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FIS Ski Flying World Championships 1994

The FIS Ski Flying World Ski Championships 1994 took place on 20 March 1994 in Planica, Slovenia for the record fourth time. It also counted for World Cup. They previously hosted the championships as being part of Yugoslavia in 1972, 1979 and 1985. This was the first large international sporting event in Slovenia after they declared its independence in 1991 following the Ten-Day War.

FIS Ski Flying World Championships 1994
VenueVelikanka bratov Gorišek K185
Date20 March 1994
Competitors43 from 15 nations
Winning score351.3
Medalists
← 1992
1996 →

Schedule edit

Date Event Rounds Longest jump of the day Visitors
17 March 1994   Hill test 2 203 metres (666 ft) by Toni Nieminen N/A
18 March 1994   Official Training 2 209 metres (686 ft) by Espen Bredesen 20,000
19 March 1994   Competition, Day 1 canceled; strong wind, no jumps at all 40,000
20 March 1994   Competition, Day 2 3 199 metres (653 ft) by Roberto Cecon 30,000

All jumps over 200 metres edit

Chronological order:

Fair play edit

Espen Bredesen (172 and 182 m) switched his silver medal with Roberto Cecon (160 and 199 m) bronze at the press conference after medal ceremony, as he deserved it more due to the rule which didn't allow to score jumps exceeding 191 metres.

Historic 200 metres barrier broken edit

On 17 March 1994 sports history was made. Austrian ski jumper Andreas Goldberger became the first person in history to jump over 200 metres (660 ft) barrier, but it didn't count, as he touched the snow with his hands at 202 metres (663 ft) during practice.[1]

On the same day and also in the first round, just a few minutes later after Goldi, Finnish ski jumper Toni Nieminen made a history and officially became the first person to land on his feet over 200 metres (660 ft) when he stood at 203 metres (666 ft).[2]

Competition edit

On 17 March 1994 practise session with 36 on start in two rounds was on schedule with historic 200 metres barrier broken and started with WR by test jumper Martin Höllwarth at 196 metres.[3] But Miran Tepeš was honoured to be the first, landing at 163 metres.[4]

On 18 March 1994 official training in front of 20,000 people with two rounds were on schedule and third round was canceled due to strong wind. Before that 15 trial V-jumpers made practise test jumps. In the first round Christof Duffner crashed from a huge height at 207 metres (679 ft) metres world record distance. About 15 minutes later Espen Bredesen set the third and last world record that year at 209 metres (686 ft).[5][6][7]

On 19 March 1994 first day of competition was on schedule but canceled due to strong. Unfortunate to 40,000 people visiting the event, crowd was very disappointed as they didn't manage to see a single jump that day.

On 20 March 1994 second day of competition was on schedule in front of 30,000 people and without any weather problems. The event marked the last time the 191 meters rule—jumps that exceeded the distance points didn't register further—was in use. At the time the single day event also counted for World Cup points and statistics. Only 2 of 4 jumps counted into final results. Czech Jaroslav Sakala became the world champion.[8]

Practise edit

13:00 PM — 17 March 1994 — incomplete

Bib Name 1RD 2RD
Test jumpers
P1   Miran Tepeš 163.0 m N/A
P2   Tomaž Knafelj N/A N/A
P3   Aljoša Dolhar 180.0 m N/A
P12   Martin Höllwarth 196.0 m N/A
Competitors
42   Andreas Goldberger 202.0 m 202.0 m
57   Toni Nieminen 203.0 m 173.0 m
N/A   Jani Soininen 159.0 m 178.0 m
N/A   Janne Ahonen 190.0 m 168.0 m
N/A   Jure Žagar 156.0 m 152.0 m
N/A   Matjaž Kladnik 172.0 m 165.0 m
N/A   Espen Bredesen 174.0 m 188.0 m
N/A   Kurt Børset 166.0 m 167.0 m
N/A   Jaroslav Sakala 170.0 m N/A
N/A   Werner Haim N/A 181.0 m
N/A   Roar Ljøkelsøy N/A 179.0 m
N/A Back N/A 180.0 m

