Ski jumping at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2017

Ski jumping at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2017 was held from 23 February to 4 March 2017 in Lahti, Finland, as part of the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2017. All competitions took place at the Salpausselkä ski jumping complex, featuring three individual events (men's and women's on the HS 100 hill, and men's on the HS 130 hill) and two team events (men's team on the HS 130 hill and a mixed team event on the HS 100 hill).

Defending champions from the 2015 championships in Falun included Carina Vogt (women's individual on the normal hill), the Norwayn men's team (men's team on the large hill), and the German mixed team (mixed team on the normal hill). The men's individual defending champions, Rune Velta (normal hill) and Severin Freund (large hill), did not compete. Velta retired in the summer of 2016,[1] and Freund was sidelined by an injury during the 2016/2017 season.[2]

A total of 128 athletes (51 women and 77 men) from 23 national teams were registered, though 2 women and 11 men did not compete in any events. Notable returns included a Georgian athlete after a 24-year absence,[3] and the Romanian team after a four-year break.[4][5][6] Women's events saw debuts from Kazakhstan and Latvia,[7] while a Turkish athlete debuted in the men's events.[8] Absent from the previous championships were athletes from Greece, South Korea, Sweden, and Hungary.[5][6]

In the women's individual event on the normal hill, Carina Vogt successfully defended her title, with Yuki Ito earning silver (as in 2015) and Sara Takanashi taking bronze.

In the men's individual event on the normal hill, Stefan Kraft won gold, followed by Andreas Wellinger (silver) and Markus Eisenbichler (bronze).

The mixed team event was won by the German team (Carina Vogt, Markus Eisenbichler, Svenja Würth, Andreas Wellinger), with Austria (Daniela Iraschko-Stolz, Michael Hayböck, Jacqueline Seifriedsberger, Stefan Kraft) taking silver, and Japan (Sara Takanashi, Taku Takeuchi, Yuki Ito, Daiki Ito) securing bronze.

The men's individual event on the large hill was also won by Stefan Kraft, with Andreas Wellinger again taking silver and Piotr Żyła earning bronze. Kraft's dual victories made him the fifth athlete in history to win both individual events at a single championship, joining Bjørn Wirkola, Gariy Napalkov, Hans-Georg Aschenbach, and Adam Małysz.[9]

The men's team event on the large hill saw the Polish team (Piotr Żyła, Dawid Kubacki, Maciej Kot, Kamil Stoch) claim their first-ever world championship title. Norway (Anders Fannemel, Johann André Forfang, Daniel-André Tande, Andreas Stjernen) took silver, and Austria (Michael Hayböck, Manuel Fettner, Gregor Schlierenzauer, Stefan Kraft) earned bronze.

Before the championships

Historical context

Jacob Tullin Thams, the first ski jumping world champion in Lahti (1926)
Martin Schmitt, winner of four medals at the 2001 Championships

The first championships in Lahti occurred in 1926, with Norwayn athletes Jacob Tullin Thams, Otto Aasen, and Georg Østerholt sweeping the podium.[10] In 1938, Asbjørn Ruud (Norway) won gold, followed by Stanisław Marusarz (Poland) and Hilmar Myhra (Norway).[11] The 1958 event saw Finnish athletes Juhani Kärkinen and Ensio Hyytiä take gold and silver, with Helmut Recknagel (East Germany) earning bronze.[12]

Later championships in Lahti expanded the number of ski jumping events. In 1978, the normal hill event was won by Matthias Buse, followed by Henry Glaß (both East Germany) and Aleksey Borovitin (Soviet Union).[13] On the large hill, Tapio Räisänen (Finland) won, ahead of Alois Lipburger (Austria) and Falko Weißpflog (East Germany).[14] In a demonstration team event East Germany was first, followed by Finland and Norway.[15]

In 1989, the normal hill event (one round due to weather) was won by Jens Weißflog (East Germany), followed by Ari-Pekka Nikkola (Finland) and Heinz Kuttin (Austria).[16] On the large hill, Jari Puikkonen (Finland) took gold, followed by Jens Weißflog and Matti Nykänen (Finland).[17] The official team event saw Finland, Norway, and Czechoslovakia on the podium.[18]

In 2001, Adam Małysz (Poland) won the normal hill event, followed by Martin Schmitt (Germany) and Martin Höllwarth (Austria).[19] On the large hill, Martin Schmitt took gold, with Adam Małysz and Janne Ahonen (Finland) earning silver and bronze.[20] Two team events were held for the first time:[9] Austria, Finland, and Germany won on the normal hill,[21] while Germany, Austria, and Finland won on the large hill.[22]

Defending champions

Carina Vogt, defending champion in the women's individual and mixed team events
Anders Fannemel, defending champion in the men's team event

In the women's normal hill event, Carina Vogt (Germany) won gold, followed by Yuki Ito (silver) and Daniela Iraschko-Stolz (bronze).[23]

In the men's normal hill event, Rune Velta (Norway) won gold, followed by Severin Freund (Germany) and Stefan Kraft (Austria).[24] On the large hill, Severin Freund took gold, with Gregor Schlierenzauer (Austria) and Rune Velta earning silver and bronze.[25] The men's team event on the large hill was won by Norway (Anders Bardal, Anders Jacobsen, Anders Fannemel, Rune Velta), followed by Austria (Stefan Kraft, Michael Hayböck, Manuel Poppinger, Gregor Schlierenzauer) and Poland (Piotr Żyła, Klemens Murańka, Jan Ziobro, Kamil Stoch).[26]

The mixed team event was won by Germany (Carina Vogt, Richard Freitag, Katharina Schmid, Severin Freund), with Norway (Line Jahr, Anders Bardal, Maren Lundby, Rune Velta) taking silver and Japan (Sara Takanashi, Noriaki Kasai, Yuki Ito, Taku Takeuchi) earning bronze.[27]

World Cup standings

Sara Takanashi
Kamil Stoch
Stefan Kraft

In the Women's World Cup, Sara Takanashi secured the overall title before the championships, winning nine of the 18 competitions. Yuki Ito and Maren Lundby each won four contests, while Katharina Schmid won one.[28] Takanashi led the overall standings with 1375 points, followed by Ito (1108 points) and Lundby (1049 points).[29] The final pre-championship events in Pyeongchang saw victories by Ito and Takanashi.[28]

Women's ski jumping World Cup standings before the start of the World Championships[29]

Place Athlete Appearances Points
1. Japan Sara Takanashi 16 1375
2. Japan Yuki Ito 16 1108
3. Norway Maren Lundby 18 1049
4. Germany Katharina Schmid 16 726
5. Austria Daniela Iraschko-Stolz 16 717
6. Germany Carina Vogt 16 687
7. Slovenia Ema Klinec 14 590
8. Russia Irina Avvakumova 14 531
9. Austria Jacqueline Seifriedsberger 16 499
10. Germany Svenja Würth 16 468
11. Slovenia Maja Vtič 18 453
12. Japan Yūka Setō 16 380
13. [[Chiara Kreuzer|Austria]]Austria Chiara Kreuzer 16 355
14. United States Sarah Hendrickson 14 301
15. Italy Manuela Malsiner 12 298
16. United States Nita Englund 17 268
17. Slovenia Špela Rogelj 16 255
18. Japan Kaori Iwabuchi 17 246
19. Germany Ramona Straub 17 239
20. Finland Julia Kykkänen 18 211
21. France Lucile Morat 15 155
22. Slovenia Urša Bogataj 17 151
23. France Léa Lemare 16 150
24. Italy Elena Runggaldier 15 149
25. Russia Anastasiya Barannikova 18 139
26. Germany Anna Hollandt 4 127
27. Russia Sofia Tikhonova 14 116
28. United States Abby Ringquist 14 100
29. Germany Juliane Seyfarth 15 88
30. Italy Evelyn Insam 13 84
31. Germany Gianina Ernst 8 80
32. France Coline Mattel 13 78
33. Canada Taylor Henrich 11 74
Slovenia Nika Vodan 9 74
35. Russia Aleksandra Kustova 11 61
36. Russia Ksenia Kablukova 11 58
37. Romania Daniela Haralambie 13 57
Slovenia Eva Logar 12 57
Germany Agnes Reisch 6 57
40. United States Tara Geraghty-Moats 13 52
41. Germany Luisa Görlich 4 50
42. France Océane Avocat Gros 11 47
43. Germany Pauline Heßler 3 28
44. Canada Natasha Bodnarchuk 4 21
Canada Atsuko Tanaka 11 21
46. Norway Anniken Mork 13 17
47. Italy Lara Malsiner 5 16
48. Canada Nicole Maurer 2 12
49. Japan Misaki Shigeno 4 11
50. Japan Haruka Iwasa 4 9
51. Czech Republic Barbora Blažková 7 8
China Li Xueyao 6 8
United States Nina Lussi 6 8
54. France Romane Dieu 4 6
55. Canada Natalie Eilers 2 5
Canada Abigail Strate 3 5
57. Austria Marita Kramer 4 2
58. South Korea Park Guy-lim 2 1
Austria Eva Pinkelnig 4 1

In the Women's Nations Cup, Japan led with 3,129 points, followed by Germany (2,550 points) and Slovenia (1,580 points).[29]

Nations Cup standings in women's ski jumping before the start of the World Championships[29]

Place Nation Appearances Points
1. Japan Japan 18 3129
2. Germany Germany 18 2550
3. Slovenia Slovenia 18 1580
4. Austria Austria 16 1574
5. Norway Norway 18 1066
6. Russia Russia 18 905
7. United States United States 18 729
8. Italy Italy 16 547
9. France France 18 436
10. Finland Finland 18 211
11. Canada Canada 16 138
12. Romania Romania 13 57
13. China China 6 8
Czech Republic Czech Republic 7 8
15. South Korea South Korea 2 1

In the Men's World Cup, 21 individual and three team competitions were held before the championships. Kamil Stoch led with six individual victories, followed by Stefan Kraft and Domen Prevc (four each), Maciej Kot and Daniel-André Tande (two each), and Severin Freund, Michael Hayböck, Peter Prevc, and Andreas Wellinger (one each).[30] Stoch led the overall standings with 1,280 points, followed by Kraft (1,220 points) and Tande (1,119 points).[31] The final pre-championship events in Pyeongchang saw victories by Kraft (large hill) and Kot (normal hill).[30]

Men's ski jumping World Cup standings before the start of the World Championships[31]

