinterzarten

Hinterzarten



Murau

Murau



Ra

Ra



Vil

Vil



Chamonix

Chamonix



Bærum

Bærum



Courchevel

Courchevel



St. Nizier

St. Nizier



Falun

Falun



Örnsköldsvik

Örnsköldsvik



Sollefteå

Sollefteå



Bollnäs

Bollnäs



Rælingen

Rælingen



Meldal

Meldal



Raufoss

Raufoss



Oberhof

Oberhof



Ru

Ru



Oberwiesenthal

Oberwiesenthal



Štrbské Pleso

Štrbské Pleso



Harrachov

Harrachov



Liberec

Liberec



Kulm

Kulm



dF

dF



Pragelato

Pragelato



Co

Co



Galio

Galio



Titisee

Titisee



Gstaad

Gstaad



Râșnov

Râșnov



Chaykovsky

Chaykovsky



Ljubno

Ljubno



Hinzenbach

Hinzenbach



Planica

Planica



FIS Ski Jumping World Cup (Europe)











FIS Ski Jumping World Cup is located in Asia

Sochi

Sochi



Nizhny Tagil

Nizhny Tagil



Chaykovsky

Chaykovsky



Almaty

Almaty



Sapporo

Sapporo



Hakuba

Hakuba



Zaō

Zaō



Pyeongchang

Pyeongchang



FIS Ski Jumping World Cup (Asia)










FIS Ski Jumping World Cup is located in North America

Iron Mountain

Iron Mountain



Ironwood

Ironwood



Lake Placid

Lake Placid



Thunder Bay

Thunder Bay



Whistler

Whistler



Park City

Park City



FIS Ski Jumping World Cup (North America)






Green pog.svgFour Hills Tournament (1979– )
Blue pog.svgNordic Tour (1997–2010); Raw Air (2017– )
Orange pog.svgSwiss Tour (1980–1992)
Black pog.svgBohemia Tour (1981–1994)
Pink pog.svgNordic Tour (1997–2010)
Yellow pog.svgFIS Team Tour (Oberstdorf included, 2009–2013)



Scoring system


Each season consists of 25–30 competitions, usually two competitions on the same hill during a weekend. One competition consists of a qualifying round; first round, with 50 competitors; and second round, with 30. Qualifying round for the main event was introduced in 1990 to limit the number of competitors: the top 10 jumpers in FIS ranking qualify directly to the first round, while the rest of the jumpers fight for the remaining 40 spots. The top 30 in the first round advance to the second round, which is held in reverse order, so the best jumper in the first round jumps last. The aggregate score in the first and second rounds determine the competition results. The top 30 are awarded World Cup points. The winner gets 100 points while number 30 receives 1 point. At team events only top 8 receive points.



Men's Individual
























































































Seasons 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

1979/80–1992/93
25 20 15 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
points were not awarded

1993/94–present
100 80 60 50 45 40 36 32 29 26 24 22 20 18 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1


Ladies's Individual





































































Seasons 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

2011/12–present
100 80 60 50 45 40 36 32 29 26 24 22 20 18 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1


Men's team

























































Seasons 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

1991/92–1992/93
60 50 40 30 20 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8

1993/94–1999/00
200 160 120 100 90 80
points were not awarded

2000/01–present
400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50
points are not being awarded


Ladies's team

























Seasons 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

2017/18–present
400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50


Mixed team

























Seasons 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

2012/13–2013/14
200 175 150 125 100 75 50 25


Men's standings


The table below shows the three highest ranked jumpers each year.


















  • Titles Overall:

































































































































Rank
Nation
Wins
Second
Third
Total
1
 Austria
12 11 13
36
2
 Finland
8 4 7 19
3
 Poland
6 1 3 10
4
 Germany
3 7 3 10
5
 Norway
3 5 4 12
6
 Slovenia
3 2 5
7
 Czechoslovakia
1 2 1 4
8
 East Germany
1 1 2
9
  Switzerland
1 3 2 6
10
 Sweden
1 1
11
 Japan
1 3 4
12
 Canada
1 2 2
13
 Italy
1 1
14
 Yugoslavia
1 1
Total 39 39 39 117

  • Nations Cup:

































































