Official training edit

9:00 AM trial round — 18 March 1994 — incomplete — 43 on start list

Bib Name 1RD 2RD
7   Noriaki Kasai 174.0 m N/A
9   Jure Žagar 149.0 m 149.0 m
11   Toni Nieminen 187.0 m N/A
14   Roberto Cecon N/A 193.0 m
17   Christof Duffner 207.0 m N/A
18   Matjaž Zupan 112.0 m 124.0 m
20   Espen Bredesen 209.0 m N/A
25   Werner Rathmayr N/A 181.0 m
32   Matjaž Kladnik 167.0 m 152.0 m
36   Andreas Goldberger 201.0 m
37   Jaroslav Sakala 183.0 m 200.0 m
39   Samo Gostiša 125.0 m 135.0 m
N/A   Jérôme Gay 146.0 m N/A
N/A   Nicolas Jean-Prost 174.0 m N/A
N/A   Dejan Jekovec 124.0 m 94.0 m
N/A   Gerd Siegmund 186.0 m N/A
N/A   Jinya Nishikata 188.0 m N/A
N/A   Lasse Ottesen N/A 176.0 m

Official results edit

10:00 AM — 20 March 1994 — Two rounds — chronological order[9]

Rank Bib Name D2 (20 March 1994) Points
1RD 2RD
  37   Jaroslav Sakala 189.0 m 185.0 m 351.3
  20   Espen Bredesen 172.0 m 182.0 m 329.8
  14   Roberto Cecon 160.0 m 199.0 m 324.7
4 17   Christof Duffner 159.0 m 148.0 m 266.4
5 4   Lasse Ottesen 177.0 m 129.0 m 263.2
6 38   Stephan Zünd 150.0 m 140.0 m 252.5
7 11   Toni Nieminen 139.0 m 156.0 m 248.0
8 42   Kurt Børset 122.0 m 167.0 m 245.3
9 23   Jani Soininen 138.0 m 149.0 m 239.4
10   Hansjörg Jäkle 129.0 m 153.0 m 237.4
11 2   Takanobu Okabe 198.0 m 95.0 m 235.2
12 5   Janne Ahonen 120.0 m 159.0 m 228.8
13 36   Andreas Goldberger 141.0 m 128.0 m 221.3
14 43   Janne Väätäinen 126.0 m 146.0 m 216.9
15   Sylvain Freiholz 123.0 m 139.0 m 213.4
16 19   Werner Haim 119.0 m 132.0 m 203.9
17   Ivo Pertile 137.0 m 124.0 m 201.2
18   Tad Langlois 128.0 m 125.0 m 195.6
19 7   Noriaki Kasai 153.0 m 109.0 m 177.9
20 24   Tomáš Goder 120.0 m 117.0 m 177.4
33   Nicolas Jean-Prost 131.0 m 106.0 m 177.4
22 13   Jinya Nishikata 168.0 m 95.0 m 170.6
23   Sepp Zehnder 118.0 m 110.0 m 170.2
24 25   Werner Rathmayr 114.0 m 115.0 m 168.3
25   Bruno Reuteler 108.0 m 116.0 m 162.8
26 35   Gerd Siegmund 115.0 m 113.0 m 161.1
27 18   Matjaž Zupan 108.0 m 116.0 m 156.3
22   Jakub Sucháček 109.0 m 115.0 m 156.3
29   Didier Mollard 112.0 m 106.0 m 147.1
30 32   Matjaž Kladnik 114.0 m 101.0 m 144.0
31   Naoki Yasuzaki 102.0 m 110.0 m 139.4
32   Hiroya Saito 103.0 m 108.0 m 137.7
33   Andreas Beck 95.0 m 117.0 m 136.4
34   Samo Gostiša 112.0 m 96.0 m 131.1
35   John Lockyer 103.0 m 110.0 m 128.6
36   Jérôme Gay 101.0 m 101.0 m 122.4
37   Vladimír Roško 98.0 m 102.0 m 120.5
38   Ken Lesja 99.0 m 99.0 m 115.1
39 8   Kakhaber Tsakadze 88.0 m 94.0 m 99.4
40   Jure Žagar 83.0 m 100.0 m 95.6
41 30   Johan Rasmussen 124.0 m 80.0 m 94.8
42 34   Roar Ljøkelsøy 94.0 m 77.0 m 76.7
43   Jeremy Blackburn 85.0 m 39.0

  Points were officially scored maximum as 191 metres jump.
  World record. First official over 200 metres.
  Crash at world record distance.
  World record.
  Fall.

Ski flying world records edit

Date Name Country Metres Feet
17 March 1994   Martin Höllwarth   Austria 196 643
17 March 1994   Andreas Goldberger   Austria 202 663
17 March 1994   Toni Nieminen   Finland 203 666
18 March 1994   Christof Duffner   Germany 207 679
18 March 1994   Espen Bredesen   Austria 209 686

  Not recognized! Touch. First ever jump over 200 metres in history.
  First official (standing) jump over 200 metres in history.

