FIS Ski Flying World Championships 2022
The 2022 FIS Ski Flying World Championships were the 27th Ski Flying World Championships, held from 10 to 13 March 2022 in Vikersund, Norway.[1][2] It is the fifth competition of its rank to be held at this location (previously in 1977, 1990, 2000 and 2012).
| Host city | Vikersund, Norway |
|---|---|
| Nations | 16 |
| Athletes | 55 |
| Sport | Ski flying |
| Events | 2 |
| Opening | 10 March |
| Closing | 13 March |
| Main venue | Vikersundbakken HS240 |
The defending champion in the individual competition was German Karl Geiger and in the team competition the Norwegian national team.
On 1 March 2022, following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, FIS decided to exclude athletes from Russia and Belarus from FIS competitions, with an immediate effect.[3]
Only seven national teams competed in the team competition – this is the smallest number in the history of the championship.
Schedule
| Date | Competition | Longest jump of the day | Metres | Feet |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9 March 2022 | Hill test 1 | Anders Håre | 228.5 | 749 |
| Hill test 2 | Iver Olaussen | 234.5 | 769 | |
| 10 March 2022 | Official training 1 | Domen Prevc | 242 | 794 |
| Official training 2 | Domen Prevc | 238.5 | 782 | |
| Qualification | Michael Hayböck | 233 | 764 | |
| 11 March 2022 | 1st round Individual | Timi Zajc | 242.5 | 796 |
| 2nd round Individual | Stefan Kraft | 230 | 755 | |
| 12 March 2022 | 3rd round Individual | Timi Zajc | 243.5 | 799 |
| 4th round Individual | Timi Zajc | 235.5 | 773 | |
| 13 March 2022 | 1st round Team event | Anže Lanišek | 234 | 768 |
| 2nd round Team event | Karl Geiger | 238 | 781 |
Test results
Hill tests
On 9 March 2022, first and second test was held.[4]
| Bib | Name | Round 1 | Round 2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| F1 | Anders Ladehaug | 195.5 m | 156 m |
| F2 | Simen Kvarstad | 172.5 m | 187 m PB |
| F3 | Iver Myhre | 127.5 m | 115 m |
| F4 | Ole Gudbrand Kihle Gravermoen | 100 m | 115 m |
| F5 | Richard Selbekk Hansen | 128 m | 140 m |
| F6 | Jonas Viken | 193.5 m | 205.5 m PB |
| F7 | Ole Kristian Baarset | 177 m PB | 167.5 m |
| F8 | Øystein Thorshov | 165.5 m | 173 m PB |
| F9 | Anders Varsi Breivik | 187 m | 190.5 m |
| F10 | Jens Gaarder | 143.5 m | 129 m |
| F11 | Jo Rømme Mellingsæter | 199 m PB | 172.5 m |
| F12 | Pål Håkon Bjørtomt | 184 m PB | 130 m |
| F13 | Anders Håre | 228.5 m | 230.5 m PB |
| F14 | Sølve Jokerud Strand | 196 m | 171 m |
| F15 | Andreas Buskum | 181 m | 177.5 m |
| F16 | Iver Olaussen | 75 m | 234.5 m PB |
| F17 | Sander Vossan Eriksen | 217.5 m | 142.5 m |
| F18 | Marius Aas Hast | 99 m | 167.5 m PB |
| F19 | Matias Braathen | DNS | |
| F20 | Anders Fannemel | 194 m | 212 m |
| F21 | Oscar Westerheim | 186 m | 199 m |
| F22 | Kristoffer Sundal | 173 m | 198 m PB |
| F23 | Robin Pedersen | 220 m | 218 m |
| F24 | Bendik Jakobsen Heggli | 213 m PB | 129.5 m |
| F25 | Sondre Ringen | 193.5 m | 200 m |
| F26 | Benjamin Østvold | 160 m | 189.5 m |
Official training results
The training held on 10 March 2022 at 13:15.[5]
| Bib | Name | Round 1 | Round 2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kalle Heikkinen | 161.5 PB | 152.5 |
| 2 | Muhammed Ali Bedir | 155.5 | 167 PB |
| 3 | Sabirzhan Muminov | 180.5 | 168.5 |
| 4 | Alex Insam | 202 | 182.5 |