Rank
Nation
Wins
Second
Third
Total
1
 Austria
18 8 8
34
2
 Norway
8 11 7 26
3
 Finland
7 9 8 24
4
 Japan
3 3 2 8
5
 Germany
2 4 8 14
6
 Poland
1 2 3
7
 Czechoslovakia
2 2 4
8
 Slovenia
1 1 2
9
 East Germany
1 1
10
  Switzerland
1 1
Total 39 39 39 117

  • Ski Flying:









































































































Rank
Nation
Wins
Second
Third
Total
1
 Austria
7 5 5
17
2
 Slovenia
6 2 2 10
3
 Germany
4 2 2 8
4
 Czechoslovakia
2 2
5
 Norway
1 2 3 6
6
  Switzerland
1 3 4
7
 Japan
5 2 7
8
 Finland
3 1 4
9
 Poland
2 1 3
10
 France
1 1
11
 Italy
2 2
Total 21 22 21 64


Men's tournaments



There are other tournaments as part of the World Cup:











Ladies' standings











Titles











Men's general statistics











Events
Winners
947
155









update: 25 March 2018.



Ski flying section












Events
Winners
119
46









update: 25 March 2018



Ladies' statistics



  retired female ski jumper

As of 25 March 2018













Team events












  • updated: 25 March 2018


Various


As of 23 March 2018











































World Cup winners by nations


The table below lists those nations which have won at least one World Cup race (current as of 25 March 2018).













Hosts











Timeline calendar
































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Season
 
Men
 
Men's team
 
Ladies
 
Ladies' team
 
Mixed

FH

LH

NH
Total

FH

LH

NH
Total

LH

NH
Total

LH

NH
Total

NH
Total
1979/80 1 16 8 25

1980/81 2 14 8 24

1981/82 3 10 9 22

1982/83 3 15 7 25

1983/84 2 14 8 24

1984/85 1 12 8 21

1985/86 2 14 9 25

1986/87 2 10 10 22

1987/88 12 8 20

1988/89 1 11 8 20

1989/90 16 9 25

1990/91 4 13 5 22

1991/92 3 12 6 21 2 2

1992/93 2 13 2 17 2 2

1993/94 1 11 7 19 2 2

1994/95 3 11 7 21 1 1

1995/96 3 16 9 28 4 4

1996/97 4 19 2 25 1 1

1997/98 4 19 4 27

1998/99 3 23 3 29 1 1

1999/00 2 22 2 26 1 2 3

2000/01 5 16 21 1 3 4

2001/02 21 1 22 1 3 1 5

2002/03 4 23 27 1 1 2

2003/04 1 22 23 2 2

2004/05 4 24 28 3 3

2005/06 2 20 22 2 2

2006/07 4 20 24 2 2

2007/08 3 22 2 27 1 2 3

2008/09 6 20 1 27 3 3 6

2009/10 3 20 23 1 3 4

2010/11 7 19 26 2 3 5

2011/12 5 19 2 26 2 3 1 6 13 13

2012/13 7 17 3 27 2 4 6 1 15 16 1
1
2013/14 2 25 1 28 4 4 2 16 18 1
1
2014/15 5 25 1 31 1 4 5 1 12 13

2015/16 6 20 3 29 1 5 6 1 16 17

2016/17 5 20 1 26 2 4 6 3 16 19

2017/18 4 18 22 2 6 8 2 13 15 2 2

Total events 119 674 154 947 21 72 2 95 10 101 111 2 2 2
2
Double wins 1 9 1 11 2 2

Total winners 120 683 155 958 21 72 2 95 10 103 113 2 2 2
2

Last updated: 25 March 2018



World Cup all-time records



























































































































Category Name Record
overall titles
Poland Adam Małysz
Finland Matti Nykänen
4
individual podiums
Finland Janne Ahonen
108
individual top 10s
Finland Janne Ahonen
247
career total points
Finland Janne Ahonen
15659
youngest winner overall (1991/92)
Finland Toni Nieminen
16 y, 295 d
oldest winner overall (2017/18)
Poland Kamil Stoch
30 y, 303 d
individual wins
Japan Sara Takanashi
55
ski flying wins
Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer
14
team wins
Austria Austria
27
team podiums
Austria Austria
59
youngest winner (Lahti '80)

