Four Hills Tournament


















Four Hills Tournament
Vierschanzentournee


Vierschanzentournee logo.png
logotype

Statusactive
Genresporting event
Date(s)29/30 December – 6 January
Frequencyannual
Country
Austria
Germany
Inaugurated1953 (1953)
Organised byFIS
Websitevierschanzentournee.com


The Four Hills Tournament (German: Vierschanzentournee) or the German-Austrian Ski Jumping Week (German: Deutsch-Österreichische Skisprung-Woche) is a ski jumping event composed of four World Cup events and has taken place in Germany and Austria each year since 1953. With a few exceptions the ski jumping events are held chronologically at Oberstdorf, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Innsbruck and Bischofshofen. Winning these all four events in one Four Hills Tournament edition is called the grand slam.


The Four Hills Tournament champion is the one who gets the most points over the four events. Unlike the World Cup ranking, however, the actual points scored during the competitions are the ones that are used to determine the winner. In 2005–06, Janne Ahonen and Jakub Janda shared the overall victory after finishing with exactly the same points total after the four competitions. In 2001–02, the anniversary 50th edition, Sven Hannawald became the first to win all the four events in the same edition. In 2017-18 season Kamil Stoch became just the second man in history to achieve the grand slam of ski jumping. Just a year later, in the 2018-19 edition, Ryoyu Kobayashi became the third ski jumper in history to win the grand slam.


The four individual events themselves are part of the World Cup and award points toward the world cup in exactly the same manner as all other world cup events.




Contents





  • 1 Tournament hills


  • 2 Knock-out system


  • 3 List of winners


  • 4 Records

    • 4.1 Overall winners



  • 5 National quota


  • 6 Notable participants


  • 7 See also


  • 8 References


  • 9 External links




Tournament hills





































Date
Image
Place
Hill name
K-Point
Hill size
Hill record
29 or 30 December

Skisprungschanze oberstdorf.JPG

Germany Oberstdorf, Germany

Schattenbergschanze
K-120
HS 137
143.5 m (2003)
Norway Sigurd Pettersen
1 January

Neue Große Olympiaschanze.jpg

Germany Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany

Große Olympiaschanze
K-125
HS 142
143.5 m (2010)
Switzerland Simon Ammann
3 or 4 January

Bergisel-N.jpg

Austria Innsbruck, Austria

Bergiselschanze
K-120
HS 130
138.0 m (2015)
Austria Michael Hayböck[1]
6 January

Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze.JPG

Austria Bischofshofen, Austria

Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze
K-125
HS 142
145.0 m (2019)
Poland Dawid Kubacki

Traditionally, the order of the tournament competitions has been: Oberstdorf, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Innsbruck, Bischofshofen – with the following exceptions:



  • 1953: Garmisch-Partenkirchen was the first, and Oberstdorf the second event.


  • 1956–57, 1961–62, 1962–63: Innsbruck was the second event, and Garmisch-Partenkirchen third.


  • 1971–72: Innsbruck was first, and Oberstdorf third.


  • 2007–08: The Innsbruck event was cancelled due to bad weather, and replaced with an additional competition at Bischofshofen.


Knock-out system


One of the tournament's peculiarities is its qualifying system. Unlike other ski jumping events where the best 30 competitors in the first round qualify for the second round, all Four Hills events follow a knock-out system first introduced for the 1996–97 season.


The 50 competitors are divided into 25 pairs. All 25 winners of these duels plus the five best losers qualify for the second round. It is theoretically possible that a competitor who finishes the first round 12th will not qualify for the second round (if he loses his internal duel, five lucky losers and winners of their duels have better results) while the one with the 49th first series result may still qualify (if his "rival" has the worst result). On the other hand, jumpers are less likely to be disadvantaged by a possible significant change in weather conditions between the start and end of the first series. A change in the direction and speed of the wind can make it impossible for the best jumpers to produce a good result. In the event of significantly worse conditions during the second half of the first series, the possibility exists that most of the best jumpers would be eliminated by bad luck alone. Directly pairing rivals reduces the impact of these conditions. In this competition format the qualifying series are valued as well, since jumpers with a better qualification result will have the opportunity to compete against jumpers with worse result. Therefore, it is not enough for a jumper to be among 50 best jumpers in qualifications (with whatever result), but it is better for him to achieve a result as good as possible.