Place Athlete Appearances Points
1. Poland Kamil Stoch 21 1280
2. Austria Stefan Kraft 20 1220
3. Norway Daniel-André Tande 21 1119
4. Slovenia Domen Prevc 21 899
5. Poland Maciej Kot 21 883
6. Germany Andreas Wellinger 21 848
7. Austria Michael Hayböck 20 671
8. Austria Manuel Fettner 21 622
9. Germany Markus Eisenbichler 19 587
10. Slovenia Peter Prevc 19 559
11. Poland Piotr Żyła 21 529
12. Germany Richard Freitag 20 435
13. Norway Andreas Stjernen 21 399
14. France Vincent Descombes Sevoie 21 348
15. Russia Evgenii Klimov 21 346
16. Germany Karl Geiger 21 316
17. Germany Severin Freund 9 309
18. Austria Andreas Kofler 15 306
19. Poland Dawid Kubacki 21 299
20. Germany Stephan Leyhe 19 290
21. Norway Robert Johansson 18 288
22. Slovenia Jurij Tepeš 21 249
23. Japan Daiki Ito 16 175
Japan Noriaki Kasai 21 175
25. Czech Republic Roman Koudelka 18 146
26. Norway Anders Fannemel 14 120
27. Poland Jan Ziobro 14 119
28. Japan Taku Takeuchi 17 115
29. Slovenia Jernej Damjan 14 112
30. Poland Stefan Hula 20 110
31. Czech Republic Vojtěch Štursa 12 88
32. Slovenia Anže Lanišek 11 85
33. Germany Andreas Wank 13 84
34. Switzerland Simon Ammann 15 81
Austria Markus Schiffner 16 81
36. Austria Gregor Schlierenzauer 5 80
37. Czech Republic Jakub Janda 17 78
38. Russia Denis Kornilov 19 77
39. Slovenia Cene Prevc 15 67
40. Canada Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes 17 52
Norway Johann André Forfang 8 52
42. Austria Clemens Aigner 8 50
43. United States Kevin Bickner 19 34
44. Norway Halvor Egner Granerud 12 31
45. Italy Sebastian Colloredo 5 29
46. Czech Republic Lukáš Hlava 15 26
47. Finland Janne Ahonen 7 24
Finland Jarkko Määttä 11 24
49. Japan Junshirō Kobayashi 6 20
50. Czech Republic Viktor Polášek 2 18
Czech Republic Tomáš Vančura 11 18
52. Russia Alexey Romashov 4 17
53. Norway Tom Hilde 8 16
Finland Ville Larinto 10 16
Slovenia Anže Semenič 9 16
56. Russia Dmitriy Vassiliev 9 15
57. Austria Stefan Huber 5 12
Germany David Siegel 2 12
59. Japan Kento Sakuyama 13 9
Poland Aleksander Zniszczoł 8 9
61. Switzerland Gregor Deschwanden 8 8
62. Austria Florian Altenburger 4 4
Italy Davide Bresadola 3 4
Poland Klemens Murańka 9 4
65. United States Michael Glasder 9 3
Slovenia Bor Pavlovčič 3 3
67. Estonia Kaarel Nurmsalu 6 2
Austria Elias Tollinger 3 2
68. Austria Daniel Huber 4 1
Japan Yūken Iwasa 2 1
Switzerland Gabriel Karlen 4 1

In the men's team events, Poland won two competitions, and Germany won one.[30] In the Men's Nations Cup, Poland led with 4,383 points, followed by Austria (3,949 points) and Germany (3,931 points).[31]

Nations Cup standings in men's ski jumping before the start of the World Championships[31]

Place Nation Appearances Individual Team Total
1. Poland Poland 24 3233 1150 4383
2. Austria Austria 24 3049 900 3949
3. Germany Germany 24 2881 1050 3931
4. Slovenia Slovenia 24 1990 750 2740
5. Norway Norway 24 2025 650 2675
6. Russia Russia 24 455 250 705
7. Japan Japan 24 495 200 695
8. Czech Republic Czech Republic 24 374 300 674
9. France France 21 348 348
10. Finland Finland 21 64 100 164
11. Switzerland Switzerland 16 90 50 140
12. Canada Canada 17 52 52
13. United States United States 20 37 0 37
14. Italy Italy 7 33 33
15. Estonia Estonia 6 2 2

The mixed team event start list was based on combined women's and men's Nations Cup points. Germany led with 6,481 points, followed by Austria (5,523 points) and Poland (4,383 points), though Poland did not enter the mixed event due to a lack of female competitors.[29][31]

Combined Nations Cup standings for women and men before the start of the World Championships[29][31]

Place Nation Women Men Total
1. Germany Germany 2550 3931 6481
2. Austria Austria 1574 3949 5523
3. Poland Poland 0 4383 4383
4. Slovenia Slovenia 1580 2740 4320
5. Japan Japan 3129 695 3824
6. Norway Norway 1066 2675 3741
7. Russia Russia 905 705 1610
8. France France 436 348 784
9. United States United States 729 37 766
10. Czech Republic Czech Republic 8 674 682
11. Italy Italy 547 33 580
12. Finland Finland 211 164 375
13. Canada Canada 138 52 190
14. Switzerland Switzerland 0 140 140
15. Romania Romania 57 0 57
16. China China 8 8
17. Estonia Estonia 2 2
18. South Korea South Korea 1 0 1

Competition schedule

Training sessions on the normal hill scheduled for 22 February were cancelled due to strong winds.[32][33]

Event[34][35] Date[34][35]
21 Feb 22 Feb 23 Feb 24 Feb 25 Feb 26 Feb 27 Feb 28 Feb 1 Mar 2 Mar 3 Mar 4 Mar
HS 100

Men's Individual

TB

10:00 AM

T

1:30 PM

T

4:30 PM

TB

7:00 PM

TR

1:00 PM

Q

2:30 PM

TB

4:00 PM

TR

4:30 PM

C

5:30 PM

HS 130

Men's Individual

T

9:00 AM

T

5:00 PM

TB

7:00 PM

TR

4:00 PM

Q

6:00 PM

TB

7:00 PM

TR

5:30 PM

C

6:30 PM

HS 130

Men's Team

T

5:30 PM

TB

7:00 PM

TR

4:15 PM

C

5:15 PM

HS 100

Women's Individual

TB

10:00 AM

TB

2:00 PM

T

10:00 AM

TB

12:30 PM

TR

2:30 PM

Q

4:00 PM

TB

5:30 PM

TR

10:00 AM

C

11:00 AM

HS 100

Mixed Team

T

4:00 PM

TB

5:30 PM

TR

4:00 PM

C

5:00 PM

TB: Technical briefing, T: Training, TR: Trial round, Q: Qualification, C: Competition

Ski jumps

Name of the hill City K-point Hill size Hill record[36] Gate compensation[37][38] Wind compensation[37][38]
Salpausselkä Finland Lahti K-90 HS 100 99.5 m Japan Sara Takanashi 19 February 2016 ±7.00 pts / m headwind: –8.00 pts / m/s

tailwind: +9.68 pts / m/s

101,.0 m Slovenia Jurij Tepeš 03 March 2012
Salpausselkä K-116 HS 130 135.5 m Austria Andreas Widhölzl 04 March 2006 ±7.56 pts / m headwind: –8.46 pts / m/s

tailwind: +10.24 pts / m/s

Jury

On behalf of the International Ski Federation, the competition directors were Chika Yoshida (director of the Women's World Cup) and Walter Hofer (director of the Men's World Cup). As in the World Cup competitions, Yoshida's assistant was Miran Tepeš, and Hofer's assistant was Borek Sedlák.[39] Additionally, the competition manager appointed by the organizers was Mika Jukkara. The technical delegate for all events was Geir Steinar Loeng from Norway, assisted by Sašo Komovec from Slovenia. Equipment control was handled by Agnieszka Baczkowska (for the women's competitions) and Sepp Gratzer (for the men's events).[37][40]

Judge Country Judges tower position
Women's Ind.

HS 100[41]

Men's Ind.

HS 100[42]

Mixed Team

HS 100[43]

Men's Ind.

HS 130[38]

Men's Team

HS 130[38]

Pirjo Karlajainen Finland A E D A
Christian Kathol Austria B A E B
Yutaka Minemura Japan C A B C
Kazimierz Bafia Poland D B C A D
Bojan Jošt Slovenia E C D B
Mark Levasseur United States D E C E

Course of the competition

Official women's training rounds

On 21 February, three official women's training rounds were held. In the first round, Sara Takanashi received the highest score, reaching a distance of 97 metres. She was followed by Yuki Ito (95.5 m) and Kaori Iwabuchi (97.5 m; she jumped from a higher start gate than the other two athletes).[44] In the second training round, the best result was achieved by Ito with a jump of 93.5 metres. The next places went to Takanashi (95 m) and Katharina Schmid (97 m; she also jumped from a longer inrun).[44] In the third round, the highest scores again went to Ito (99 m) and Takanashi (96.5 m; the only athlete in the series to jump from a lower gate), with the third-best result going to Svenja Würth (94 m). In each of the training rounds, over a dozen registered competitors did not jump.[44]

Further training rounds were scheduled for the following day, but the first one was interrupted after 21 attempts due to excessively strong wind.[32]

Official men's training rounds on the normal hill

The first men's training rounds were scheduled for 22 February, but – similar to the women's competition – unfavourable wind conditions made it impossible to carry them out.[33] The training was successfully held the following day. In the first round, the best result was achieved by Dawid Kubacki with a jump of 92.5 metres. The second-best distance score was shared by Maciej Kot (93.5 m) and Johann André Forfang (93 m). In the second round, the longest jump was made by Manuel Fettner, who reached 97 metres. He was followed by Kamil Stoch (96.5 m) and Kot (95 m). In the third training round, Markus Eisenbichler earned the highest score with a jump of 98.5 metres. He was followed by Stephan Leyhe (98 m) and Michael Hayböck (95.5 m).[45]

Qualifications for the women's individual competition

Chiara Kreuzer – the best in the women's competition qualifications

In the practice round before the women's competition qualifications, Sara Takanashi jumped the furthest, reaching 95 m. The next places were taken by Svenja Würth and Katharina Schmid.[46]

In the qualification round held on February 23, 49 athletes from 16 countries participated, including a group of 10 pre-qualified jumpers. Chiara Kreuzer took first place with a jump of 96.5 m. Directly behind her were Elena Runggaldier and Manuela Malsiner. Among the jumpers with automatic qualification rights, Jacqueline Seifriedsberger, Carina Vogt, and Svenja Würth jumped the furthest, each reaching 93 m. All athletes representing Germany (five), Japan, Russia, Slovenia, and Italy (four each), Austria, Canada, and Norway (three each), as well as France and the United States (two each), and two jumpers each from China and the Czech Republic, and one each from Finland and Romania advanced to the main competition.[47]

Both representatives from Kazakhstan, two athletes each from China and Finland, one Czech, and one Romanian failed to qualify. Additionally, the only jumper from Latvia was disqualified.[47]

Qualifications for the men's normal hill competition

Dawid Kubacki – winner of the qualifications for the men's normal hill competition

In the practice round held before the qualifications for the men's competition on the smaller hill, Kamil Stoch achieved the highest score with a 97 m jump. The next places were taken by Markus Eisenbichler (97 m) and Maciej Kot (98.5 m; both jumped from a longer run-up).[48]

In the qualification round held on February 24, 66 athletes from 22 countries participated, including 10 jumpers with automatic qualification rights. Dawid Kubacki took first place with a 99 m jump. The positions directly behind him were taken by Piotr Żyła (96 m) and Janne Ahonen (97 m). Among the pre-qualified jumpers, Kamil Stoch jumped the furthest, setting a new hill record with 103.5 m. All representatives from Austria, the Czech Republic, Finland, Japan, Germany, Norway, Poland, Russia, Slovenia, and Switzerland (four jumpers each), as well as Italy (three) and France (two), along with two jumpers from the United States and one each from Bulgaria and Canada, secured the right to compete in the main competition.[49]

The qualification round eliminated all representatives from Kazakhstan (four), Romania (two), two athletes each from Estonia, Ukraine, and the United States, one Canadian, and the sole representatives from Georgia, Latvia, and Turkey. Among those who did not advance to the main competition were disqualified jumpers from Kazakhstan, Ukraine, and the United States (one each).[49]

Women's individual competition

Yuki Ito – silver medalist in the women's competition

The practice round before the women's individual competition began on February 24 at 4:31 PM. The highest score was achieved by the defending champion Carina Vogt (Germany), who jumped 98 m. Second was Sara Takanashi, who jumped three meters shorter, and third was Yuki Ito (both from Japan) with a distance of 93 m.[50]

