The FIS Ski Flying World Championships 2020 were the 26th Ski Flying World Championships, held between 10 and 13 December 2020 in Planica, Slovenia.[1]
Host city | Planica, Slovenia |
---|---|
Sport | Ski flying |
Events | 2 |
Opening | 10 December |
Closing | 13 December |
Main venue | Letalnica bratov Gorišek HS240 |
It was originally scheduled between 19 and 22 March 2020,[2] but on 12 March 2020, it was postponed to the next season due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[3]
Schedule
editDate | Competition | Longest jump of the day | Metres | Feet |
---|---|---|---|---|
8 December 2020 | Hill test 1 | heavy snowfall; 70 cm | ||
9 December 2020 | Hill test 2 | Lovro Kos | 225 | 738 |
10 December 2020 | Official training | Michael Hayböck | 241 | 791 |
Qualification | Michael Hayböck | 242.5 | 795 | |
11 December 2020 | 1st round Individual | Michael Hayböck | 245.5 | 805 |
2nd round Individual | Markus Eisenbichler | 247 | 809 | |
12 December 2020 | 3rd round Individual | Karl Geiger | 240.5 | 789 |
4th round Individual | Halvor Egner Granerud | 243 | 797 | |
13 December 2020 | 1st round Team event | Karl Geiger | 238 | |
2nd round Team event | Markus Eisenbichler | 236.5 |
Test results
editHill test 1
editOn 8 December 2020, an additional test for lights was scheduled, but was cancelled due to heavy snowfall.
Hill test 2
editOn 9 December 2020, a second test was held.[4]
Bib | Name | Round 1 | Round 2 |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Rok Tarman | 148 m | 156 m |
2 | Cene Prevc | 209 m | 210 m |
3 | Lovro Kos | 209 m | 225 m |
4 | Andraž Pograjc | 194 m | 204 m |
5 | Lovro Vodušek | 144 m | 175 m |
6 | Matevž Samec | 200 m | 203 m |
7 | Lojze Petek | 136 m | 182 m |
8 | Nik Fabjan | 193 m | 209 m |
9 | Rok Toporiš | 169 m | 199 m |
10 | Jošt Sušnik | 134 m | 143 m |
11 | Domen Presterl | 145 m | 147 m |
12 | Urban Sušnik | 125 m | 126 m |
13 | Matija Štemberger | 152 m | 148 m |
14 | Matija Vidic | 133 m | DNS |
15 | Gašper Sršen | 139 m | 142 m |
16 | Ernest Prišlič | 199 m | 207 m |
– | Tilen Bartol | DNS |
Official training results
editThe training was held on 10 December 2020 at 13:30.
Bib | Name | Round 1 | Round 2 |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Yevhen Marusiak | 105 m | 124 m |
2 | Niko Kytösaho | 157 m | 182 m |
3 | Matthew Soukup | 185.5 m | 177.5 m |
4 | Patrick Gasienica | 162.5 m | 138 m |
5 | Arttu Pohjola | 160 m | 159 m |
6 | Alex Insam | 174 m | 189 m |
7 | Filip Sakala | 171.5 m | 180.5 m |
8 | Domen Prevc | 215.5 m | 221.5 m |
9 | Eetu Nousiainen | 175.5 m | 185 m |
10 | Dean Decker | 175.5 m | 184.5 m |
11 | Stefan Kraft | 239 m | DNS |
12 | Jarkko Määttä | 190.5 m | 184 m |
13 | Gregor Schlierenzauer | 211 m | 203.5 m |
14 | Vitaliy Kalinichenko | 184.5 m | 186.5 m |
15 | Ilya Mankov | 194 m | 193 m |
16 | Čestmír Kožíšek | 202 m | 191 m |
17 | Andreas Alamommo | 173.5 m | 167.5 m |
18 | Casey Larson | 191.5 m | 184 m |
19 | Danil Sadreev | 191 m | 192.5 m |
20 | Giovanni Bresadola | 195 m | 196.5 m |
21 | Timon-Pascal Kahofer | 192 m | 205 m |
