2018–19 Four Hills Tournament

The 2018–19 Four Hills Tournament, part of the 2018–19 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup, took place at the four traditional venues of Oberstdorf, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Innsbruck and Bischofshofen, located in Germany and Austria, between 29 December 2018 and 6 January 2019.[1]

Four Hills Tournament
at the 2018–19 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup
VenueSchattenbergschanze, Große Olympiaschanze, Bergiselschanze, Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze
LocationGermany, Austria
Dates29 December 2018 (2018-12-29) – 6 January 2019 (2019-01-06)
Medalists
 
 
 

Japan's Ryoyu Kobayashi won the tournament ahead of German ski jumpers Markus Eisenbichler and Stephan Leyhe, becoming only the second Japanese ski jumper to win the title, following Kazuyoshi Funaki in 1997–98. Kobayashi also became the third ski jumper in history to win all four events, after Sven Hannawald in 2001–02 and Kamil Stoch in 2017–18.[2]

Schedule

StageVenueDateEventStart time
(CET)
1 Oberstdorf29 December 2018Qualification16:30
30 December 2018Competition16:30
2 Garmisch-Partenkirchen31 December 2018Qualification14:00
1 January 2019Competition14:00
3 Innsbruck3 January 2019Qualification14:00
4 January 2019Competition14:00
4 Bischofshofen5 January 2019Qualification17:00
6 January 2019Competition17:00

Results

Oberstdorf

HS 137 Schattenbergschanze, Germany
30 December 2018[3]

RankNameNationalityJump 1 (m)Jump 2 (m)Points
1Ryoyu Kobayashi Japan138.5126.5282.3
2Markus Eisenbichler Germany133.0129.0281.9
3Stefan Kraft Austria131.0134.5280.5
4Andreas Stjernen Norway132.5131.0278.2
5Dawid Kubacki Poland128.5133.5269.8
6Piotr Żyła Poland133.0126.5268.3
7Robert Johansson Norway129.0125.0268.0
8Kamil Stoch Poland127.0131.0267.6
9Timi Zajc Slovenia127.0125.5266.0
10Daniel Huber Austria129.0124.0265.2

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

HS 142 Große Olympiaschanze, Germany
1 January 2019[4]

RankNameNationalityJump 1 (m)Jump 2 (m)Points
1Ryoyu Kobayashi Japan136.5133.0266.6
2Markus Eisenbichler Germany138.0135.0264.7
3Dawid Kubacki Poland133.5133.0256.2
4Roman Koudelka Czech Republic133.0134.5253.8
5Junshirō Kobayashi Japan131.0131.5249.4
6Kamil Stoch Poland129.0134.0249.2
7Stephan Leyhe Germany128.0135.0249.0
8Timi Zajc Slovenia132.0132.5248.7
9Halvor Egner Granerud Norway127.0132.0245.4
10Andreas Stjernen Norway129.5134.0245.3

Innsbruck

HS 130 Bergiselschanze, Austria
4 January 2019[5]

RankNameNationalityJump 1 (m)Jump 2 (m)Points
1Ryoyu Kobayashi Japan136.5131.0267.0
2Stefan Kraft Austria129.5130.5254.2
3Andreas Stjernen Norway131.0126.0242.7
4Stephan Leyhe Germany129.0127.5239.1
5Kamil Stoch Poland126.5131.0234.1
6Yukiya Satō Japan129.0123.5231.4
7Killian Peier  Switzerland127.0123.0230.6
8Richard Freitag Germany128.0124.0230.0
9Roman Koudelka Czech Republic123.0125.0228.4
10Timi Zajc Slovenia130.0119.5226.6

Bischofshofen

HS 142 Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze, Austria
6 January 2019[6]

RankNameNationalityJump 1 (m)Jump 2 (m)Points
1Ryoyu Kobayashi Japan135.0137.5282.1
2Dawid Kubacki Poland138.0130.0268.3
3Stefan Kraft Austria134.0131.5267.5
4Stephan Leyhe Germany126.0137.0266.0
5Markus Eisenbichler Germany137.0131.5265.5
6Roman Koudelka Czech Republic133.0130.5259.7
7Halvor Egner Granerud Norway128.5135.0258.0
8Killian Peier  Switzerland131.5127.0254.6
9Robert Johansson Norway132.0126.5253.3
10Karl Geiger Germany122.0133.5249.5

Overall standings

The final standings after all four events:[7]

RankNameNationalityOberstdorfGarmisch-
Partenkirchen
InnsbruckBischofshofenTotal Points
Ryoyu Kobayashi Japan282.3 (1)266.6 (1)267.0 (1)282.1 (1)1,098.0
Markus Eisenbichler Germany281.9 (2)264.7 (2)223.8 (13)265.5 (5)1,035.9
Stephan Leyhe Germany260.0 (13)249.0 (7)239.1 (4)266.0 (4)1,014.1
4Dawid Kubacki Poland269.8 (5)256.2 (3)216.5 (18)268.3 (2)1,010.8
5Roman Koudelka Czech Republic264.4 (11)253.8 (4)228.4 (9)259.7 (6)1,006.3
6Kamil Stoch Poland267.6 (8)249.2 (6)234.1 (5)243.1 (12)994.0
7Andreas Stjernen Norway278.2 (4)245.3 (10)242.7 (3)221.8 (25)988.0
8Robert Johansson Norway268.0 (7)235.8 (19)226.1 (11)253.3 (9)983.2
9Daniel Huber Austria265.2 (10)238.8 (15)222.8 (14)243.6 (11)970.4
10Killian Peier  Switzerland241.2 (19)232.9 (23)230.6 (7)254.6 (8)959.3

References

  1. "Green light for the 4-Hills-Tournament". FIS Ski. Retrieved 19 December 2018.
  2. "Ryoyu Kobayashi creates history with Four Hills grand slam". Eurosport. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  3. "FIS Ski Jumping World Cup / Oberstdorf / Results". FIS Ski. Retrieved 30 December 2018.
  4. "FIS Ski Jumping World Cup / Garmisch-Partenkirchen / Results". FIS Ski. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
  5. "FIS Ski Jumping World Cup / Innsbruck / Results". FIS Ski. Retrieved 5 January 2019.
  6. "FIS Ski Jumping World Cup / Bischofshofen / Results". FIS Ski. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  7. "FIS Ski Jumping World Cup / Four Hills Tournament / Standings". FIS Ski. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
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