Canada Steve Collins
15 y, 362 d
individual performances
Japan Noriaki Kasai
543
team performances
Japan Noriaki Kasai
69
all performances
Japan Noriaki Kasai
612
# of seasons performing
Japan Noriaki Kasai
29
oldest winner (Ruka '14)

Japan Noriaki Kasai
42 y, 176 d
oldest jumper performing
Japan Noriaki Kasai
45 y, 292 d
oldest jumper on podium
Japan Noriaki Kasai
44 y, 293 d
oldest jumper in top 10
Japan Noriaki Kasai
45 y, 285 d
most times winning individual points
Japan Noriaki Kasai
440x
wins in a single season
Slovenia Peter Prevc
Japan Sara Takanashi
15
podiums in a single season
Slovenia Peter Prevc
22
overall points in a single season
Slovenia Peter Prevc
2303


Shared wins



Men


























































































































No.
Season
Date
Place
Hill
Size
Winners
1 1981/82 3 January 1982
Austria Innsbruck

Bergiselschanze K104
LH
East Germany Manfred Deckert

Norway Per Bergerud
2 1985/86 19 January 1986
East Germany Oberwiesenthal

Fichtelbergschanzen K90
NH
East Germany Ulf Findeisen

Austria Ernst Vettori
3 1988/89 14 January 1989
Czechoslovakia Liberec

Ještěd A K120
LH
Czechoslovakia Pavel Ploc

Norway Jon Inge Kjørum
4 1989/90 11 February 1990
Switzerland Engelberg

Gross-Titlis-Schanze K120
LH
Finland Ari-Pekka Nikkola

Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Franci Petek
5 1990/91 1 January 1991
Germany Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Große Olympiaschanze K107
LH
Germany Jens Weißflog

Austria Andreas Felder
6 1995/96 21 January 1996
Japan Sapporo

Ōkurayama K115
LH
Finland Ari-Pekka Nikkola

Austria Andreas Goldberger
7 2004/05 29 January 2005
Poland Zakopane

Wielka Krokiew HS134 (night)
LH
Poland Adam Małysz

Norway Roar Ljøkelsøy
8 2010/11 12 February 2011
Norway Vikersund

Vikersundbakken HS225 (night)
FH
Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer

Norway Johan Remen Evensen
9 2012/13 17 March 2013
Norway Oslo

Holmenkollbakken HS134
LH
Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer

Poland Piotr Żyła
10 2014/15 29 November 2014
Finland Ruka

Rukatunturi HS142 (night)
LH
Switzerland Simon Ammann

Japan Noriaki Kasai
11 2016/17 11 February 2017
Japan Sapporo

Ōkurayama HS137 (night)
LH
Poland Maciej Kot

Slovenia Peter Prevc


Ladies
































No.
Season
Date
Place
Hill
Size
Winners
1 2012/13 9 December 2012
Russia Sochi

RusSki Gorki HS 106
NH
Austria Daniela Iraschko-Stolz

France Coline Mattel
2 2014/15 15 February 2015
Slovenia Ljubno

Savina Ski Jumping Center HS 95
NH
Austria Daniela Iraschko-Stolz

Japan Sara Takanashi


Key people


Torbjørn Yggeseth was a founder and a leader of this competition for the first 13 seasons. A new function called Race Director was introduced by International Ski Federation in 1992/93 with its first president Walter Hofer. Before that season this function didn't exist.[3] In the premiere Ladies 2011/12 World Cup season Chika Yoshida was entitled as World Cup Coordinator, but since the season 2012/13 Yoshida is called Race Director.











Notes





  1. ^ Note that the rounds hosted in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Slovakia were held when the countries were still part of Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia respectively.




References





  1. ^ Eric Williams (9 June 2010). "FIS approves World Cup circuit for women's ski jumping". Skiracing. Retrieved 17 January 2016..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ "FIS: Complete Calendar of FIS Ski Jumping and Ski Flying World Cup races". Archived from the original on 29 June 2013. Retrieved 6 May 2013.


  3. ^ "Walter Hofer: "Man muss auf dem Boden bleiben"". kleine zeitung. Retrieved 4 August 2012.




External links


  • Official website










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