Medal table edit

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Czech Republic (CZE)1001
2  Norway (NOR)0101
3  Italy (ITA)0011
Totals (3 entries)1113

References edit

  1. ^ "Andreas Goldberger - Planica 1994 - 202 m! - World record crash". YouTube/ORF. 17 June 2012. Archived from the original on 2021-12-20.
  2. ^ "Toni Nieminen - 203 m - Planica 1994". YouTube. 24 March 2017. Archived from the original on 2021-12-20.
  3. ^ "Martin Hoellwarth - 196 m - Planica 1994 - Test Jumping - World Record!". YouTube. 20 July 2012. Archived from the original on 2021-12-20.
  4. ^ "V Planici tudi preko magičnih 200 metrov, p.8" (in Slovenian). Delo. 18 March 1994.
  5. ^ "Planica ne pozna nobenih meja Espen Bredesen poletel 209 metrov, p.8" (in Slovenian). Delo. 19 March 1994.
  6. ^ "Christof Duffner - Planica 1994 - 207 m - World Record (fall)". ORF/YouTube. 17 June 2012. Archived from the original on 2021-12-20.
  7. ^ "Espen Bredesen - 209 m - Planica 1994 - Word record (Polish Commentary)". YouTube. 30 December 2017. Archived from the original on 2021-12-20.
  8. ^ "V Planici '94 je novi svetovni prvak postal Jaroslav Sakala, p.11" (in Slovenian). Delo. 21 March 1994.
  9. ^ World Championships 1994 - Official results 2010-08-16 at the Wayback Machine

