FIS Ski Flying World Championships 1994
Men's Ski Flying at the FIS Ski Flying World Championships 1994 | ||||||||||
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Venue | Velikanka bratov Gorišek | |||||||||
Date | 19–20 March 1994 | |||||||||
Competitors | 43 from 15 nations | |||||||||
Winning score | 351.3 | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
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The FIS Ski Flying World Ski Championships 1994 took place on 20 March 1994 in Planica, Slovenia for the record fourth time. Planica hosted the championships previously when it was part of Yugoslavia in 1972, 1979, and 1985. This was the first major international sporting event to take place in Slovenia after it declared its independence from Yugoslavia in 1991 following the Ten-Day War. It also marked the first time the Czech Republic and Slovakia were dissolved from Czechoslovakia in January 1993.
It was also historic moment when Austria's Andreas Goldberger became the first person in history who jumped over magic mark of 200 metres (660 ft) but unfortunately touched snow with his hands at 202 metres (663 ft) during practice on 17 March and didn't count. Just a couple minutes later Toni Nieminen from Finland became officially the first person who jumped standing on his feet over magic mark of 200 metres (660 ft) when he jumped 203 metres (666 ft). The final last world record 209 metres (686 ft) was set the next day on March 18 by Espen Bredesen.
World Record
Date | Day | Bib | Name | Distance (m) | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mar 17 | Thursday | P12 | Martin Höllwarth | 196.0 | V-jumper |
42 | Andreas Goldberger | 202.0 | invalid WR; snow hand touch; 1st ever over 200 m | ||
57 | Toni Nieminen | 203.0 | 1st official full standing jump over 200 m ever | ||
Mar 18 | Friday | 19 | Christof Duffner | 207.0 | invalid WR; fall; official training |
Espen Bredesen | 209.0 | WR that stand for 3 years; official training |
Schedule
Day | Date | Event | Longest jump of the day (m) |
---|---|---|---|
Thursday | Mar 17 | Free Training (2 series) | 203.0 - Toni Nieminen |
Friday | Mar 18 | Official Training, Qualification | 209.0 - Espen Bredesen |
Saturday | Mar 19 | Individual, Day 1 (cancelled, strong wind) | |
Sunday | Mar 20 | Individual, Day 2 | 199.0 - Roberto Cecon |
Individual
On first day of competition event was cancelled due to strong wind. On the second day of competition the managed to take event to the end. For the last time 191 meters rule was in use, which means that jumps that were exceeding the distance points didn't count further. At time the single day event also counted for World Cup points and statistics.
19–20 March 1994[1]
Rank | Bib | Name | Distance (meters) | Total Points | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Day One (Mar 19) | Day Two (Mar 20) | ||||||
1st Round | 2nd Round | 3rd Round | Final Round | ||||
37 | Jaroslav Sakala | 189.0 | 185.0 | 351.3 | |||
Espen Bredesen | 178.0 | 182.0 | 329.8 | ||||
Roberto Cecon | 160.0 | 199.0 | 324.7 | ||||
4 | Christof Duffner | 159.0 | 148.0 | 266.4 | |||
5 | Lasse Ottesen | 177.0 | 129.0 | 263.2 | |||
6 | Stephan Zünd | 150.0 | 140.0 | 252.5 | |||
7 | Toni Nieminen | 139.0 | 156.0 | 248.0 | |||
8 | Kurt Børset | 122.0 | 167.0 | 245.3 | |||
9 | Jani Soininen | 138.0 | 149.0 | 239.4 | |||
10 | Hansjörg Jäkle | 129.0 | 153.0 | 237.4 | |||
11 | 2 | Takanobu Okabe | 198.0 | 95.0 | 235.2 | ||
12 | Janne Ahonen | 120.0 | 159.0 | 228.8 | |||
13 | Andreas Goldberger | 141.0 | 128.0 | 221.3 | |||
14 | Janne Väätäinen | 126.0 | 146.0 | 216.9 | |||
15 | Sylvain Freiholz | 123.0 | 139.0 | 213.4 | |||
16 | Werner Haim | 119.0 | 132.0 | 203.9 | |||
17 | Ivo Pertile | 137.0 | 124.0 | 201.2 | |||
18 | Tad Langlois | 128.0 | 125.0 | 195.6 | |||
19 | 7 | Noriaki Kasai | 153.0 | 109.0 | 177.9 | ||
20 | Tomáš Goder | 120.0 | 117.0 | 177.4 | |||
Nicolas Jean-Prost | 131.0 | 106.0 | 177.4 | ||||
22 | Jinya Nishikata | 168.0 | 95.0 | 170.6 | |||
23 | Sepp Zehnder | 118.0 | 110.0 | 170.2 | |||
24 | Werner Rathmayr | 114.0 | 115.0 | 168.3 | |||
25 | Bruno Reuteler | 108.0 | 116.0 | 162.8 | |||
26 | Gerd Siegmund | 115.0 | 113.0 | 161.1 | |||
27 | 18 | Matjaž Zupan | 108.0 | 116.0 | 156.3 | ||
Jakub Sucháček | 109.0 | 115.0 | 156.3 | ||||
29 | Didier Mollard | 112.0 | 106.0 | 147.1 | |||
30 | Matjaž Kladnik | 114.0 | 101.0 | 144.0 | |||
31 | Naoki Yasuzaki | 139.4 | |||||
32 | Hiroya Saito | 137.7 | |||||
33 | Andreas Beck | 136.4 | |||||
34 | Samo Gostiša | 131.1 | |||||
35 | John Lockyer | 128.6 | |||||
36 | Jérôme Gay | 122.4 | |||||
37 | Vladimír Roško | 120.5 | |||||
38 | Ken Lesja | 115.1 | |||||
39 | 8 | Kakhaber Tsakadze | 88.0 | 99.4 | |||
40 | Jure Žagar | 95.6 | |||||
41 | 30 | Johan Rasmussen | 124,0 | 94.8 | |||
42 | Roar Ljøkelsøy | 76.7 | |||||
43 | Jeremy Blackburn | 39.0 |
Medal table
Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Czech Republic | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
2 | Norway | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
3 | Italy | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
References
- ↑ FIS Ski flying World Championships 2012 - Official results - Mar 20, 1994. - accessed 20 April 2013.