The first jumper in the competition is the one who qualified 26th, followed by his pair who qualified 25th. The next pair has 27th and 24th from the qualification, one after that 28th and 23rd etc. The last pair has last qualified jumper against qualification winner.


If qualification is postponed until the day of competition, the knock-out system is not used, and competition follows regular world cup rules. Because of that in the 2007/08 tournament, the knock-out system was used only in Oberstdorf.



List of winners






*
Won all four events in the same season

Won three events in the same season
























































































































































































































































































































































































































YearOberstdorfGarmisch-
Partenkirchen
InnsbruckBischofshofenOverall victory

1953

Norway Erling Kroken

Norway Asgeir Dølplads[a]

Austria Sepp Bradl

Norway Halvor Næs

Austria Sepp Bradl

1953–54

Norway Olav Bjørnstad

Norway Olav Bjørnstad

Norway Olav Bjørnstad

Austria Sepp Bradl

Norway Olav Bjørnstad

1954–55

Finland Aulis Kallakorpi

Finland Aulis Kallakorpi

Norway Torbjørn Ruste

Norway Torbjørn Ruste

Finland Hemmo Silvennoinen

1955–56

Finland Eino Kirjonen

Finland Hemmo Silvennoinen

Soviet Union Koba Zakadze

Soviet Union Yuri Skorzov

Soviet Union Nikolay Kamenskiy

1956–57

Finland Pentti Uotinen

Soviet Union Nikolay Kamenskiy[b]

Soviet Union Nikolai Schamov[b]

Finland Eino Kirjonen

Finland Pentti Uotinen

1957–58

Soviet Union Nikolai Kamenski

Austria Willi Egger

East Germany Helmut Recknagel

East Germany Helmut Recknagel

East Germany Helmut Recknagel

1958–59

East Germany Helmut Recknagel

East Germany Helmut Recknagel

East Germany Helmut Recknagel

Austria Walter Habersatter

East Germany Helmut Recknagel

1959–60

West Germany Max Bolkart

West Germany Max Bolkart

West Germany Max Bolkart

Austria Albin Plank

West Germany Max Bolkart

1960–61

Finland Juhani Kärkinen

Soviet Union Koba Zakadze

Finland Kalevi Kärkinen

East Germany Helmut Recknagel

East Germany Helmut Recknagel (3)

1961–62

Finland Eino Kirjonen

West Germany Georg Thoma[b]

Austria Willi Egger[b]

Austria Willi Egger

Finland Eino Kirjonen

1962–63

Norway Toralf Engan

Norway Toralf Engan[b]

Norway Toralf Engan[b]

Norway Torbjørn Yggeseth

Norway Toralf Engan

1963–64

Norway Torbjørn Yggeseth

Finland Veikko Kankkonen

Finland Veikko Kankkonen

Austria Baldur Preiml

Finland Veikko Kankkonen

1964–65

Norway Torgeir Brandtzæg

Finland Erkki Pukka

Norway Torgeir Brandtzæg

Norway Bjørn Wirkola

Norway Torgeir Brandtzæg

1965–66

Finland Veikko Kankkonen

Finland Paavo Lukkariniemi

East Germany Dieter Neuendorf

Finland Veikko Kankkonen

Finland Veikko Kankkonen (2)

1966–67

East Germany Dieter Neuendorf

Norway Bjørn Wirkola

Norway Bjørn Wirkola

Norway Bjørn Wirkola

Norway Bjørn Wirkola

1967–68

East Germany Dieter Neuendorf

Norway Bjørn Wirkola

Soviet Union Gariy Napalkov

Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška

Norway Bjørn Wirkola

1968–69

Norway Bjørn Wirkola

Norway Bjørn Wirkola

Norway Bjørn Wirkola

Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška

Norway Bjørn Wirkola (3)

1969–70

Soviet Union Gariy Napalkov

Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška

Norway Bjørn Wirkola

Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška

East Germany Horst Queck

1970–71

Norway Ingolf Mork

Norway Ingolf Mork

Czechoslovakia Zbyněk Hubač

Norway Ingolf Mork

Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška

1971–72

Japan Yukio Kasaya[c]