In the first competition round, starting at 5:30 PM, 50 athletes from 14 countries participated. The sky was cloudy, with air temperatures from –5 to –6 °C, snow at –12 °C, and an average wind speed of 0.60 m/s. All jumpers started from the 18th gate. The first to start was Czech Marta Křepelková, who jumped 77 m. She was surpassed by Norway's Silje Opseth (83 m), who was then overtaken by Romania's Daniela Haralambie (83.5 m). Slovenia's Nika Vodan, starting 12th, was the first to exceed the construction point with a 90.5 m jump, taking the lead with a 13.5-point advantage over Haralambie. Canada's Taylor Henrich took second place with an 88 m jump.[51]

Italy's Elena Runggaldier, starting 18th, became the new leader with a 92 m jump, surpassing Križnar by 7.4 points. France's Léa Lemare (90 m) followed closely behind. Japan's Kaori Iwabuchi (starting 23rd) also jumped 92 m but received lower style points, placing second. Italy's Manuela Malsiner (starting 26th) exceeded the construction point with a 91 m jump but was fifth due to lower judges' scores. Austria's Chiara Kreuzer (starting 28th) jumped 93.5 m but was just behind Runggaldier by 0.8 points due to lower style points and less wind compensation.[51]

From the final group of 10, Germany's Svenja Würth (starting 31st) took the lead with a 97 m jump, 5.3 points ahead of the previous leader. Austria's Jacqueline Seifriedsberger jumped 94 m, trailing Würth by 1.1 points. Russia's Irina Avvakumova reached the construction point and placed fifth. Slovenia's Ema Klinec became the new leader with a 99 m jump, edging out Würth by 0.6 points. Carina Vogt jumped 98.5 m, taking a 5.2-point lead over Klinec with higher style points and less wind deduction. Austria's Daniela Iraschko-Stolz jumped 93 m, placing fifth, followed by Germany's Katharina Schmid (94 m) in sixth. Norway's Maren Lundby set a new hill record with a 99.5 m jump, leading by 3.3 points over Vogt. Japan's Yuki Ito (97 m) took third, and Sara Takanashi (98 m) placed second. After the first round, Lundby led, followed by Takanashi (2.7 points behind) and Vogt (3.3 points behind).[51]

The second round began at 6:28 PM with 31 athletes from 13 countries; Nita Englund (USA) and Li Xueyao (China) tied for 30th in the first round. The average wind speed was 0.41 m/s, and jumpers started from the 17th gate. Li opened with an 81.5 m jump, surpassed by Englund's 82 m. Subsequent leaders were Germany's Gianina Ernst (81.5 m), Russia's Anastasiya Barannikova (86.5 m), Finland's Julia Kykkänen (82.5 m), Slovenia's Maja Vtič (86 m), and Japan's Yūka Setō (86.5 m). Nika Vodan was the first to exceed the construction point in the final round with a 91.5 m jump. Leadership changed with Irina Avvakumova (90.5 m), Kaori Iwabuchi (89.5 m), and Chiara Kreuzer (91 m).[41]

In the final group, Elena Runggaldier's 81 m jump dropped her out of the top ten. Katharina Schmid took the lead with a 93.5 m jump, 10 points ahead of Kreuzer. Daniela Iraschko-Stolz (89.5 m) followed closely. The next three jumpers maintained their first-round positions: Jacqueline Seifriedsberger (92.5 m), Svenja Würth (94 m), and Ema Klinec (94 m). Yuki Ito's 96.5 m jump, the longest of the round, gave her a 6.8-point lead over Klinec. Carina Vogt matched Ito's 96.5 m but took a two-point lead with higher style points and less wind deduction. Sara Takanashi's 95 m jump placed her third. Maren Lundby closed with a 91 m jump, finishing just off the podium.[41]

Carina Vogt defended her title, beating Ito by 2 points and Takanashi by 3.5 points. The top 10 included three athletes each from Austria, Japan, and Germany, and one from Slovenia.[41]

Men's individual normal hill competition

Andreas Wellinger – World Championship silver medalist on the normal hill  
Markus Eisenbichler – bronze medalist on the HS 100 hill  

The practice round before the men's competition on the smaller hill began on February 25 at 4:30 PM. The best result was achieved by Germany's Andreas Wellinger with a 98.5 m jump. Poland's Maciej Kot took the second-best score with a 97 m jump, followed by Slovenia's Peter Prevc with 96.5 m. Japan's Noriaki Kasai was the only one who did not attempt a jump.[52]

The first competition round started at 5:30 PM with 50 athletes from 16 countries. The sky was clear, with air temperatures from –4 to –5 °C, snow at –12 °C, and an average wind speed of –0.07 m/s. All jumps were made from the 11th gate. The first competitor, host nation's Antti Aalto, jumped 87.5 m. He was overtaken by Switzerland's Killian Peier (starting 4th), who was the first to exceed the construction point with a 93 m jump, leading after 17 competitors. Others advancing to the final round from this group included Italy's Davide Bresadola (89.5 m), Russia's Dmitriy Vassiliev (90.5 m), and Finland's Ville Larinto (89.5 m) and Janne Ahonen (90.5 m).[53]

Norway's Johann André Forfang (starting 22nd) became the next leader with a 93 m jump, surpassing Peier by 2.4 points due to higher style points and better wind compensation. Russia's Denis Kornilov (92.5 m) placed fourth. Austria's Gregor Schlierenzauer (89.5 m) and Switzerland's Simon Ammann (91.5 m) followed closely behind Forfang and Peier. Japan's Taku Takeuchi (94.5 m) took second place due to negative wind compensation. Czech Republic's Roman Koudelka (starting 30th) matched Forfang's 93 m distance and total score. Noriaki Kasai reached the construction point, securing a spot in the final round. Japan's Daiki Ito became the new leader with a 95.5 m jump, leading Forfang and Koudelka by 2.3 points. Poland's Dawid Kubacki (starting 35th) jumped 96.5 m, taking a 4.6-point lead over Ito.[53]

Kubacki held the lead after jumps from nine more competitors, including Russia's Evgenii Klimov (91.5 m), Norway's Andreas Stjernen (95 m), and Germany's Richard Freitag (94.5 m). Among pre-qualified jumpers, Peter Prevc (92.5 m) was the first to compete. Germany's Markus Eisenbichler jumped 95 m, trailing Kubacki by one point. Austria's Manuel Fettner matched Eisenbichler's distance but placed fourth due to wind deductions. Austria's Michael Hayböck took the lead with a 98 m jump, leading Kubacki by 1.6 points. Andreas Wellinger then surpassed him by 0.6 points with a 96.5 m jump, benefiting from higher style points and wind compensation. Maciej Kot placed fifth with a 95 m jump. Slovenia's Domen Prevc (89 m) did not advance to the final round. Norway's Daniel-André Tande (92.5 m) finished in the lower half of the top 20. Austria's Stefan Kraft achieved the best result of the round with a 99.5 m jump, the longest of the series. Poland's Kamil Stoch closed the round with a 96.5 m jump, placing fourth. Before the final round, Kraft led Wellinger by 4.3 points and Hayböck by 4.9 points.[53]

The final round began at 6:37 PM with 30 athletes from 11 countries. The average wind speed was –0.07 m/s. Dmitriy Vassiliev opened with an 86.5 m jump, finishing 30th. He was surpassed by Davide Bresadola (90.5 m), followed by Ville Larinto (89.5 m), Czech Republic's Jakub Janda (90 m), Evgenii Klimov (90.5 m), and Simon Ammann (92 m). Norway's Daniel-André Tande jumped 94.5 m, leading Ammann by 8.1 points. Norway's Robert Johansson matched Tande's distance but placed behind due to lower wind compensation. Peter Prevc took the lead with a 95 m jump. Andreas Stjernen, despite matching Prevc's distance, placed fourth due to lower style points. Johann André Forfang then jumped 98.5 m, taking a 5.9-point lead over Prevc and securing a top-10 finish. Roman Koudelka (92.5 m) and Stephan Leyhe (94 m) followed.[42]

The final group began with Richard Freitag's 96 m jump. Manuel Fettner, tied with Freitag after the first round, jumped 94.5 m and dropped to the lower half of the top 20. Daiki Ito also jumped 94.5 m, maintaining a mid-tier position with better style points and wind compensation. Maciej Kot took the lead with a 95.5 m jump, only to be surpassed by Markus Eisenbichler's 100.5 m jump, the longest of the competition, by 8.5 points. Eisenbichler secured a podium spot as Dawid Kubacki (93.5 m) placed fourth, Kamil Stoch (99 m) took second with a 1.1-point deficit, and Michael Hayböck (95.5 m) dropped three spots. Andreas Wellinger (100 m) and Stefan Kraft (98 m) maintained their first-round positions, with Kraft winning the title.[42]

Kraft won with a 2.1-point lead over Wellinger and 7.2 points over Eisenbichler. The top 10 included three athletes each from Germany and Poland, two from Austria, and one each from Japan and Norway.[42]

Official training sessions for the men's large hill competition

Training sessions on the larger hill began on February 27. In the first session, Kamil Stoch achieved the best result with a 131.5 m jump. Peter Prevc had the second-best result at 127.5 m, followed by Maciej Kot at 123.5 m. In the next training session, Stoch again took the top spot with a 126 m jump. Andreas Stjernen earned the second-best score with 124 m, and Robert Johansson took third with 125.5 m.[54] In the final session of the day, Stephan Leyhe jumped the furthest at 129.5 m, followed by Daniel-André Tande at 128.5 m and Stoch at 124.5 m. Most athletes who participated in the mixed team competition the previous day, along with several others, did not take part in these sessions.[54]

Training on the large hill continued on February 28. In the first session, Andreas Stjernen led with a 127 m jump, followed by Anders Fannemel at 124 m and Maciej Kot at 119.5 m. In the second training session, Stjernen and Fannemel again secured the top results, jumping 129.5 m and 129 m, respectively. Johann André Forfang took the third-best result with 128.5 m. In the third session, Stefan Kraft jumped the furthest at 131.5 m, followed by Piotr Żyła at 128 m and Robert Johansson at 126 m. More athletes skipped these sessions compared to February 27, with 32 out of 78 registered jumpers absent in the final session.[55]

Qualifications for the men's large hill competition

In the practice round before the qualifications, Peter Prevc jumped the furthest at 125.5 m. The next best results were achieved by Manuel Fettner (122.5 m) and Dawid Kubacki (120.5 m).[56]

The qualification round, held on March 1, saw 61 athletes from 21 countries participate, including 10 jumpers with automatic qualification rights (with Domen Prevc absent, the 11th-ranked World Cup jumper, Piotr Żyła, gained this privilege). Additionally, Latvia's Kristaps Nežborts was registered but did not appear at the start. The best result was achieved by Antti Aalto with a 128.5 m jump. Andreas Stjernen (125 m) and Daiki Ito (121.5 m) took the next positions.[57] Among the pre-qualified athletes, Peter Prevc jumped the furthest at 127.5 m. All representatives from Austria, Finland, Japan, Germany, Norway, Poland, Russia, Slovenia, the United States, and Switzerland (four jumpers each), as well as Italy (three), the sole registered Frenchman, three Czechs, two Estonians, and one Canadian, secured spots in the main competition.[57]

The qualification round eliminated all representatives from Kazakhstan (four), as well as the sole representatives from Bulgaria, Georgia, Turkey, and Ukraine, along with one jumper each from the Czech Republic, Canada, and Estonia. Among them were disqualified jumpers from Bulgaria and Canada (one each).[57]

Results

Abbreviations used in the tables:

  • DSQ – disqualification,
  • NQ – did not advance to the final round,
  • DNS – did not start,
  • pq – automatic qualification for the main competition,
  • q – qualification for the main competition (outside the automatically qualified group),
  • nq – did not qualify for the main competition.

