1987–88 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup

The 1987–88 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup was the 9th World Cup season in ski jumping. It began in Thunder Bay, Canada on 5 December 1987 and finished in Planica, Yugoslavia on 27 March 1988. The individual World Cup was won by Matti Nykänen and Nations Cup by Finland.

1987–88 World Cup
Winners
OverallFinland Matti Nykänen
Four Hills TournamentFinland Matti Nykänen
Swiss TournamentFinland Matti Nykänen
Nations Cup Finland
Competitions
Venues15
Individual20
Cancelled2

Map of world cup hosts

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All 15 locations which have been hosting world cup events for men this season. Events in Liberec and Harrachov were entirely canceled.

1987–88 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup (Europe)
1987–88 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup (Asia)
1987–88 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup (North America)

  Four Hills Tournament   Swiss Tournament

Calendar

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NH – normal hill / LH – large hill
No. Season Date Place Hill Size Winner Second Third Overall Ref.
189 1 5 December 1987     Thunder Bay Big Thunder K89 NH 068   Matti Nykänen   Pavel Ploc   Ernst Vettori   Matti Nykänen [1]
190 2 6 December 1987     Thunder Bay Big Thunder K120 LH 106   Matti Nykänen   Jens Weißflog   Vegard Opaas [2]
191 3 12 December 1987     Lake Placid MacKenzie Intervale K114 LH 107   Pavel Ploc   Dieter Thoma   Andreas Bauer   Pavel Ploc [3]
192 4 13 December 1987     Lake Placid MacKenzie Intervale K86 NH 069   Pavel Ploc   Jiří Parma   Vegard Opaas [4]
193 5 19 December 1987     Sapporo Miyanomori K90 NH 070   Matti Nykänen   Werner Schuster   Martin Švagerko [5]
194 6 20 December 1987     Sapporo Ōkurayama K115 LH 108   Matti Nykänen   Jiří Parma   Staffan Tällberg   Matti Nykänen [6]
195 7 30 December 1987     Oberstdorf Schattenbergschanze K115 LH 109   Pavel Ploc   Matti Nykänen   Staffan Tällberg   Pavel Ploc [7]
196 8 1 January 1988     Garmisch-Partenkirchen Große Olympiaschanze K107 LH 110   Matti Nykänen   Staffan Tällberg   Jens Weißflog   Matti Nykänen [8]
197 9 4 January 1988     Innsbruck Bergiselschanze K109 LH 111   Matti Nykänen   Andreas Bauer   Jens Weißflog [9]
198 10 6 January 1988     Bischofshofen Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze K111 LH 112   Matti Nykänen   Primož Ulaga   Ole Christian Eidhammer [10]
36th Four Hills Tournament Overall (30 December 1987 – 6 January 1988)   Matti Nykänen   Jens Weißflog   Jiří Parma
9 January 1988     Liberec Ještěd A K120 LH cnx cancelled
10 January 1988     Harrachov Čerťák K120 LH cnx
Bohemia Tournament Overall (9–10 January 1988) planned and unrealized
199 11 17 January 1988     Gallio Trampolino di Pakstall K95 NH 071   Ernst Vettori   Primož Ulaga   Jiří Parma   Matti Nykänen [11]
200 12 20 January 1988     St. Moritz Olympiaschanze K94 NH 072   Matti Nykänen   Erik Johnsen   Remo Lederer   Matti Nykänen [12]
201 13 22 January 1988     Gstaad Mattenschanze K88 NH 073   Pavel Ploc   Miran Tepeš   Jens Weißflog [13]
202 14 24 January 1988     Engelberg Gross-Titlis-Schanze K120 LH 113   Jens Weißflog   Matti Nykänen   Andreas Felder [14]
23rd Swiss Tournament Overall (20–24 February 1988)   Matti Nykänen   Miran Tepeš   Ernst Vettori
1988 Winter Olympics
203 15 4 March 1988     Lahti Salpausselkä K90 NH 074   Matti Nykänen   Jan Boklöv   Erik Johnsen   Matti Nykänen [15]
204 16 6 March 1988     Lahti Salpausselkä K114 LH 114   Matti Nykänen   Jan Boklöv   Erik Johnsen [16]
FIS Ski Flying World Championships 1988
205 17 18 March 1988     Meldal Kløvsteinbakken K105 LH 115   Erik Johnsen   Oliver Strohmaier   Jiří Malec   Matti Nykänen [17]
206 18 20 March 1988     Oslo Holmenkollbakken K105 LH 116   Erik Johnsen   Ole Gunnar Fidjestøl   Günther Stranner [18]
207 19 26 March 1988     Planica Srednja Bloudkova K90 NH 075   Primož Ulaga   Pavel Ploc   Ernst Vettori [19]
208 20 27 March 1988     Planica Bloudkova velikanka K120 LH 117   Primož Ulaga   Rajko Lotrič   Didier Mollard [20]

Standings

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References

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  1. ^ "K89: Thunder Bay". International Ski Federation. 5 December 1987.
  2. ^ "K120: Thunder Bay". International Ski Federation. 6 December 1987.
  3. ^ "K114: Lake Placid". International Ski Federation. 12 December 1987.
  4. ^ "K86: Lake Placid". International Ski Federation. 13 December 1987.
  5. ^ "K90: Sapporo". International Ski Federation. 19 December 1987.
  6. ^ "K115: Sapporo". International Ski Federation. 20 December 1987.
  7. ^ "K115: Oberstdorf". International Ski Federation. 30 December 1987.
  8. ^ "K107: Garmisch-Partenkirchen". International Ski Federation. 1 January 1988.
  9. ^ "K109: Innsbruck". International Ski Federation. 4 January 1988.
  10. ^ "K111: Bischofshofen". International Ski Federation. 6 January 1988.
  11. ^ "K95: Gallio". International Ski Federation. 17 January 1988.
  12. ^ "K94: St. Moritz". International Ski Federation. 20 January 1988.
  13. ^ "K88: Gstaad". International Ski Federation. 22 January 1988.
  14. ^ "K120: Engelberg". International Ski Federation. 24 January 1988.
  15. ^ "K90: Lahti". International Ski Federation. 4 March 1988.
  16. ^ "K114: Lahti". International Ski Federation. 6 March 1988.
  17. ^ "K105: Meldal". International Ski Federation. 18 March 1988.
  18. ^ "K105: Oslo". International Ski Federation. 16 March 1988.
  19. ^ "K90: Planica". International Ski Federation. 26 March 1988.
  20. ^ "K120: Planica". International Ski Federation. 27 March 1988.