Japan Yukio Kasaya

Japan Yukio Kasaya[c]

Norway Bjørn Wirkola

Norway Ingolf Mork

1972–73

East Germany Rainer Schmidt

East Germany Rainer Schmidt

Soviet Union Sergei Botschkov

Czechoslovakia Rudolf Höhnl

East Germany Rainer Schmidt

1973–74

East Germany Hans-Georg Aschenbach

Switzerland Walter Steiner

East Germany Hans-Georg Aschenbach

East Germany Bernd Eckstein

East Germany Hans-Georg Aschenbach

1974–75

Austria Willi Pürstl

Austria Karl Schnabl

Austria Karl Schnabl

Austria Karl Schnabl

Austria Willi Pürstl

1975–76

Austria Toni Innauer

Austria Toni Innauer

East Germany Jochen Danneberg

Austria Toni Innauer

East Germany Jochen Danneberg

1976–77

Austria Toni Innauer

East Germany Jochen Danneberg

East Germany Henry Glaß

Switzerland Walter Steiner

East Germany Jochen Danneberg (2)

1977–78

East Germany Matthias Buse

East Germany Jochen Danneberg

Norway Per Bergerud

Finland Kari Ylianttila

Finland Kari Ylianttila

1978–79

Soviet Union Yuri Ivanov

Czechoslovakia Josef Samek

Finland Pentti Kokkonen

Finland Pentti Kokkonen

Finland Pentti Kokkonen

1979–80

East Germany Jochen Danneberg

Austria Hubert Neuper

Austria Hubert Neuper

East Germany Martin Weber

Austria Hubert Neuper

1980–81

Austria Hubert Neuper

Canada Horst Bulau

Finland Jari Puikkonen

Austria Armin Kogler

Austria Hubert Neuper (2)

1981–82

Finland Matti Nykänen

Norway Roger Ruud

East Germany Manfred Deckert
Norway Per Bergerud

Austria Hubert Neuper

East Germany Manfred Deckert

1982–83

Canada Horst Bulau

Austria Armin Kogler

Finland Matti Nykänen

East Germany Jens Weißflog

Finland Matti Nykänen

1983–84

East Germany Klaus Ostwald

East Germany Jens Weißflog

East Germany Jens Weißflog

East Germany Jens Weißflog

East Germany Jens Weißflog

1984–85

Austria Ernst Vettori

East Germany Jens Weißflog

Finland Matti Nykänen

Norway Hroar Stjernen

East Germany Jens Weißflog

1985–86

Finland Pekka Suorsa

Czechoslovakia Pavel Ploc

Finland Jari Puikkonen

Austria Ernst Vettori

Austria Ernst Vettori

1986–87

Norway Vegard Opaas

West Germany Andreas Bauer

Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Primož Ulaga

Finland Tuomo Ylipulli

Austria Ernst Vettori (2)

1987–88

Czechoslovakia Pavel Ploc

Finland Matti Nykänen

Finland Matti Nykänen

Finland Matti Nykänen

Finland Matti Nykänen (2)

1988–89

West Germany Dieter Thoma

Finland Matti Nykänen

Sweden Jan Boklöv

United States Mike Holland

Finland Risto Laakkonen

1989–90

West Germany Dieter Thoma

East Germany Jens Weißflog

Finland Ari-Pekka Nikkola

Czechoslovakia František Jež

West Germany Dieter Thoma

1990–91

Germany Jens Weißflog

Germany Jens Weißflog

Finland Ari-Pekka Nikkola

Austria Andreas Felder

Germany Jens Weißflog

1991–92

Finland Toni Nieminen

Austria Andreas Felder

Finland Toni Nieminen

Finland Toni Nieminen

Finland Toni Nieminen

1992–93

Germany Christof Duffner

Japan Noriaki Kasai

Austria Andreas Goldberger

Austria Andreas Goldberger

Austria Andreas Goldberger

1993–94

Germany Jens Weißflog

Norway Espen Bredesen

Austria Andreas Goldberger

Norway Espen Bredesen

Norway Espen Bredesen

1994–95

Austria R. Schwarzenberger

Finland Janne Ahonen

Japan Kazuyoshi Funaki

Austria Andreas Goldberger

Austria Andreas Goldberger (2)