Women

Qualifications for the individual competition on the HS 100 hill (23 February 2017)[47]

Position Number Athlete Country Jump Style Total score Notes
Distance Gate Wind
1. 37 Chiara Hölzl Austria 96.5 19 0.24 52.5 123.6 q
2. 27 Elena Runggaldier Italy 91.5 19 0.14 52.5 114.4 q
3. 35 Manuela Malsiner Italy 98.5 19 1.06 45.5 114.0 q
4. 28 Léa Lemare France 92.5 19 0.47 52.5 113.7 q
5. 33 Špela Rogelj Slovenia 92.0 19 0.37 51.0 112.0 q
6. 36 Sarah Hendrickson United States 91.0 19 0.27 51.5 111.3 q
7. 32 Kaori Iwabuchi Japan 93.5 19 0.70 49.5 110.9 q
8. 24 Evelyn Insam Italy 89.5 19 0.32 52.5 108.9 q
9. 21 Nika Križnar Slovenia 92.0 19 0.37 47.0 108.0 q
10. 22 Taylor Henrich Canada 90.5 19 0.74 52.0 107.1 q
11. 11 Yūka Setō Japan 88.5 19 -0.06 48.0 105.6 q
12. 29 Lucile Morat France 89.0 19 0.19 48.0 104.5 q
13. 31 Ramona Straub Germany 93.5 19 1.00 45.0 104.0 q
14. 23 Gianina Ernst Germany 87.5 19 0.09 49.5 103.8 q
15. 25 Sofia Tikhonova Russia 86.5 19 0.02 50.0 102.8 q
16. 16 Lara Malsiner Italy 87.5 19 0.31 50.0 102.5 q
17. 26 Anastasiya Barannikova Russia 88.5 19 0.52 49.5 102.3 q
18. 20 Ksenia Kablukova Russia 86.0 19 0.08 50.5 101.9 q
19. 12 Chang Xinyue China 86.5 19 -0.04 46.5 99.9 q
20. 30 Julia Kykkänen Finland 85.0 19 -0.02 50.0 99.7 q
21. 39 Maja Vtič Slovenia 83.0 19 -0.29 48.5 97.3 q
22. 19 Daniela Haralambie Romania 85.5 19 0.20 47.5 96.9 q
23. 6 Silje Opseth Norway 83.0 19 0.43 50.5 93.1 q
24. 17 Anniken Mork Norway 84.5 19 0.36 43.5 89.6 q
15 Nicole Maurer Canada 80.0 19 -0.22 47.5 89.6 q
26. 13 Li Xueyao China 82.5 19 0.27 46.5 89.3 q
27. 34 Nita Englund United States 78.5 19 -0.12 47.0 85.2 q
28. 14 Barbora Blažková Czech Republic 77.0 19 0.02 44.5 78.3 q
1 Marta Křepelková Czech Republic 76.0 19 0.21 48.0 78.3 q
30. 18 Natasha Bodnarchuk Canada 74.5 19 -0.05 48.0 77.5 q
31. 3 Liu Qi China 75.5 19 0.12 46.0 76.0 nq
32. 4 Susanna Forsström Finland 75.5 19 0.29 44.5 73.2 nq
33. 9 Ma Tong China 72.5 19 -0.08 43.5 69.3 nq
34. 2 Jenny Rautionaho Finland 70.0 19 -0.17 46.5 68.1 nq
35. 10 Jana Mrákotová Czech Republic 71.0 19 -0.14 44.0 67.4 nq
36. 7 Diana Trâmbițaș Romania 69.0 19 0.07 43.0 60.4 nq
37. 5 Walentina Sdierżykowa Kazakhstan 65.5 19 0.41 42.5 50.2 nq
38. 11 Dajana Achmietwalijewa Kazakhstan 56.5 19 0.09 38.5 30.8 nq
40 Svenja Würth Germany 93.0 17 0.22 pq
41 Jacqueline Seifriedsberger Austria 93.0 17 0.28 pq
42 Irina Avvakumova Russia 80.5 17 0.14 pq
43 Ema Klinec Slovenia 87.0 17 -0.34 pq
44 Carina Vogt Germany 93.0 17 0.15 pq
45 Daniela Iraschko-Stolz Austria 89.0 17 -0.02 pq
46 Katharina Althaus Germany 91.5 17 0.24 pq
47 Maren Lundby Norway 88.5 17 -0.07 pq
48 Yūki Itō Japan 92.0 17 -0.01 pq
49 Sara Takanashi Japan 92.5 17 -0.32 pq
8 Šarlote Šķēle Latvia DSQ

Individual competition on the HS 100 hill (24 February 2017)[41]

Position Number Athlete Country 1st round 2nd round Total score
Jump Style Total score Jump Style Score
Distance Gate Wind Distance Gate Wind
1. 35 Carina Vogt Germany 97.0 18 0.26 53.0 127.9 96.5 17 0.10 54.5 126.7 254.6
2. 39 Yuki Ito Japan 97.0 18 0.13 54.0 127.0 96.5 17 0.17 54.0 125.6 252.6
3. 40 Sara Takanashi Japan 98.0 18 0.06 53.0 128.5 95.0 17 0.05 54.0 122.6 251.1
4. 38 Maren Lundby Norway 99.5 18 0.22 54.0 131.2 91.0 17 -0.21 52.5 116.5 247.7
5. 34 Ema Klinec Slovenia 99.0 18 0.60 49.5 122.7 94.0 17 -0.11 54.0 123.1 245.8
6. 31 Svenja Würth Germany 97.0 18 0.24 50.0 122.1 94.0 17 -0.01 51.5 119.6 241.7
7. 32 Jacqueline Seifriedsberger Austria 94.0 18 0.13 54.0 121.0 92.5 17 -0.09 54.0 119.9 240.9
8. 37 Katharina Althaus Germany 94.0 18 0.49 53.0 117.1 92.5 17 -0.09 54.0 121.9 239.0
9. 36 Daniela Iraschko-Stolz Austria 93.0 18 0.18 53.0 117.6 89.5 17 -0.31 50.0 112.0 229.6
10. 28 Chiara Hölzl Austria 93.5 18 0.31 51.5 116.0 91.0 17 0.06 51.5 113.0 229.0
11. 23 Kaori Iwabuchi Japan 92.0 18 -0.08 49.0 113.8 89.5 17 0.10 49.5 107.7 221.5
12. 33 Irina Avvakumova Russia 90.0 18 0.17 52.5 111.1 90.5 17 0.34 52.0 110.3 221.4
13. 12 Nika Križnar Slovenia 90.5 18 0.01 48.5 109.4 91.5 17 0.13 48.0 110.0 219.4
14. 29 Yūka Setō Japan 88.0 18 -0.12 51.0 108.2 87.5 17 -0.10 49.5 105.5 213.7
15. 26 Manuela Malsiner Italy 91.0 18 0.08 47.0 108.4 86.5 17 -0.21 49.5 104.5 212.9
16. 13 Taylor Henrich Canada 88.0 18 -0.25 50.5 108.9 85.0 17 -0.01 51.0 101.1 210.0
17. 30 Maja Vtič Austria 89.5 18 0.36 51.0 107.1 86.0 17 0.07 50.0 101.4 208.5
18. 18 Elena Runggaldier Italy 92.0 18 -0.03 52.5 116.8 81.0 17 -0.01 49.5 91.6 208.4
19. 21 Julia Kykkänen Finland 86.5 18 -0.24 51.0 106.3 82.5 17 -0.18 51.0 97.7 204.0
20. 19 Léa Lemare France 90.0 18 0.26 52.0 109.9 83.0 17 0.20 49.5 93.9 203.8
21. 17 Anastasiya Barannikova Russia 84.5 18 0.08 48.5 96.9 86.5 17 -0.20 50.0 104.9 201.8
22. 24 Špela Rogelj Slovenia 84.0 18 -0.02 49.5 97.7 87.5 17 0.41 51.0 102.7 200.4
23. 27 Sarah Hendrickson Italy 86.5 18 0.02 51.5 104.3 82.0 17 0.04 50.0 93.7 198.0
24. 20 Lucile Morat France 85.5 18 -0.12 50.0 102.2 83.5 17 0.17 49.5 95.1 197.3
25. 14 Gianina Ernst Germany 84.5 18 -0.01 47.5 96.6 81.5 17 -0.12 48.0 92.2 188.8
26. 16 Sofia Tikhonova Russia 84.0 18 -0.04 49.0 97.4 82.0 17 0.22 48.5 90.7 188.1
27. 25 Nita Englund United States 85.0 18 0.10 48.5 94.7 82.0 17 -0.02 49.0 93.2 187.9
28. 4 Li Xueyao China 84.0 18 0.10 47.5 94.7 81.5 17 -0.04 46.5 89.9 184.6
29. 10 Daniela Haralambie Romania 83.5 18 -0.09 48.0 95.9 79.5 17 0.05 48.0 86.6 182.5
30. 11 Ksenia Kablukova Slovenia 83.5 18 0.02 49.0 95.8 78.0 17 -0.06 48.5 85.1 180.9
31. 2 Silje Opseth Finland 83.0 18 0.09 49.5 94.8 79.0 17 0.40 48.0 82.8 177.6
32. 5 Barbora Blažková Czech Republic 84.0 18 0.20 47.5 93.9 NQ 93.9
33. 15 Evelyn Insam Italy 83.0 18 0.29 50.0 93.7 NQ 93.7
22 Ramona Straub Germany 84.0 18 0.23 47.5 93.7 NQ 93.7
35. 3 Chang Xinyue China 84.0 18 0.18 47.0 93.6 NQ 93.6
36. 8 Anniken Mork Norway 82.0 18 -0.11 46.5 91.6 NQ 91.6
37. 7 Lara Malsiner Italy 83.0 18 0.15 46.5 91.3 NQ 91.3
38. 1 Marta Křepelková Czech Republic 77.0 18 -0.09 47.5 82.4 NQ 82.4
39. 6 Nicole Maurer Canada 77.0 18 -0.01 46.0 80.1 NQ 80.1
40. 9 Natasha Bodnarchuk Canada 74.5 18 -0.17 47.5 78.1 NQ 78.1

Men

Qualifications for the individual competition on the HS 100 hill (24 February 2017)[49]