22 | Antti Aalto | 180.5 m | 163 m |
23 | Roman Trofimov | 188 m | 212.5 m |
24 | Naoki Nakamura | 203.5 m | DNS |
25 | Dominik Peter | DNS | DNS |
26 | Clemens Leitner | 171.5 m | 186 m |
27 | Artti Aigro | 180 m | 201 m |
28 | Mikhail Nazarov | 160.5 m | 202 m |
29 | Michael Hayböck | 234 m | 241 m |
30 | Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes | 206 m | 212 m |
31 | Philipp Aschenwald | 205.5 m | 215 m |
32 | Daniel-André Tande | 232 m | 234 m |
33 | Peter Prevc | 212.5 m | 205.5 m |
34 | Andrzej Stękała | 209.5 m | 219 m |
35 | Anders Håre | 194.5 m | 200 m |
36 | Junshirō Kobayashi | 200 m | 212.5 m |
37 | Klemens Murańka | 208 m | 213.5 m |
38 | Evgeniy Klimov | 215 m | 197.5 m |
39 | Timi Zajc | 218 m | 214 m |
40 | Žiga Jelar | 197.5 m | 206 m |
41 | Aleksander Zniszczoł | 210 m | 212 m |
42 | Sander Vossan Eriksen | 218 m | 208 m |
43 | Severin Freund | 206.5 m | 208 m |
44 | Ryōyū Kobayashi | 205.5 | 213.5 m |
45 | Kamil Stoch | 229.5 m | 232.5 m |
46 | Martin Hamann | 222 m | 224.5 m |
47 | Constantin Schmid | 217 m | 226 m |
48 | Marius Lindvik | DNS | DNS |
49 | Gregor Deschwanden | DNS | DNS |
50 | Keiichi Satō | 200 m | 213.5 m |
51 | Johann André Forfang | 208 m | 218 m |
52 | Bor Pavlovčič | 211 m | 226 m |
53 | Anže Lanišek | 215 m | 221.5 m |
54 | Pius Paschke | 200 m | 220 m |
55 | Piotr Żyła | 213 m | 228 m |
56 | Karl Geiger | 215 m | 208.5 m |
57 | Dawid Kubacki | 212 m | 202 m |
58 | Yukiya Satō | 194 m | 208.5 m |
59 | Robert Johansson | 222 m | 212.5 m |
60 | Markus Eisenbichler | 232 m | 236 m |
61 | Halvor Egner Granerud | 231.5 m | 223 m |
Medal summary
editMedals table
edit* Host nation (Slovenia)
Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Germany | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
2 | Norway | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
3 | Poland | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Totals (3 entries) | 2 | 2 | 2 | 6 |
Medalists
editEvent | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Individual[5] |
Karl Geiger Germany |
877.2 | Halvor Egner Granerud Norway |
876.7 | Markus Eisenbichler Germany |
859.3 |
Team[6] |
Norway Daniel Andre Tande Johann André Forfang Robert Johansson Halvor Egner Granerud |
1727.7 | Germany Constantin Schmid Pius Paschke Markus Eisenbichler Karl Geiger |
1708.5 | Poland Piotr Żyła Andrzej Stękała Kamil Stoch Dawid Kubacki |
1665.5 |
References
edit- ^ "Provisional competition calendars announced". fis-ski.com. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
- ^ "Planica to host 2020 Ski Flying World Championships". sloveniatimes.com. Archived from the original on 2 January 2023. Retrieved 10 July 2016.
- ^ "FIS Ski Flying World Championships postponed to 2020–21 season". fis-ski.com. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
- ^ "Letalnica bratov Gorišek preizkušena, najdaljši polet 225 metrov" (in Slovenian). Siol.net. 9 December 2020.
- ^ Individual results
- ^ Team results
External links
edit- Official website Archived 2020-12-05 at the Wayback Machine