1995–96

Finland Mika Laitinen

Austria R. Schwarzenberger

Austria Andreas Goldberger

Germany Jens Weißflog

Germany Jens Weißflog (4)

1996–97

Germany Dieter Thoma

Slovenia Primož Peterka

Japan Kazuyoshi Funaki

Germany Dieter Thoma

Slovenia Primož Peterka

1997–98

Japan Kazuyoshi Funaki

Japan Kazuyoshi Funaki

Japan Kazuyoshi Funaki

Germany Sven Hannawald

Japan Kazuyoshi Funaki

1998–99

Germany Martin Schmitt

Germany Martin Schmitt

Japan Noriaki Kasai

Austria Andreas Widhölzl

Finland Janne Ahonen

1999–00

Germany Martin Schmitt

Austria Andreas Widhölzl

Austria Andreas Widhölzl

Austria Andreas Widhölzl

Austria Andreas Widhölzl

2000–01

Germany Martin Schmitt

Japan Noriaki Kasai

Poland Adam Małysz

Poland Adam Małysz

Poland Adam Małysz

2001–02

Germany Sven Hannawald

Germany Sven Hannawald

Germany Sven Hannawald

Germany Sven Hannawald

Germany Sven Hannawald *

2002–03

Germany Sven Hannawald

Slovenia Primož Peterka

Finland Janne Ahonen

Norway Bjørn Einar Romøren

Finland Janne Ahonen

2003–04

Norway Sigurd Pettersen

Norway Sigurd Pettersen

Slovenia Peter Žonta

Norway Sigurd Pettersen

Norway Sigurd Pettersen

2004–05

Finland Janne Ahonen

Finland Janne Ahonen

Finland Janne Ahonen

Austria Martin Höllwarth

Finland Janne Ahonen

2005–06

Finland Janne Ahonen

Czech Republic Jakub Janda

Norway Lars Bystøl

Finland Janne Ahonen

Finland Janne Ahonen
Czech Republic Jakub Janda

2006–07

Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer

Switzerland Andreas Küttel

Norway Anders Jacobsen

Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer

Norway Anders Jacobsen

2007–08

Austria Thomas Morgenstern

Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer

Finland Janne Ahonen[d]

Finland Janne Ahonen

Finland Janne Ahonen (5)

2008–09

Switzerland Simon Ammann

Austria Wolfgang Loitzl

Austria Wolfgang Loitzl

Austria Wolfgang Loitzl

Austria Wolfgang Loitzl

2009–10

Austria Andreas Kofler

Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer

Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer

Austria Thomas Morgenstern

Austria Andreas Kofler

2010–11

Austria Thomas Morgenstern

Switzerland Simon Ammann

Austria Thomas Morgenstern

Norway Tom Hilde

Austria Thomas Morgenstern

2011–12

Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer

Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer

Austria Andreas Kofler

Austria Thomas Morgenstern

Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer

2012–13

Norway Anders Jacobsen

Norway Anders Jacobsen

Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer

Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer

Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer (2)

2013–14

Switzerland Simon Ammann

Austria Thomas Diethart

Finland Anssi Koivuranta

Austria Thomas Diethart

Austria Thomas Diethart

2014–15

Austria Stefan Kraft

Norway Anders Jacobsen

Germany Richard Freitag

Austria Michael Hayboeck

Austria Stefan Kraft

2015–16

Germany Severin Freund

Slovenia Peter Prevc

Slovenia Peter Prevc

Slovenia Peter Prevc

Slovenia Peter Prevc

2016–17

Austria Stefan Kraft

Norway Daniel-André Tande

Norway Daniel-André Tande

Poland Kamil Stoch

Poland Kamil Stoch

2017–18

Poland Kamil Stoch

Poland Kamil Stoch

Poland Kamil Stoch

Poland Kamil Stoch

Poland Kamil Stoch * (2)

2018–19

Japan Ryoyu Kobayashi

Japan Ryoyu Kobayashi

Japan Ryoyu Kobayashi

Japan Ryoyu Kobayashi

Japan Ryoyu Kobayashi *
Notes


  1. ^ In the inaguaral tournament, the first competition was held in Garmisch-Partenkirchen


  2. ^ abcdef Innsbruck was the second event, and Garmisch-Partenkirchen third.