Position Number Athlete Country Jump Style Total score Notes
Distance Gate Wind
1. 51 Dawid Kubacki Poland 99.0 13 0.35 54.0 129.2 q
2. 56 Piotr Żyła Poland 96.0 13 -0.05 54.0 126.5 q
3. 33 Janne Ahonen Finland 97.0 13 0.22 54.0 126.2 q
4. 52 Evgenii Klimov Russia 97.5 13 0.40 53.5 125.3 q
50 Stephan Leyhe Germany 96.0 13 0.15 54.5 125.3 q
6. 45 Taku Takeuchi Japan 94.5 13 -0.20 52.5 123.4 q
7. 30 Alexey Romashov Russia 96.5 13 0.46 53.5 122.8 q
8. 38 Johann André Forfang Norway 96.5 13 0.47 53.0 122.2 q
9. 49 Robert Johansson Norway 93.5 13 -0.09 54.0 121.9 q
10. 29 Ville Larinto Finland 95.5 13 0.37 52.5 120.5 q
11. 41 Jakub Janda Czech Republic 94.0 13 0.25 54.0 120.0 q
12. 32 Viktor Polášek Czech Republic 95.0 13 0.31 52.0 119.5 q
13. 48 Daiki Itō Japan 93.0 13 0.09 54.0 119.3 q
14. 46 Roman Koudelka Czech Republic 92.5 13 -0.32 50.5 118.6 q
15. 39 Cene Prevc Slovenia 94.0 13 0.27 52.5 118.3 q
16. 42 Gregor Schlierenzauer Austria 92.5 13 0.05 53.5 118.1 q
17. 43 Simon Ammann Switzerland 88.5 13 -1.11 49.5 117.2 q
47 Noriaki Kasai Japan 92.0 13 -0.18 51.5 117.2 q
19. 55 Richard Freitag Germany 90.0 13 -0.41 52.5 116.5 q
20. 25 Davide Bresadola Italy 90.5 13 -0.30 52.5 116.4 q
10 Killian Peier Switzerland 93.0 13 0.26 52.5 116.4 q
22. 31 Tomáš Vančura Czech Republic 91.0 13 -0.06 52.5 115.1 q
23. 36 Kevin Bickner United States 92.0 13 -0.05 50.5 115.0 q
24. 37 Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes Canada 91.5 13 0.29 52.5 113.2 q
54 Andreas Stjernen Norway 89.0 13 -0.43 51.0 113.2 q
26. 14 Alex Insam Italy 89.5 13 -0.34 49.5 111.8 q
27. 26 Gregor Deschwanden Switzerland 89.0 13 -0.10 51.0 110.0 q
28. 28 Dmitriy Vassiliev Russia 92.5 13 0.36 47.5 109.6 q
29. 34 Jarkko Määttä Finland 90.0 13 0.34 52.0 109.3 q
30. 24 Michael Glasder United States 87.5 13 -0.30 51.0 108.9 q
31. 40 Denis Kornilov Russia 89.5 13 0.29 52.0 108.7 q
32. 27 Kento Sakuyama Japan 88.0 13 -0.16 49.5 108.5 q
33. 53 Vincent Descombes Sevoie France 88.0 13 -0.30 49.5 108.4 q
34. 1 Antti Aalto Finland 89.0 13 0.02 50.0 107.8 q
35. 3 Andreas Schuler Switzerland 87.0 13 -0.24 50.0 106.3 q
36. 2 Vladimir Zografski Bulgaria 85.0 13 -0.26 50.0 102.5 q
37. 35 Sebastian Colloredo Italy 87.0 13 0.34 51.0 102.3 q
38. 19 Paul Brasme France 86.0 13 0.15 51.0 101.8 q
39. 44 Jernej Damjan Slovenia 86.5 13 0.27 50.0 100.8 q
40. 23 Kaarel Nurmsalu Estonia 82.5 13 -0.51 49.5 99.4 q
41. 21 Ilia Kratov Kazakhstan 84.0 13 0.00 49.5 97.5 nq
42. 13 Artti Aigro Estonia 83.0 13 -0.18 49.5 97.2 nq
43. 16 Fatih Arda İpcioğlu Turkey 83.0 13 -0.09 49.0 95.9 nq
44. 8 Casey Larson United States 83.0 13 0.35 49.5 92.7 nq
45. 18 Martti Nõmme Estonia 80.5 13 -0.20 49.0 91.9 nq
46. 4 Joshua Maurer Canada 77.5 13 -0.42 48.0 87.1 nq
47. 22 Sorin Mitrofan Romania 79.0 13 -0.21 48.0 87.0 nq
48. 9 Nikolay Karpenko Kazakhstan 77.5 13 0.07 47.0 82.4 nq
49. 5 Sorin Iulian Pîtea Romania 77.5 13 0.16 48.0 81.7 nq
50. 20 Stepan Pasicznyk Ukraine 79.0 13 0.65 48.0 80.8 nq
51. 12 Roman Nogin Kazakhstan 72.0 13 0.14 45.5 68.4 nq
52. 15 Artur Sarkisiani Georgia 68.0 13 -0.14 46.0 63.4 nq
53. 11 Kristaps Nežborts Latvia 67.0 13 -0.09 44.5 59.4 nq
57 Peter Prevc Slovenia 98.5 13 0.24 pq
58 Markus Eisenbichler Germany DNS
59 Manuel Fettner Austria 95.5 13 0.12 pq
60 Michael Hayböck Austria 95.0 13 -0.15 pq
61 Andreas Wellinger Germany 98.5 13 0.17 pq
62 Maciej Kot Poland 97.0 13 -0.32 pq
63 Domen Prevc Slovenia 88.5 13 0.17 pq
64 Daniel-André Tande Norway 94.0 13 -0.03 pq
65 Stefan Kraft Austria 99.5 13 0.15 pq
66 Kamil Stoch Poland 103.5 13 0.58 pq
6 William Rhoads United States DSQ
7 Alexey Korolev Kazakhstan DSQ
17 Vitaliy Kalinichenko Ukraine DSQ

Individual competition on the HS 100 hill (25 February 2017)[42]

Position Number Athlete Country 1st round 2nd round Total score
Jump Style Score Jump Style Score
Distance Gate Wind Distance Gate Wind
1. 49 Stefan Kraft Austria 99.5 11 0.03 57.0 135.8 98.0 11 -0.21 57.0 135.0 270.8
2. 45 Andreas Wellinger Germany 96.5 11 -0.31 55.5 131.5 100.0 11 -0.07 56.5 137.2 268.7
3. 42 Markus Eisenbichler Germany 95.0 11 -0.50 53.5 128.3 100.5 11 0.02 54.5 135.3 263.6
4. 50 Kamil Stoch Poland 96.5 11 -0.08 56.0 129.8 99.0 11 0.23 56.5 132.7 262.5
5. 46 Maciej Kot Poland 95.0 11 -0.42 54.0 128.1 95.5 11 -0.15 54.5 127.0 255.1
6. 44 Michael Hayböck Austria 98.0 11 -0.09 54.0 130.9 95.5 11 -0.15 51.0 123.5 254.4
7. 22 Johann André Forfang Norway 93.0 11 -0.30 53.5 122.4 98.5 11 0.23 55.5 130.7 253.1
8. 35 Dawid Kubacki Poland 96.5 11 -0.08 55.5 129.3 93.5 11 0.12 54.0 122.2 251.5
9. 39 Richard Freitag Germany 94.5 11 -0.09 54.0 123.9 96.0 11 -0.05 54.0 126.5 250.4
10. 32 Daiki Itō Japan 95.5 11 0.04 54.0 124.7 94.5 11 -0.17 54.5 125.1 249.8
11. 41 Peter Prevc Slovenia 92.5 11 -0.23 54.0 121.2 95.0 11 -0.10 55.0 126.0 247.2
12. 43 Manuel Fettner Austria 95.0 11 0.01 54.0 123.9 94.5 11 0.08 54.0 122.4 246.3
13. 34 Stephan Leyhe Germany 94.0 11 -0.12 54.0 123.2 94.0 11 0.04 54.0 121.7 244.9
14. 30 Roman Koudelka Czech Republic 93.0 11 -0.25 54.0 122.4 92.5 11 -0.34 54.0 122.3 244.7
15. 48 Daniel-André Tande Norway 92.5 11 -0.12 53.5 119.7 94.5 11 -0.24 52.5 123.8 243.5
16. 33 Robert Johansson Norway 93.5 11 0.11 54.0 120.1 94.5 11 0.06 54.0 122.5 242.6
17. 38 Andreas Stjernen Norway 95.0 11 0.34 54.0 121.3 95.0 11 0.13 51.5 120.5 241.8
18. 4 Killian Peier Switzerland 93.0 11 -0.15 52.5 120.0 93.0 11 -0.11 53.5 120.6 240.6
19. 40 Piotr Żyła Poland 91.5 11 -0.26 52.5 118.0 94.0 11 -0.02 54.0 122.2 240.2
20. 29 Taku Takeuchi Japan 94.5 11 0.22 54.0 121.2 91.5 11 -0.10 53.0 117.0 238.2
21. 27 Simon Ammann Switzerland 91.5 11 -0.27 51.0 116.6 92.0 11 -0.29 52.0 118.8 235.4
22. 36 Evgenii Klimov Russia 91.5 11 -0.06 52.0 115.6 90.5 11 -0.30 51.0 114.9 230.5
23. 25 Jakub Janda Czech Republic 89.0 11 -0.25 52.5 112.9 90.0 11 -0.25 52.5 114.9 227.8
24. 26 Gregor Schlierenzauer Austria 89.5 11 -0.36 52.5 115.0 90.0 11 0.06 52.5 112.0 227.0
25. 17 Janne Ahonen Finland 90.5 11 -0.12 52.5 114.7 89.5 11 -0.01 52.5 111.6 226.3
26. 13 Ville Larinto Finland 89.5 11 -0.28 51.0 112.7 90.0 11 -0.03 52.5 112.8 225.5
27. 9 Davide Bresadola Italy 89.5 11 -0.07 51.0 110.7 90.5 11 -0.13 51.5 113.8 224.5
28. 31 Noriaki Kasai Japan 90.0 11 0.06 52.5 112.0 89.0 11 0.10 52.5 109.7 221.7
29. 24 Denis Kornilov Russia 92.5 11 0.42 51.5 113.1 86.0 11 -0.16 51.0 104.5 217.6
30. 12 Dmitriy Vassiliev Russia 90.5 11 0.11 50.5 110.6 86.5 11 -0.13 49.5 103.8 214.4
31. 16 Viktor Polášek Czech Republic 89.0 11 -0.13 50.0 109.3 NQ 109.3
32. 28 Jernej Damjan Slovenia 88.0 11 -0.23 51.0 109.2 NQ 109.2
33. 10 Gregor Deschwanden Switzerland 88.0 11 -0.17 51.0 108.6 NQ 108.6
34. 47 Domen Prevc Slovenia 89.0 11 0.11 51.0 108.1 NQ 108.1
35. 18 Jarkko Määttä Finland 88.0 11 -0.05 51.0 107.5 NQ 107.5
15 Tomáš Vančura Czech Republic 87.0 11 -0.21 51.5 107.5 NQ 107.5
37. 19 Sebastian Colloredo Italy 88.5 11 0.09 51.0 107.3 NQ 107.3
38. 1 Antti Aalto Finland 87.5 11 -0.11 51.0 107.1 NQ 107.1
39. 21 Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes Canada 88.0 11 0.12 51.0 106.0 NQ 106.0
40. 11 Kento Sakuyama Japan 87.5 11 0.04 51.0 105.7 NQ 105.7
41. 37 Vincent Descombes Sevoie France 87.5 11 -0.05 50.0 105.5 NQ 105.5
42. 2 Vladimir Zografski Bulgaria 88.0 11 0.35 52.0 105.2 NQ 105.2
43. 23 Cene Prevc Slovenia 86.0 11 -0.17 50.5 104.1 NQ 104.1
44. 14 Alexey Romashov Russia 86.0 11 -0.03 49.5 101.8 NQ 101.8
45. 5 Alex Insam Italy 86.0 11 0.12 50.5 101.5 NQ 101.5
46. 3 Andreas Schuler Switzerland 85.5 11 0.20 49.5 98.9 NQ 98.9
47. 20 Kevin Bickner United States 83.5 11 -0.10 49.5 98.9 NQ 98.9
48. 7 Kaarel Nurmsalu Estonia 83.0 11 -0.29 49.0 97.8 NQ 97.8
49. 8 Michael Glasder United States 82.0 11 -0.10 49.5 94.5 NQ 94.5
50. 6 Paul Brasme France 83.0 11 0.18 49.5 94.1 NQ 94.1

Qualification for the individual competition on the HS 130 hill (1 March 2017)[57]

