2015–16 Four Hills Tournament

Four Hills Tournament
at the 2015–16 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup
VenueSchattenbergschanze, Große Olympiaschanze, Bergiselschanze, Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze
LocationAustria, Germany
Dates29 December 2015 (2015-12-29) – 6 January 2016 (2016-01-06)
Medalists
 
 
 

The 2015–16 Four Hills Tournament took place at the four traditional venues of Oberstdorf, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Innsbruck, and Bischofshofen, located in Germany and Austria, between 29 December 2015 and 6 January 2016.

Peter Prevc won the competition ahead of Severin Freund and Michael Hayböck. By winning the tournament, Prevc became the second ski jumper from Slovenia to win it after Primož Peterka in 1996–97. This was the first tournament since 2007–08 which was not won by an Austrian ski jumper, ending the seven-year streak of the Austrian team.

Results

Oberstdorf

HS 137 Schattenbergschanze, Germany
29 December 2015[1]

Rank Name Nationality Jump 1 (m) Jump 2 (m) Points
1 Severin Freund Germany 126.0 137.5 307.2
2 Michael Hayböck Austria 130.0 139.0 304.2
3 Peter Prevc Slovenia 129.5 130.0 299.9
4 Anders Fannemel Norway 130.5 129.0 295.8
5 Noriaki Kasai Japan 127.0 133.5 290.6
6 Kenneth Gangnes Norway 129.0 135.5 288.6
7 Stefan Kraft Austria 130.0 127.5 287.7
8 Johann André Forfang Norway 121.5 127.0 278.8
9 Richard Freitag Germany 121.0 130.0 276.5
10 Daniel-André Tande Norway 133.0 119.0 273.9

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

HS 140 Große Olympiaschanze, Germany
1 January 2016[2]

Rank Name Nationality Jump 1 (m) Jump 2 (m) Points
1 Peter Prevc Slovenia 133.5 136.0 272.7
2 Kenneth Gangnes Norway 132.0 134.0 260.1
3 Severin Freund Germany 133.5 132.5 256.8
4 Johann André Forfang Norway 128.0 133.5 250.8
5 Michael Hayböck Austria 131.0 132.0 247.3
6 Richard Freitag Germany 130.0 127.5 243.6
7 Anders Fannemel Norway 132.5 126.0 241.5
8 Roman Koudelka Poland 129.0 128.0 241.0
9 Stefan Kraft Austria 128.5 127.5 238.6
10 Daiki Itō Japan 130.0 125.0 234.0

Innsbruck

HS 130 Bergiselschanze, Austria
3 January 2016[3]

Rank Name Nationality Jump 1 (m) Jump 2 (m) Points
1 Peter Prevc Slovenia 130.8 138.7 269.5
2 Severin Freund Germany 124.1 133.3 258.4
3 Kenneth Gangnes Norway 127.1 124.4 251.1
4 Johann André Forfang Norway 122.4 127.3 249.7
5 Michael Hayböck Austria 119.2 128.3 247.5
6 Andreas Wellinger Germany 122.5 120.0 239.5
7 Noriaki Kasai Japan 124.5 119.5 236.8
8 Daiki Itō Japan 120.0 121.0 235.8
9 Andreas Wank Germany 120.0 122.5 235.4
10 Richard Freitag Germany 117.5 123.0 233.3

Bischofshofen

HS 140 Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze, Austria
6 January 2016[4]

Rank Name Nationality Jump 1 (m) Jump 2 (m) Points
1 Peter Prevc Slovenia 139.0 142.5 297.3
2 Severin Freund Germany 136.0 141.0 290.5
3 Michael Hayböck Austria 136.0 139.0 282.6
4 Stefan Kraft Austria 136.0 138.0 278.0
5 Kenneth Gangnes Norway 131.5 137.0 273.3
6 Domen Prevc Slovenia 132.0 135.5 265.1
7 Johann André Forfang Norway 135.5 129.5 256.2
8 Simon Ammann Switzerland 136.0 132.0 255.7
9 Noriaki Kasai Japan 129.0 131.0 254.8
10 Daiki Itō Japan 130.5 130.0 251.2

Overall standings

The final standings after all four events:[5]

Rank Name Nationality Oberstdorf Garmisch-
Partenkirchen
Innsbruck Bischofshofen Total Points
Peter Prevc Slovenia 299.9 (3) 272.7 (1) 269.5 (1) 297.3 (1) 1,139.5
Severin Freund Germany 307.2 (1) 256.8 (3) 258.4 (2) 290.5 (2) 1,112.9
Michael Hayböck Austria 304.2 (2) 247.3 (5) 247.5 (5) 282.6 (3) 1,081.6
4 Kenneth Gangnes Norway 288.6 (6) 260.1 (2) 251.5 (3) 273.3 (5) 1,073.5
5 Stefan Kraft Austria 287.7 (7) 238.6 (9) 231.9 (11) 278.0 (4) 1,036.2
6 Johann André Forfang Norway 278.8 (8) 250.8 (4) 278.0 (4) 256.2 (7) 1,035.5
7 Noriaki Kasai Japan 290.6 (5) 231.0 (12) 236.8 (7) 254.8 (9) 1,013.2
8 Anders Fannemel Norway 295.8 (4) 241.5 (7) 231.8 (12) 241.0 (18) 1,010.1
9 Richard Freitag Germany 276.5 (9) 243.6 (6) 233.3 (10) 248.0 (11) 1,001.4
10 Andreas Wank Germany 264.5 (13) 231.8 (11) 235.4 (9) 242.7 (16) 974.4

References