  3. ^ ab Innsbruck was the first event, and Oberstdorf third.


  4. ^ The competition was held in Bischofshofen due to bad weather




Records


Janne Ahonen is the only ski jumper to have won the tournament five times, with wins in 1998–99, 2002–03, 2004–05, 2005–06 and 2007–08. Jens Weißflog was the first ski jumper to reach four wins, winning the tournament in 1984, 1985, 1991 and 1996. Helmut Recknagel and Bjørn Wirkola have the next best record, winning three titles each. Wirkola's victories came in three consecutive years (1967–1969), a record still uncontested.


Janne Ahonen's fourth victory in 2005–06 was also the first time the tournament victory was shared, with Jakub Janda, who claimed his first 4 Hills Tournament crown.


Jens Weißflog and Bjørn Wirkola have both won ten Four Hills Tournament events. Janne Ahonen and Gregor Schlierenzauer are next with 9 victories, followed by Matti Nykänen who has seven.


In 2000–01, the 49th edition of the tournament, Adam Małysz beat second placed Janne Ahonen by 104.4 points. This is the biggest winning margin in the tournament's history. He also won all four qualifications that year. The following year Sven Hannawald became the first person to win all four competitions in a single season. In 2017-18 Kamil Stoch has repeated Hannawald's record and year after, Ryoyu Kobayashi became the third person to win all four events.


Germany (with twelve of their wins pre-1989), Austria and Finland each have sixteen victories. Fourth is Norway with ten victories. Poland has three victories. Czechoslovakia and one of its successors the Czech Republic have two victories altogether, as have Slovenia and Japan. USSR has a single victory.



Overall winners


































Record overall victories
Overall victoriesNameTournament(s)
5
Finland Janne Ahonen

1998–99, 2002–03, 2004–05, 2005–06, 2007–08
4
East GermanyGermany Jens Weissflog

1983–84, 1984–85, 1990–91, 1995–96
3
East Germany Helmut Recknagel

1957–58, 1958–59, 1960–61

Norway Bjørn Wirkola

1966–67, 1967–68, 1968–69
2
Finland Veikko Kankkonen

1963–64, 1965–66

East Germany Jochen Danneberg

1975–76, 1976–77

Austria Hubert Neuper

1979–80, 1980–81

Finland Matti Nykänen

1982–83, 1987–88

Austria Ernst Vettori

1985–86, 1986–87

Austria Andreas Goldberger

1992–93, 1994–95

Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer

2011–12, 2012–13

Poland Kamil Stoch

2016–17, 2017–18


National quota


During the Four Hills Tournament many national jumpers from Germany and Austria are allowed to qualify for the competition. This allows them to show themselves and get experience. The national jumping team starts first in the qualification.[citation needed]



Notable participants


In 1965, the Polish old-boy jumper, Stanisław Marusarz (silver medal in World Championship, 1938 in Lahti) who was visiting the tournament, asked the jury in Garmisch-Patenkirchen to allow him a showcase jump. After a long debate, the jury agreed. Marusarz, who at this time was 53 years old (and not practicing jumping for 9 years) achieved 66 meters, using borrowed skies and boots and making his try in official suit (in which he attended the New Years Party), which made the crowd applaud.[2]



See also


  • Nordic Tournament


References




  1. ^ "Germany's Freitag wins 3rd stop of 4 Hills Tour". Yahoo Sports. 4 January 2015. Retrieved 4 January 2015..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output .citation qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free abackground: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 .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration abackground: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 .citation .cs1-lock-subscription abackground: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-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-maintdisplay:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


  2. ^ http://www.sport.pl/skoki/1,65079,13075218,Skoki_narciarskie__Turniej_Czterech_Skoczni__Marusarz.html#BoxSportTxt




External links


  • Four Hills Tournament web site

Media related to Four Hills Tournament at Wikimedia Commons










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