Position Number Athlete Country Jump Style Total score Notes
Distance Gate Wind
1. 15 Antti Aalto Finland 128.5 10 1.08 50.0 123.4 q
2. 51 Andreas Stjernen Norway 125.0 10 1.17 55.5 121.8 q
3. 45 Daiki Itō Japan 121.5 10 1.02 55.0 116.3 q
4. 28 Viktor Polášek Czech Republic 119.5 10 0.65 54.0 114.8 q
5. 38 Simon Ammann Switzerland 124.0 10 0.99 48.5 114.5 q
6. 30 Jarkko Määttä Finland 119.5 10 0.80 54.0 113.5 q
7. 25 Ville Larinto Finland 117.5 10 0.33 52.5 112.4 q
8. 27 Tomáš Vančura Czech Republic 118.0 10 0.74 54.0 111.3 q
9. 48 Dawid Kubacki Poland 119.0 10 1.06 54.5 110.9 q
44 Noriaki Kasai Japan 119.0 10 0.95 53.5 110.9 q
11. 42 Anders Fannemel Norway 116.5 10 0.39 52.5 110.1 q
12. 41 Taku Takeuchi Japan 117.5 10 0.65 52.5 109.7 q
13. 13 Killian Peier Switzerland 116.5 10 0.49 52.0 108.8 q
14. 20 Michael Glasder United States 116.0 10 0.46 52.5 108.6 q
15. 33 Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes Canada 115.0 10 0.32 52.0 107.5 q
16. 29 Janne Ahonen Finland 116.0 10 0.52 50.5 106.1 q
17. 34 Johann André Forfang Norway 114.5 10 0.63 52.5 104.5 q
18. 36 Jakub Janda Czech Republic 114.0 10 0.43 51.5 104.3 q
19. 6 Alex Insam Italy 116.0 10 0.87 51.5 104.1 q
20. 22 Gregor Deschwanden Switzerland 114.0 10 0.46 51.5 104.0 q
21. 16 William Rhoads United States 116.0 10 0.88 51.0 103.6 q
22. 37 Markus Schiffner Austria 115.5 10 0.98 51.5 102.3 q
23. 47 Stephan Leyhe Germany 113.5 10 0.70 52.0 101.6 q
24. 24 Dmitriy Vassiliev Russia 113.0 10 0.48 51.0 101.5 q
25. 40 Jernej Damjan Slovenia 113.5 10 0.73 52.0 101.3 q
26. 35 Denis Kornilov Russia 110.5 10 0.26 50.5 98.4 q
27. 52 Richard Freitag Germany 114.5 10 1.24 51.0 97.8 q
50 Vincent Descombes Sevoie France 114.0 10 1.19 51.5 97.8 q
29. 19 Kaarel Nurmsalu Estonia 111.0 10 0.55 51.0 97.3 q
30. 39 Anže Lanišek Slovenia 109.5 10 0.31 51.5 97.2 q
31. 31 Sebastian Colloredo Italy 111.0 10 0.76 51.0 95.6 q
32. 21 Davide Bresadola Italy 108.5 10 0.15 49.5 94.7 q
33. 3 Casey Larson United States 108.5 10 0.61 49.0 90.3 q
34. 32 Kevin Bickner United States 108.0 10 0.64 49.5 89.7 q
35. 8 Martti Nõmme Estonia 108.5 10 0.82 49.5 89.9 q
36. 46 Jurij Tepeš Slovenia 107.0 10 0.59 49.5 88.3 q
37. 26 Alexey Romashov Russia 106.0 10 0.51 49.0 86.7 q
38. 11 Andreas Schuler Switzerland 107.0 10 0.93 49.5 85.4 q
39. 49 Evgenii Klimov Russia 105.5 10 0.77 49.5 84.1 q
40. 23 Kento Sakuyama Japan 102.5 10 0.17 48.5 82.8 q
41. 5 Artti Aigro Estonia 102.5 10 0.48 47.5 78.2 nq
42. 43 Roman Koudelka Czech Republic 98.5 10 0.59 48.5 72.0 nq
43. 4 Ilia Kratov Kazakhstan 93.0 10 0.46 45.5 60.2 nq
44. 17 Fatih Arda İpcioğlu Turkey 95.0 10 1.02 46.5 60.1 nq
45. 7 Nikolay Karpenko Kazakhstan 92.0 10 0.82 46.5 56.4 nq
46. 18 Alexey Korolev Kazakhstan 88.5 10 0.69 47.0 51.7 nq
47. 2 Vitaliy Kalinichenko Ukraine 88.0 10 0.72 46.0 49.5 nq
48. 10 Roman Nogin Kazakhstan 82.5 10 0.94 45.0 36.7 nq
49. 1 Artur Sarkisiani Georgia 72.0 10 1.09 44.5 16.1 nq
53 Piotr Żyła Poland 121.5 10 0.73 pq
54 Peter Prevc Slovenia 127.5 10 0.48 pq
55 Markus Eisenbichler Germany 105.5 10 0.59 pq
56 Manuel Fettner Austria 121.5 10 1.13 pq
57 Michael Hayböck Austria 110.5 10 1.03 pq
58 Andreas Wellinger Germany 114.0 10 1.26 pq
59 Maciej Kot Poland 115.0 10 1.44 pq
60 Daniel-André Tande Norway 113.5 10 1.26 pq
61 Stefan Kraft Austria 118.5 10 0.81 pq
62 Kamil Stoch Poland 113.5 10 0.60 pq
9 Joshua Maurer Canada DSQ
12 Vladimir Zografski Bulgaria DSQ
14 Kristaps Nežborts Latvia DSQ

Individual competition on the HS 130 hill (2 March 2017)[58]

Position Number Athlete Country 1st round 2nd round Total score
Jump Style Score Jump Style Score
Distance Gate Wind Distance Gate Wind
1. 49 Stefan Kraft Austria 127.5 9 -0.23 56.5 139.6 127.5 9 -0.15 57.5 139.7 279.3
2. 46 Andreas Wellinger Germany 127.5 9 -0.24 55.5 138.7 129.0 9 -0.04 55.5 139.3 278.0
3. 41 Piotr Żyła Poland 127.5 9 0.16 55.5 134.8 131.0 9 0.25 57.0 141.9 276.7
4. 39 Andreas Stjernen Norway 129.5 9 0.39 56.0 137.0 129.0 9 0.15 57.0 139.9 276.1
5. 31 Anders Fannemel Norway 123.5 9 -0.29 55.0 131.5 127.0 9 -0.24 55.0 137.3 268.8
6. 47 Maciej Kot Poland 123.5 9 -0.18 55.0 130.3 126.5 9 -0.21 55.5 136.6 266.9
7. 50 Kamil Stoch Poland 127.5 9 -0.10 55.0 136.7 124.5 9 0.26 55.0 128.1 264.8
8. 36 Dawid Kubacki Poland 128.5 9 0.16 55.5 136.6 123.0 9 -0.01 54.5 127.2 263.8
9. 42 Peter Prevc Slovenia 128.0 9 0.24 55.0 134.6 124.5 9 0.20 55.5 129.9 263.7
10. 48 Daniel-André Tande Norway 121.5 9 0.23 54.0 122.0 129.5 9 0.00 55.0 139.3 261.3
11. 45 Michael Hayböck Austria 121.5 9 -0.02 54.0 124.1 128.0 9 0.17 56.0 136.2 260.3
12. 23 Johann André Forfang Norway 127.0 9 0.21 54.5 132.5 122.5 9 -0.17 54.0 127.4 259.9
13. 43 Markus Eisenbichler Germany 125.5 9 0.06 54.0 130.6 123.5 9 0.01 54.0 127.4 258.0
14. 27 Simon Ammann Switzerland 122.5 9 -0.16 52.5 125.8 125.5 9 -0.14 48.5 127.0 252.8
15. 33 Daiki Itō Japan 122.0 9 -0.17 54.5 127.0 120.0 9 -0.05 54.0 121.7 248.7
16. 35 Stephan Leyhe Germany 125.0 9 -0.05 55.5 132.2 117.5 9 0.08 53.0 115.0 247.2
17. 30 Taku Takeuchi Japan 122.0 9 0.12 54.0 123.8 121.0 9 0.24 54.0 121.0 244.8
18. 44 Manuel Fettner Austria 118.0 9 -0.07 52.5 116.8 122.5 9 0.04 54.5 125.9 242.7
19. 40 Richard Freitag Germany 121.0 9 -0.15 54.0 124.5 115.5 9 0.05 52.5 111.2 235.7
20. 37 Evgenii Klimov Russia 120.0 9 0.37 53.0 117.1 117.5 9 -0.20 52.5 117.2 234.3
21. 29 Jernej Damjan Slovenia 113.5 9 -0.44 51.0 111.0 120.0 9 -0.15 52.5 121.2 232.2
22. 26 Markus Schiffner Austria 120.0 9 -0.22 52.0 121.5 113.5 9 0.09 51.0 105.7 227.2
23. 18 Janne Ahonen Finland 115.0 9 0.12 52.5 111.9 116.0 9 0.12 52.5 113.7 225.6
24. 13 Dmitriy Vassiliev Russia 120.0 9 0.56 52.5 115.0 115.0 9 -0.07 50.5 110.3 225.3
25. 17 Viktor Polášek Czech Republic 116.0 9 -0.29 51.0 114.0 115.5 9 -0.09 51.0 111.0 225.0
26. 14 Ville Larinto Finland 118.0 9 0.32 52.5 113.4 115.5 9 0.05 52.5 111.2 224.6
27. 19 Jarkko Määttä Finland 116.0 9 0.14 51.0 109.8 117.5 9 0.24 52.0 112.7 222.5
28. 25 Jakub Janda Czech Republic 118.5 9 0.14 52.5 115.8 111.0 9 -0.25 50.0 103.6 219.4
29. 24 Denis Kornilov Russia 119.5 9 0.39 51.0 114.0 108.5 9 -0.01 48.5 95.1 209.9
30. 21 Kevin Bickner United States 117.0 9 0.06 50.5 111.8 104.0 9 -0.84 48.5 95.5 207.3
31. 6 Antti Aalto Finland 115.0 9 -0.01 51.0 109.3 NQ 109.3
32. 32 Noriaki Kasai Japan 114.0 9 -0.07 51.0 108.1 NQ 108.1
33. 38 Vincent Descombes Sevoie France 114.0 9 0.14 50.0 105.2 NQ 105.2
34. 34 Jurij Tepeš Slovenia 111.5 9 -0.12 51.0 104.1 NQ 104.1
35. 11 Gregor Deschwanden Switzerland 112.5 9 0.28 51.0 102.3 NQ 102.3
36. 28 Anže Lanišek Slovenia 110.0 9 0.00 50.5 99.7 NQ 99.7
37. 2 Alex Insam Italy 107.0 9 -0.41 49.5 97.5 NQ 97.5
38. 22 Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes Canada 108.0 9 0.12 50.0 94.6 NQ 94.6
39. 7 William Rhoads United States 107.0 9 -0.08 48.5 93.1 NQ 93.1
40. 9 Michael Glasder United States 106.0 9 -0.09 49.5 92.4 NQ 92.4
5 Killian Peier Switzerland 106.5 9 0.00 49.5 92.4 NQ 92.4
42. 16 Tomáš Vančura Czech Republic 104.5 9 -0.28 49.5 91.7 NQ 91.7
43. 20 Sebastian Colloredo Italy 107.0 9 0.40 49.5 89.9 NQ 89.9
44. 3 Martti Nõmme Estonia 106.0 9 0.16 48.5 89.9 NQ 89.9
45. 8 Kaarel Nurmsalu Estonia 103.5 9 -0.19 48.0 87.4 NQ 87.4
46. 1 Casey Larson United States 102.5 9 -0.25 48.0 86.3 NQ 86.3
47. 4 Andreas Schuler Switzerland 103.0 9 0.03 48.0 84.3 NQ 84.3
48. 10 Davide Bresadola Italy 101.5 9 -0.24 47.0 83.4 NQ 83.4
49. 15 Alexey Romashov Russia 102.0 9 -0.05 48.0 83.3 NQ 83.3
50. 12 Kento Sakuyama Japan 102.0 9 0.05 47.5 81.9 NQ 81.9