flying, world, championships, 1994, flying, world, championships, 1994, took, place, march, 1994, planica, slovenia, record, fourth, time, also, counted, world, they, previously, hosted, championships, being, part, yugoslavia, 1972, 1979, 1985, this, first, la. The FIS Ski Flying World Ski Championships 1994 took place on 20 March 1994 in Planica Slovenia for the record fourth time It also counted for World Cup They previously hosted the championships as being part of Yugoslavia in 1972 1979 and 1985 This was the first large international sporting event in Slovenia after they declared its independence in 1991 following the Ten Day War FIS Ski Flying World Championships 1994VenueVelikanka bratov Gorisek K185Date20 March 1994Competitors43 from 15 nationsWinning score351 3Medalists Jaroslav Sakala Czech Republic Espen Bredesen Norway Roberto Cecon Italy 19921996 Contents 1 Schedule 2 All jumps over 200 metres 3 Fair play 4 Historic 200 metres barrier broken 5 Competition 5 1 Practise 5 2 Official training 6 Official results 7 Ski flying world records 8 Medal table 9 ReferencesSchedule editDate Event Rounds Longest jump of the day Visitors 17 March 1994 Hill test 2 203 metres 666 ft by Toni Nieminen N A 18 March 1994 Official Training 2 209 metres 686 ft by Espen Bredesen 20 000 19 March 1994 Competition Day 1 canceled strong wind no jumps at all 40 000 20 March 1994 Competition Day 2 3 199 metres 653 ft by Roberto Cecon 30 000All jumps over 200 metres editChronological order 202 metres 663 ft 17 March Andreas Goldberger WR crash 1RD Practise 203 metres 666 ft 17 March Toni Nieminen WR 1RD Practice 202 metres 663 ft 17 March Andreas Goldberger 2RD Practise 207 metres 679 ft 18 March Christof Duffner WR crash 1RD Official training 209 metres 686 ft 18 March Espen Bredesen WR 1RD Official training 201 metres 659 ft 18 March Andreas Goldberger 2RD Official training 200 metres 656 ft 18 March Jaroslav Sakala 2RD Official training Fair play editEspen Bredesen 172 and 182 m switched his silver medal with Roberto Cecon 160 and 199 m bronze at the press conference after medal ceremony as he deserved it more due to the rule which didn t allow to score jumps exceeding 191 metres Historic 200 metres barrier broken editOn 17 March 1994 sports history was made Austrian ski jumper Andreas Goldberger became the first person in history to jump over 200 metres 660 ft barrier but it didn t count as he touched the snow with his hands at 202 metres 663 ft during practice 1 On the same day and also in the first round just a few minutes later after Goldi Finnish ski jumper Toni Nieminen made a history and officially became the first person to land on his feet over 200 metres 660 ft when he stood at 203 metres 666 ft 2 Competition editOn 17 March 1994 practise session with 36 on start in two rounds was on schedule with historic 200 metres barrier broken and started with WR by test jumper Martin Hollwarth at 196 metres 3 But Miran Tepes was honoured to be the first landing at 163 metres 4 On 18 March 1994 official training in front of 20 000 people with two rounds were on schedule and third round was canceled due to strong wind Before that 15 trial V jumpers made practise test jumps In the first round Christof Duffner crashed from a huge height at 207 metres 679 ft metres world record distance About 15 minutes later Espen Bredesen set the third and last world record that year at 209 metres 686 ft 5 6 7 On 19 March 1994 first day of competition was on schedule but canceled due to strong Unfortunate to 40 000 people visiting the event crowd was very disappointed as they didn t manage to see a single jump that day On 20 March 1994 second day of competition was on schedule in front of 30 000 people and without any weather problems The event marked the last time the 191 meters rule jumps that exceeded the distance points didn t register further was in use At the time the single day event also counted for World Cup points and statistics Only 2 of 4 jumps counted into final results Czech Jaroslav Sakala became the world champion 8 Practise edit 13 00 PM 17 March 1994 incomplete Bib Name 1RD 2RD Test jumpers P1 nbsp Miran Tepes 163 0 m N A P2 nbsp Tomaz Knafelj N A N A P3 nbsp Aljosa Dolhar 180 0 m N A P12 nbsp Martin Hollwarth 196 0 m N A Competitors 42 nbsp Andreas Goldberger 202 0 m 202 0 m 57 nbsp Toni Nieminen 203 0 m 173 0 m N A nbsp Jani Soininen 159 0 m 178 0 m N A nbsp Janne Ahonen 190 0 m 168 0 m N A nbsp Jure Zagar 156 0 m 152 0 m N A nbsp Matjaz Kladnik 172 0 m 165 0 m N A nbsp Espen Bredesen 174 0 m 188 0 m N A nbsp Kurt Borset 166 0 m 167 0 m N A nbsp Jaroslav Sakala 170 0 m N A N A nbsp Werner Haim N A 181 0 m N A nbsp Roar Ljokelsoy N A 179 0 m N A Back N A 180 0 m Official