| 5 | Matthew Soukup | 160 | 155.5 |
| 6 | Kevin Maltsev | 158.5 | 154 |
| 7 | Čestmír Kožíšek | 160.5 | 146 |
| 8 | Casey Larson | 175 | 164 |
| 9 | Muhammet İrfan Çintımar | 131.5 | 129 |
| 10 | Danil Vassilyev | 141 | 155 PB |
| 11 | Fatih Arda İpcioğlu | 183.5 PB NR | 161 |
| 12 | Andrzej Stękała | 195 | 209 |
| 13 | Giovanni Bresadola | 203.5 | 206.5 |
| 14 | Domen Prevc | 242 | 238.5 |
| 15 | Artti Aigro | 208 | 215 |
| 16 | Eetu Nousiainen | 198 | 205 |
| 17 | Antti Aalto | 208 | 188 |
| 18 | Jakub Wolny | 210.5 | 205 |
| 19 | Niko Kytösaho | 212 | 219 PB |
| 20 | Vladimir Zografski | 173 | 174.5 |
| 21 | Keiichi Satō | 177.5 | 171.5 |
| 22 | Michael Hayböck | 229.5 | 221 |
| 23 | Simon Ammann | 215.5 | 210.5 |
| 24 | Paweł Wąsek | 206 | 210.5 PB |
| 25 | Fredrik Villumstad | 183 | 193.5 |
| 26 | Ulrich Wohlgenannt | 228.5 | 219 |
| 27 | Dawid Kubacki | 200 | 205 |
| 28 | Severin Freund | 222.5 | 211 |
| 29 | Junshirō Kobayashi | 187 | 198 |
| 30 | Naoki Nakamura | 192.5 | 185 |
| 31 | Andreas Wellinger | 225 | 219.5 |
| 32 | Johann André Forfang | 233 | 231 |
| 33 | Gregor Deschwanden | 203.5 | 212 |
| 34 | Peter Prevc | 239 | 235.5 |
| 35 | Constantin Schmid | 210.5 | 219 |
| 36 | Piotr Żyła | 213.5 | 222 |
| 37 | Kamil Stoch | 209.5 | 216 |
| 38 | Stephan Leyhe | 192 | 214.5 |
| 39 | Daniel-André Tande | 222 | 222.5 |
| 40 | Manuel Fettner | 206.5 | 216.5 |
| 41 | Lovro Kos | 219 | 235 |
| 42 | Yukiya Satō | 205 | 230 |
| 43 | Killian Peier | 156.5 | 191 |
| 44 | Timi Zajc | 225 | 238 |
| 45 | Daniel Huber | 214 | 214.5 |
| 46 | Robert Johansson | 207 | 234 |
| 47 | Cene Prevc | 213 | 213 |
| 48 | Jan Hörl | 187.5 | 197 |
| 49 | Anže Lanišek | 222.5 | 227 |
| 50 | Stefan Kraft | 215.5 | 238 |
| 51 | Markus Eisenbichler | 211 | 205 |
| 52 | Marius Lindvik | 217.5 | 224 |
| 53 | Halvor Egner Granerud | 172 | 198 |
| 54 | Karl Geiger | 217 | 233.5 |
| 55 | Ryōyū Kobayashi | 217.5 | 224 |
Medal summary
Medal table
* Host nation (Norway)
| Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Slovenia | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| 2 | Norway* | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| 3 | Germany | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| 4 | Austria | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Totals (4 entries) | 2 | 2 | 2 | 6 | |
Medalists
| Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Individual[6] |
Marius Lindvik Norway | 854.2 | Timi Zajc Slovenia | 844.3 | Stefan Kraft Austria | 837.5 |
| Team[7] |
Slovenia Domen Prevc Peter Prevc Timi Zajc Anže Lanišek | 1711.5 | Germany Severin Freund Andreas Wellinger Markus Eisenbichler Karl Geiger | 1583.5 | Norway Johann André Forfang Daniel-André Tande Halvor Egner Granerud Marius Lindvik | 1559.6 |
References
- "Folkefest i bygda – VM i skiflyging i mars 2022". Archived from the original on 2021-12-05. Retrieved 2022-01-09.
- "FIS Ski Jumping - Vikersund (NOR) - Event Details".
- "Russian and Belarusian Athletes not to take part in FIS Competitions". FIS. Retrieved 1 March 2022.
- "MŚwL w Vikersund: Upadek i najdłuższy lot. Olaussen bohaterem testu skoczni" (in Polish). skijumping.pl. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
- "Men's WSC HS240 Training: Vikersund (NOR)" (PDF). FIS. Retrieved 10 March 2022.
- Men's WSC HS240 Individual: Vikersund (NOR)
- Men's WSC HS240 Team: Vikersund (NOR)