Team competition on the HS 130 hill (4 March 2017)[59]

Position Number Country Athlete 1st round 2nd round Total score
Jump Style Score Jump Style Score
Distance Gate Wind Distance Gate Wind
1. 12-1 Poland Piotr Żyła 130.5 9 -0.04 52.0 143.4 123.0 8 -0.17 54.0 128.3 1104.2
12-2 Dawid Kubacki 129.0 9 0.07 55.5 143.2 119.5 7 0.10 54.0 124.4
12-3 Maciej Kot 130.5 9 -0.38 57.0 151.9 121.5 8 -0.03 54.0 124.2
12-4 Kamil Stoch 130.5 8 -0.05 57.0 153.4 124.5 8 -0.60 54.0 135.4
2. 8-1 Norway Anders Fannemel 131.0 10 0.06 54.5 141.0 112.5 8 -0.69 51.0 111.8 1078.5
8-2 Johann André Forfang 126.5 9 -0.01 54.0 137.9 138.0 9 0.91 49.5 136.6
8-3 Daniel-André Tande 126.0 9 -0.13 55.5 139.7 126.0 8 0.10 54.0 131.2
8-4 Andreas Stjernen 127.5 8 0.04 55.5 145.7 125.5 8 -0.20 55.5 134.6
3. 11-1 Austria Michael Hayböck 130.0 10 -0.02 55.5 140.9 118.5 8 -0.16 53.0 119.9 1068.9
11-2 Manuel Fettner 126.5 9 0.04 54.0 137.5 121.0 7 0.47 52.5 122.4
11-3 Gregor Schlierenzauer 124.0 9 -0.12 54.0 134.5 113.5 8 -0.46 51.0 111.2
11-4 Stefan Kraft 134.0 8 -0.09 58.5 161.6 126.0 8 -0.70 56.5 141.7
4. 10-1 Germany Markus Eisenbichler 130.5 10 -0.08 53.5 140.4 130.5 8 -0.06 54.0 140.7 1052.9
10-2 Stephan Leyhe 124.5 9 -0.05 54.0 134.7 103.5 7 0.22 49.0 89.5
10-3 Richard Freitag 128.5 9 -0.27 55.0 145.2 124.0 8 0.25 54.0 126.3
10-4 Andreas Wellinger 130.5 8 -0.19 55.0 152.8 119.0 8 -0.48 53.0 123.3
5. 9-1 Slovenia Jurij Tepeš 123.5 10 -0.04 38.5 112.4 106.5 8 -0.26 49.5 95.1 941.6
9-2 Anže Lanišek 121.0 9 -0.24 53.5 129.9 112.0 7 0.22 51.0 106.8
9-3 Jernej Damjan 120.0 9 -0.33 53.0 128.5 113.0 8 0.15 50.5 103.8
9-4 Peter Prevc 127.5 8 -0.01 55.5 146.1 117.5 8 -0.27 53.5 119.0
6. 4-1 Finland Jarkko Määttä 120.5 10 0.05 53.5 121.2 117.0 8 -0.08 51.5 114.1 926.5
4-2 Ville Larinto 114.0 9 -0.03 51.5 113.1 117.0 9 -0.11 51.5 109.6
4-3 Antti Aalto 122.0 9 -0.17 52.5 129.9 114.5 8 -0.15 51.0 109.8
4-4 Janne Ahonen 116.0 8 -0.01 51.5 121.4 112.0 8 -0.35 51.0 107.4
7. 6-1 Japan Taku Takeuchi 120.0 10 0.10 53.0 119.4 115.5 8 -0.03 52.5 111.9 922.7
6-2 Ryōyū Kobayashi 114.5 9 -0.12 50.5 113.9 119.0 9 0.04 52.5 112.8
6-3 Noriaki Kasai 119.0 9 -0.10 53.5 124.8 105.0 8 -0.31 49.5 92.9
6-4 Daiki Itō 119.0 8 -0.13 53.0 129.5 114.0 8 -0.94 51.5 117.5
5-1 Czech Republic Viktor Polášek 125.0 10 0.06 54.0 129.7 117.0 8 0.10 51.0 112.0 922.7
5-2 Tomáš Vančura 114.5 9 -0.05 52.0 114.7 109.0 9 0.08 50.5 92.4
5-3 Jakub Janda 120.0 9 -0.07 53.5 126.3 115.5 8 0.31 52.0 108.5
5-4 Roman Koudelka 119.5 8 -0.04 51.5 128.0 113.0 8 -0.39 52.5 111.1
9. 7-1 Russia Alexey Romashov 118.5 10 0.04 52.0 116.2 NQ 473.4
7-2 Denis Kornilov 113.0 9 -0.09 48.0 108.4
7-3 Dmitriy Vassiliev 118.0 9 -0.15 51.0 121.0
7-4 Evgenii Klimov 118.5 8 -0.10 52.5 127.8
10. 3-1  Switzerland Gregor Deschwanden 114.5 10 0.15 49.5 105.5 NQ 453.0
3-2 Andreas Schuler 106.0 9 -0.07 49.0 96.6
3-3 Killian Peier 114.0 9 -0.12 51.5 114.0
3-4 Simon Ammann 123.5 8 -0.11 52.5 136.9
11. 2-1 United States Casey Larson 93.0 10 0.03 46.5 64.8 NQ 365.1
2-2 William Rhoads 107.0 9 -0.14 49.0 99.9
2-3 Michael Glasder 108.0 9 -0.10 49.5 101.0
2-4 Kevin Bickner 105.5 8 -0.13 48.0 100.2
12. 1-1 Kazakhstan Roman Nogin 75.0 10 0.10 44.0 29.4 NQ 192.3
1-2 Alexey Korolev 83.5 9 -0.08 46.0 53.2
1-3 Nikolay Karpenko 81.0 9 -0.10 42.5 45.4
1-4 Ilia Kratov 87.5 8 -0.08 45.0 64.3

Mixed competition

Mixed competition on the HS 100 hill (26 February 2017)[43]

Position Number Country Athlete 1st round 2nd round Total score
Jump Style Score Jump Style Score
Distance Gate Wind Distance Gate Wind
1. 14-1 Germany Carina Vogt 98.0 18 0.10 54.0 129.2 95.0 18 -0.26 53.5 126.0 1035.5
14-2 Markus Eisenbichler 95.5 12 -0.20 54.0 126.9 99.5 13 -0.27 55.5 137.1
14-3 Svenja Würth 95.0 18 -0.21 48.0 120.0 95.5 18 -0.32 46.0 120.1
14-4 Andreas Wellinger 99.0 12 0.19 56.0 132.5 98.0 12 -0.78 55.5 143.7
2. 13-1 Austria Daniela Iraschko-Stolz 88.5 18 -0.44 52.0 113.3 90.5 18 -0.33 52.5 116.7 999.3
13-2 Michael Hayböck 92.0 12 -0.11 52.5 117.6 97.5 13 -0.28 54.0 131.7
13-3 Jacqueline Seifriedsberger 94.5 18 -0.27 54.0 125.6 92.5 18 -0.25 54.0 121.4
13-4 Stefan Kraft 96.5 12 -0.59 55.5 134.2 97.0 12 -0.49 55.5 138.8
3. 11-1 Japan Sara Takanashi 90.0 18 -0.91 50.5 119.3 89.5 18 -0.86 51.0 118.3 979.7
11-2 Taku Takeuchi 89.0 12 -0.91 49.5 116.3 92.0 13 -0.55 51.5 120.8
11-3 Yūki Itō 95.0 18 -0.14 54.0 125.4 93.5 18 -0.46 53.5 125.0
11-4 Daiki Itō 92.5 12 -0.23 54.0 121.2 96.5 12 -0.08 55.0 133.4
4. 12-1 Slovenia Nika Križnar 84.0 18 -0.94 49.0 106.1 90.5 18 -0.53 50.0 116.1 961.4
12-2 Anže Lanišek 93.5 12 -0.30 54.0 123.9 96.5 13 -0.02 55.5 128.7
12-3 Ema Klinec 92.5 18 -0.11 52.5 118.6 91.5 18 -0.49 52.5 120.2
12-4 Peter Prevc 88.0 12 -0.43 51.5 111.7 97.5 12 -0.21 54.5 136.1
5. 10-1 Norway Silje Opseth 80.5 18 -0.51 49.5 95.4 67.5 18 -0.28 46.0 63.7 877.8
10-2 Daniel-André Tande 91.0 12 0.06 52.5 114.0 95.0 13 -0.15 54.0 125.5
10-3 Maren Lundby 90.5 18 -0.32 52.5 116.6 93.5 18 -0.14 52.5 120.9
10-4 Andreas Stjernen 91.5 12 -0.13 52.5 116.8 91.0 12 -0.60 52.5 124.9
6. 9-1 Russia Anastasiya Barannikova 85.5 18 -0.19 48.0 100.8 87.0 18 -0.15 49.5 105.0 864.0
9-2 Denis Kornilov 89.5 12 0.01 52.5 111.4 92.5 13 0.03 52.5 117.3
9-3 Irina Avvakumova 85.5 18 0.01 51.0 101.9 85.0 18 -0.23 49.5 101.7
9-4 Evgenii Klimov 85.5 12 -0.71 50.0 107.9 88.0 12 -0.66 51.0 118.0
7. 5-1 Italy Elena Runggaldier 87.0 18 0.24 50.5 102.6 80.5 18 -0.41 48.5 93.5 848.1
5-2 Sebastian Colloredo 89.0 12 -0.10 52.0 111.0 83.0 13 -0.73 50.5 103.6
5-3 Manuela Malsiner 88.5 18 -0.20 48.5 107.4 87.0 18 0.09 49.5 102.8
5-4 Davide Bresadola 85.5 12 -0.95 51.0 111.2 88.0 12 -0.45 51.0 116.0
8. 7-1 United States Nita Englund 79.5 18 -0.42 49.5 92.6 75.5 18 -0.67 45.5 83.0 802.2
7-2 Michael Glasder 80.5 12 -0.59 49.5 96.2 83.0 13 -0.49 50.0 100.7
7-3 Sarah Hendrickson 85.0 18 -0.50 50.5 105.3 84.0 18 -0.27 50.5 101.1
7-4 Kevin Bickner 88.5 12 -0.18 51.0 109.7 89.0 12 -0.05 50.5 113.6
9. 6-1 Czech Republic Marta Křepelková 76.0 18 -0.13 48.0 81.3 NQ 403.3
6-2 Jakub Janda 88.0 12 -0.38 51.0 110.7
6-3 Barbora Blažková 77.0 18 -0.96 45.0 88.3
6-4 Roman Koudelka 94.0 12 -0.10 54.0 123.0
10. 8-1 France Léa Lemare 84.5 18 -0.39 50.5 103.3 NQ 403.1
8-2 Paul Brasme 82.0 12 -0.29 50.5 97.3
8-3 Lucile Morat 84.0 18 -0.28 50.5 100.7
8-4 Vincent Descombes Sevoie 84.0 12 -0.55 48.5 101.8
11. 4-1 Finland Susanna Forsström 79.0 18 0.42 46.0 80.6 NQ 397.4
4-2 Ville Larinto 88.5 12 -0.32 52.5 112.6
4-3 Julia Kykkänen 78.5 18 -0.12 49.5 87.7
4-4 Janne Ahonen 90.5 12 -0.31 52.5 116.5
12. 3-1 Canada Natasha Bodnarchuk 76.0 18 -0.04 48.0 80.4 NQ 379.5
3-2 Joshua Maurer 80.0 12 -0.34 47.0 90.3
3-3 Taylor Henrich 85.5 18 -0.07 50.5 102.2
3-4 Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes 88.0 12 0.05 51.0 106.6
13. 2-1 Romania Diana Trâmbițaș 67.0 18 -0.40 43.5 61.4 NQ 336.2
2-2 Sorin Iulian Pîtea 82.0 12 -0.44 50.5 98.8
2-3 Daniela Haralambie 80.0 18 -0.53 47.5 92.6
2-4 Sorin Mitrofan 76.5 12 -0.40 46.5 83.4
14. 1-1 Kazakhstan Dajana Achmietwalijewa 53.5 18 -0.45 39.5 30.9 NQ 258.4
1-2 Ilia Kratov 82.0 12 -0.15 49.0 94.5
1-3 Walentina Sdierżykowa 62.0 18 -0.56 42.0 51.4
1-4 Alexey Korolev 77.0 12 0.05 48.0 81.6