training edit 9 00 AM trial round 18 March 1994 incomplete 43 on start list Bib Name 1RD 2RD 7 nbsp Noriaki Kasai 174 0 m N A 9 nbsp Jure Zagar 149 0 m 149 0 m 11 nbsp Toni Nieminen 187 0 m N A 14 nbsp Roberto Cecon N A 193 0 m 17 nbsp Christof Duffner 207 0 m N A 18 nbsp Matjaz Zupan 112 0 m 124 0 m 20 nbsp Espen Bredesen 209 0 m N A 25 nbsp Werner Rathmayr N A 181 0 m 32 nbsp Matjaz Kladnik 167 0 m 152 0 m 36 nbsp Andreas Goldberger 201 0 m 37 nbsp Jaroslav Sakala 183 0 m 200 0 m 39 nbsp Samo Gostisa 125 0 m 135 0 m N A nbsp Jerome Gay 146 0 m N A N A nbsp Nicolas Jean Prost 174 0 m N A N A nbsp Dejan Jekovec 124 0 m 94 0 m N A nbsp Gerd Siegmund 186 0 m N A N A nbsp Jinya Nishikata 188 0 m N A N A nbsp Lasse Ottesen N A 176 0 mOfficial results edit10 00 AM 20 March 1994 Two rounds chronological order 9 Rank Bib Name D2 20 March 1994 Points 1RD 2RD nbsp 37 nbsp Jaroslav Sakala 189 0 m 185 0 m 351 3 nbsp 20 nbsp Espen Bredesen 172 0 m 182 0 m 329 8 nbsp 14 nbsp Roberto Cecon 160 0 m 199 0 m 324 7 4 17 nbsp Christof Duffner 159 0 m 148 0 m 266 4 5 4 nbsp Lasse Ottesen 177 0 m 129 0 m 263 2 6 38 nbsp Stephan Zund 150 0 m 140 0 m 252 5 7 11 nbsp Toni Nieminen 139 0 m 156 0 m 248 0 8 42 nbsp Kurt Borset 122 0 m 167 0 m 245 3 9 23 nbsp Jani Soininen 138 0 m 149 0 m 239 4 10 nbsp Hansjorg Jakle 129 0 m 153 0 m 237 4 11 2 nbsp Takanobu Okabe 198 0 m 95 0 m 235 2 12 5 nbsp Janne Ahonen 120 0 m 159 0 m 228 8 13 36 nbsp Andreas Goldberger 141 0 m 128 0 m 221 3 14 43 nbsp Janne Vaatainen 126 0 m 146 0 m 216 9 15 nbsp Sylvain Freiholz 123 0 m 139 0 m 213 4 16 19 nbsp Werner Haim 119 0 m 132 0 m 203 9 17 nbsp Ivo Pertile 137 0 m 124 0 m 201 2 18 nbsp Tad Langlois 128 0 m 125 0 m 195 6 19 7 nbsp Noriaki Kasai 153 0 m 109 0 m 177 9 20 24 nbsp Tomas Goder 120 0 m 117 0 m 177 4 33 nbsp Nicolas Jean Prost 131 0 m 106 0 m 177 4 22 13 nbsp Jinya Nishikata 168 0 m 95 0 m 170 6 23 nbsp Sepp Zehnder 118 0 m 110 0 m 170 2 24 25 nbsp Werner Rathmayr 114 0 m 115 0 m 168 3 25 nbsp Bruno Reuteler 108 0 m 116 0 m 162 8 26 35 nbsp Gerd Siegmund 115 0 m 113 0 m 161 1 27 18 nbsp Matjaz Zupan 108 0 m 116 0 m 156 3 22 nbsp Jakub Suchacek 109 0 m 115 0 m 156 3 29 nbsp Didier Mollard 112 0 m 106 0 m 147 1 30 32 nbsp Matjaz Kladnik 114 0 m 101 0 m 144 0 31 nbsp Naoki Yasuzaki 102 0 m 110 0 m 139 4 32 nbsp Hiroya Saito 103 0 m 108 0 m 137 7 33 nbsp Andreas Beck 95 0 m 117 0 m 136 4 34 nbsp Samo Gostisa 112 0 m 96 0 m 131 1 35 nbsp John Lockyer 103 0 m 110 0 m 128 6 36 nbsp Jerome Gay 101 0 m 101 0 m 122 4 37 nbsp Vladimir Rosko 98 0 m 102 0 m 120 5 38 nbsp Ken Lesja 99 0 m 99 0 m 115 1 39 8 nbsp Kakhaber Tsakadze 88 0 m 94 0 m 99 4 40 nbsp Jure Zagar 83 0 m 100 0 m 95 6 41 30 nbsp Johan Rasmussen 124 0 m 80 0 m 94 8 42 34 nbsp Roar Ljokelsoy 94 0 m 77 0 m 76 7 43 nbsp Jeremy Blackburn 85 0 m 39 0 Points were officially scored maximum as 191 metres jump World record First official over 200 metres Crash at world record distance World record Fall Ski flying world records editDate Name Country Metres Feet 17 March 1994 Martin Hollwarth nbsp Austria 196 643 17 March 1994 Andreas Goldberger nbsp Austria 202 663 17 March 1994 Toni Nieminen nbsp Finland 203 666 18 March 1994 Christof Duffner nbsp Germany 207 679 18 March 1994 Espen Bredesen nbsp Austria 209 686 Not recognized Touch First ever jump over 200 metres in history First official standing jump over 200 metres in history Medal table editRankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal1 nbsp Czech Republic CZE 10012 nbsp Norway NOR 01013 nbsp Italy ITA 0011Totals 3 entries 1113References edit Andreas Goldberger Planica 1994 202 m World record crash YouTube ORF 17 June 2012 Archived from the original on 2021 12 20 Toni Nieminen 203 m Planica 1994 YouTube 24 March 2017 Archived from the original on 2021 12 20 Martin Hoellwarth 196 m Planica 1994 Test Jumping World Record YouTube 20 July 2012 Archived from the original on 2021 12 20 V Planici tudi preko magicnih 200 metrov p 8 in Slovenian Delo 18 March 1994 Planica ne pozna nobenih meja Espen Bredesen poletel 209 metrov p 8 in Slovenian Delo 19 March 1994 Christof Duffner Planica 1994 207 m World Record fall ORF YouTube 17 June 2012 Archived from the original on 2021 12 20 Espen Bredesen 209 m Planica 1994 Word record Polish Commentary YouTube 30 December 2017 Archived from the original on 2021 12 20 V Planici 94 je novi svetovni prvak postal Jaroslav Sakala p 11 in Slovenian Delo 21 March 1994 World Championships 1994 Official results Archived 2010 08 16 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title FIS Ski Flying World Championships 1994 amp oldid 1090701862, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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