Team line-ups

Women's teams
Athlete Date of birth 2015 World Championships results 2017 World Championships results
Individual normal hill[23][60] Mixed team[27] Individual normal hill Mixed team
Austria[37] (3)
Chiara Hölzl 18 July 1997 16. 10.
Daniela Iraschko-Stolz 21 November 1983 3. 4. 9. 2.
Jacqueline Seifriedsberger 20 January 1991 7. 4. 7. 2.
China[37] (4)
Chang Xinyue 13 February 1994 38. 35.
Li Xueyao 11 April 1995 37. 28.
Liu Qi 27 February 1996 q q
Ma Tong 2 March 1994 q q
Czech Republic[61] (3)
Barbora Blažková 23 September 1997 39. 11. 32. 9.
Marta Křepelková 18 June 1991 38. 9.
Jana Mrákotová 24 July 1999 q
Finland[62] (3)
Susanna Forsström 19 April 1995 40. 10. q 11.
Julia Kykkänen 17 April 1994 23. 10. 19. 11.
Jenny Rautionaho 26 July 1996 q
France[63] (2)
Léa Lemare 21 June 1996 32. 8. 20. 10.
Lucile Morat 15 June 2001 24. 10.
Japan[37] (4)
Yuki Ito 10 May 1994 2. 3. 2. 3.
Kaori Iwabuchi 28 April 1993 36. 11.
Yūka Setō 22 February 1997 31. 14.
Sara Takanashi 8 October 1996 4. 3. 3. 3.
Canada[64] (3)
Natasha Bodnarchuk 13 June 1998 40. 12.
Taylor Henrich 1 November 1995 5. 16. 12.
Nicole Maurer 28 January 2000 39.
Kazakhstan[37] (2)
Dajana Achmietwalijewa 21 December 1997 q 14.
Walentina Sdierżykowa 30 January 2001 q 14.
Latvia[7] (1)
Šarlote Šķēle 29 March 2001 q
Germany[37][65] (5)
Katharina Althaus 23 May 1996 17. 1. 8.
Gianina Ernst 31 December 1998 25.
Ramona Straub 19 September 1993 33.
Carina Vogt 5 February 1992 1. 1. 1. 1.
Svenja Würth 20 August 1993 6. 1.
Norway[66] (3)
Maren Lundby 7 September 1994 15. 2. 4. 5.
Anniken Mork 16 January 1991 36.
Silje Opseth 28 April 1999 31. 5.
Russia[64] (5)
Irina Avvakumova 14 September 1991 11. 6. 12. 6.
Anastasiya Barannikova 27 November 1987 21. 6.
Ksenia Kablukova 16 June 1998 30.
Aleksandra Kustova 26 August 1998
Sofia Tikhonova 16 November 1998 20. 6. 26.
Romania[37] (2)
Daniela Haralambie 14 August 1997 29. 13.
Diana Trâmbițaș 31 May 2000 q 13.
Slovenia[37] (5)
Urša Bogataj 7 March 1995
Ema Klinec 2 July 1998 5. 4.
Nika Križnar 9 March 2000 13. 4.
Špela Rogelj 8 November 1994 10. 5. 22.
Maja Vtič 27 January 1988 13. 5. 17.
United States[7] (2)
Nita Englund 10 June 1992 12. 7. 27. 8.
Sarah Hendrickson 1 August 1994 6. 7. 23. 8.
Italy[67] (4)
Evelyn Insam 10 February 1994 33. 9. 33.
Lara Malsiner 14 April 2000 37.
Manuela Malsiner 15 December 1997 15. 7.
Elena Runggaldier 10 July 1990 30. 9. 18. 7.
Men's teams
Athlete Date of birth 2015 World Championships results 2017 World Championships results
Individual normal hill[68][69] Individual large hill[70][71] Team large hill[72] Mixed team[73] Individual normal hill Individual large hill Team large hill Mixed team
Austria[74] (6)
Manuel Fettner 17 June 1985 12. 18. 3.
Michael Hayböck 5 March 1991 21. 14. 2. 4. 6. 11. 3. 2.
Andreas Kofler 17 May 1984
Stefan Kraft 13 May 1993 3. 5. 2. 4. 1. 1. 3. 2.
Markus Schiffner 5 June 1992 22.
Gregor Schlierenzauer 7 January 1990 22. 2. 2. 24. 3.
Bulgaria[40] (1)
Vladimir Zografski 14 July 1993 30. 47. 42. q
Czech Republic[40][61] (6)
Lukáš Hlava 10 September 1984 32. 8.
Jakub Janda 27 April 1978 28. 33. 8. 23. 28. 7. 9.
Roman Koudelka 9 July 1989 4. 8. 8. 14. q 7. 9.
Jan Matura 29 January 1980 38. 16. 8. 11.
Viktor Polášek 18 July 1997 q 11. 31. 25. 7.
Tomáš Vančura 10 September 1996 35. 42. 7.
Estonia[75] (3)
Artti Aigro 29 August 1999 q q
Martti Nõmme 7 August 1993 q 48. q 44.
Kaarel Nurmsalu 30 April 1991 48. 45.
Finland[40][62] (5)
Antti Aalto 2 April 1995 38. 31. 6.
Janne Ahonen 11 May 1977 15. 19. 9. 10. 25. 23. 6. 11.
Lauri Asikainen 28 May 1989 39. 39. 9.
Ville Larinto 11 April 1990 47. 9. 26. 26. 6. 11.
Jarkko Määttä 28 December 1994 34. 22. 9. 10. 35. 27. 6.
France[63] (2)
Paul Brasme 7 November 1997 50. 10.
Vincent Descombes Sevoie 9 January 1984 29. 34. 5. 41. 33. 10.
Georgia[3] (1)
Artur Sarkisiani 29 August 1996 q q
Japan[76] (5)
Daiki Itō 27 December 1985 12. 28. 4. 10. 15. 7. 3.
Noriaki Kasai 6 June 1972 35. 11. 4. 3. 28. 32. 7. 3.
Ryōyū Kobayashi 8 November 1996 7.
Kento Sakuyama 3 July 1990 40. 50.
Taku Takeuchi 20 May 1987 5. 24. 4. 3. 20. 17. 7.
Canada[77] (2)
Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes 13 July 1991 39. 38. 12.
Joshua Maurer 20 September 1996 q q 12.
Kazakhstan[40] (4)
Nikolay Karpenko 10 August 1981 q q 12.
Alexey Korolev 20 June 1987 q q 12. 14.
Ilia Kratov 20 May 2000 q q 12. 14.
Roman Nogin 23 June 1998 q q 12.
Latvia[7] (1)
Kristaps Nežborts 24 September 1997 q q q
Germany[78] (5)
Markus Eisenbichler 3 April 1991 10. 5. 3. 13. 4. 1.
Richard Freitag 14 August 1991 7. 15. 5. 1. 9. 19. 4.
Karl Geiger 11 February 1993
Stephan Leyhe 5 January 1992 13. 16. 4.
Andreas Wellinger 28 August 1995 11. DNS 2. 2. 4. 1.
Norway[66] (6)
Anders Fannemel 13 May 1991 9. 7. 1. 2. 5. 2.
Johann André Forfang 4 July 1995 DSQ 18. 7. 12. 2.
Tom Hilde 22 September 1987
Robert Johansson 23 March 1990 16.
Andreas Stjernen 30 July 1988 17. 4. 2. 5.
Daniel-André Tande 24 January 1994 15. 10. 2. 5.
Poland[79] (6)
Stefan Hula 29 September 1986
Maciej Kot 9 June 1991 5. 6. 1.
Dawid Kubacki 12 March 1990 29. 8. 8. 1.
Kamil Stoch 25 May 1987 17. 12. 3. 4. 7. 1.
Jan Ziobro 24 June 1991 8. 3.
Piotr Żyła 16 January 1987 33. 9. 3. 19. 3. 1.
Russia[40][77] (6)
Evgenii Klimov 3 February 1994 35. 22. 20. 9. 6.
Denis Kornilov 17 August 1986 27. 7. 29. 29. 9. 6.
Alexey Romashov 29 April 1992 44. 49. 9.
Maksim Siergieyev 16 June 1999
Roman Trofimov 19 November 1989
Dmitriy Vassiliev 26 December 1979 40. 21. 7. 30. 24. 9.
Romania[40] (2)
Sorin Mitrofan 26 March 1999 q 13.
Sorin Iulian Pîtea 9 July 1997 q 13.
Slovenia[80] (6)
Jernej Damjan 28 May 1983 23. 25. 6. 32. 21. 5.
Anže Lanišek 20 April 1996 36. 5. 4.
Cene Prevc 12 March 1996 43.
Domen Prevc 4 June 1999 34.
Peter Prevc 20 September 1992 13. 4. 6. 5. 11. 9. 5. 4.
Jurij Tepeš 14 June 1989 41. 6. 34. 5.
United States[7] (4)
Kevin Bickner 23 September 1996 47. 30. 11. 8.
Michael Glasder 27 March 1989 46. 49. 40. 11. 8.
Casey Larson 16 December 1998 q 46. 11.
William Rhoads 8 June 1995 DSQ q 7. q 39. 11.
 Switzerland[81] (5)
Simon Ammann 25 June 1981 16. 23. 10. 21. 14. 10.
Gregor Deschwanden 27 February 1991 14. 17. 10. 33. 35. 10.
Gabriel Karlen 10 March 1994 10.
Killian Peier 28 March 1995 31. 30. 10. 18. 40. 10.
Andreas Schuler 30 December 1995 46. 47. 10.
Turkey[82] (1)
Fatih Arda İpcioğlu 28 September 1997 q q
Ukraine[75] (2)
Vitaliy Kalinichenko 9 August 1993 q q q q
Stepan Pasicznyk 9 January 1998 q q q
Italy[67] (3)
Davide Bresadola 10 September 1988 37. 36. 12. 9. 27. 48. 7.
Sebastian Colloredo 9 September 1987 44. 42. 12. 9. 37. 43. 7.
Alex Insam 19 December 1997 45. 37.

Legend:

q – Athlete did not qualify for the main competition;
DNS – Athlete did not start in the main competition;
– – Athlete was not entered for qualifications (individual competition) or for the team (team competition).

References

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