2024–25 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup

2024–25 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup
Discipline Men Women
Overall Daniel Tschofenig (1st title) Nika Prevc (2nd title)
Nations Cup  Austria (22nd)  Germany (3rd)
Ski Flying Domen Prevc (1st)
Stage events
Four Hills Tournament Daniel Tschofenig (1st)
Two Nights Tournament Nika Prevc (2nd)
Raw Air Andreas Wellinger (1st) Nika Prevc (1st)
Planica7 Domen Prevc (1st)
Competition
Edition 46th 14th
Locations 18 15
Individual 29 24
Team 2 + 2 super team 1 super team
Mixed 3 3
Cancelled 2

The 2024–25 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup was the 46th World Cup season for men, the 28th season in ski flying, and the 14th season for women as the highest level of international ski jumping competitions, organized by the International Ski Federation (FIS).[1][2][3]

The men's (29 events) and women's (24 events) season both started on 22 November 2024 in Lillehammer, Norway. The men's season concluded on 30 March 2025 in Planica, Slovenia, while the women's season ended on 21 March 2025 in Lahti, Finland.[4][5][6]

For the peak of the season, they took a break in February and March for the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships in Trondheim, Norway, which ended with one of the biggest scandals in the ski jumping sport history, with inappropriate Norwegian suits and disqualifications.

Austrian champion Stefan Kraft and Nika Prevc from Slovenia (with record 15 ins) were the reigning champions from the previous season. Kraft did not defend his title, finishing the season as 3rd.

Daniel Tschofenig from Austria claimed the Crystal Globe and the 4H Tournament for the first time, while Prevc successfully defended her title, securing her second World Cup title in a row.

Season overview

The provisional calendar of events was introduced in October 2023.[7] In April 2024, the subcommittee for calendar planning in Prague published the proposed schedule for the 2024–25 World Cup season.[8] The competition programs were officially approved during a meeting in Portorož on 8 May.[9]

On 7 June 2024, it was announced that the World Cup competitions scheduled for 11–12 January 2025 at the modernized olympic hill Trampolino Dal Ben (HS143) in Predazzo would not take place. Organizers decided to cancel the pre-Olympic trials six months in advance due to all delays in facility reconstruction. The test event is now expected to be rescheduled during the Summer Grand Prix.[10] Meanwhile, the final rehearsal for the 2026 Ski Flying World Championship in Oberstdorf was set for late January.

The 2024–25 season has already seen several historic moments. After his victory in Lillehammer, Pius Paschke became the oldest leader in World Cup history at 34 years and 187 days.[11] Tschofenig made history as the first ski jumper born in the 21st century to win a World Cup competition.[12]

During the qualification for the first competition of the Four Hills Tournament in Oberstdorf, Austrian ski jumpers took the top five spots. This was the first time in the history of the World Cup that such a situation occurred. Having four athletes in the top five of the qualifications had happened a few times before, but never had even the top four spots been taken by a one team.

For the first time in history, siblings Domen Prevc and Nika Prevc both secured World Cup victories on the same weekend — Domen triumphing in Ski Flying in Oberstdorf, while Nika claimed victory in Zaō. Nika further cemented her place in the record books by becoming the first female ski jumper to win World Cup events on three different continents (Europe, Asia, and North America) after her triumph in Lake Placid.

Meanwhile, ski jumping legend Noriaki Kasai extended his own records. On 16 February 2025, during the individual competition in Sapporo, the 52-year-old became the oldest competitor in a World Cup event at 52 years, 8 months, and 10 days. It also marked his 579th World Cup appearance, further solidifying his place in the sport’s history.

A scandal involving equipment tampering by the Norwegian ski jumping team erupted during the World Ski Championships in Trondheim. Ahead of the Raw Air tournament, FIS provisionally suspended three Norwegian team officials and two athletes as part of an ongoing investigation into alleged rule violations during the Men’s Large Hill competition at the Trondheim 2025 Championships. Following an initial review, head coach Magnus Brevik, assistant coach Thomas Lobben, service staff member Adrian Livelten, and athletes Marius Lindvik and Johann André Forfang have been formally placed under investigation. Effective immediately, they are banned from participating in all FIS events and competitions organized by any National Ski Association until the inquiry and adjudication process is complete.[13]

On 14 March 2025, the day before her 20th birthday, Nika Prevc set a new women's ski flying world record, twice reaching a distance of 236 meters (774 ft) during official training 1 and 3 at the Vikersundbakken hill in Vikersund, Norway. Prevc broke the previous record held by Norwegian ski jumper Silje Opseth, who had set the mark at 230.5 meters on the same hill in March 2024.[14]

At the final competition of the season on 21 March, Nika Prevc achieved her 10th consecutive World Cup victory and her 15th win of the season. With this accomplishment, the Slovenian equaled Sara Takanashi's record results from the 2013–2014 and 2015–2016 seasons, respectively. Prevc's winning margin over the second-place finisher Selina Freitag was 51.4 points — the largest in the history of the Ski Jumping World Cup, regardless of gender. The previous overall record was a 47.5-point lead by Andreas Felder over Ole Gunnar Fidjestøl in Planica on 14 March 1987, while the women’s record stood at 41.7 points, set by Marita Kramer over Chiara Kreuzer in Nizhny Tagil on 26 November 2021. Additionally, Prevc equaled Maren Lundby's record of 19 women's World Cup podium finishes in a single season, a milestone Lundby achieved in the 2018–2019 season.[15][16]

On 30 March 2025, during the final competition of the season in Planica, Domen Prevc set a new ski flying distance record of 254.5 meters (835 ft), surpassing by 1 meter the previous record set by Stefan Kraft at Vikersundbakken on 18 March 2017. This marks the first time in over eight years that the record has been broken, after 14 years again world record (29th set there) returned to Planica.[17]

World records

List of world record distances achieved within this World Cup season.

Date Athlete Hill Round Place Metres Feet
Women
14 March 2025 Nika Prevc Vikersundbakken HS240 Training – R1 Vikersund, Norway 236 774
14 March 2025 Nika Prevc Vikersundbakken HS240 Training – R3 Vikersund, Norway 236 774
Men
30 March 2025 Domen Prevc Letalnica bratov Gorišek HS240 Final Planica, Slovenia 254.5 835

Map of World Cup hosts

The following list contains all 23 World Cup hosts of the season.

Lillehammer Ruka Wisła Titisee-Neustadt Engelberg Oberstdorf
Lysgårdsbakken Rukatunturi Malinka Hochfirstschanze Gross-Titlis-Schanze Schattenbergschanze
Garmisch-Pa Innsbruck Bischofshofen Zakopane Oberstdorf Willingen
Große Olympiaschanze Bergiselschanze Paul-Ausserleitner Wielka Krokiew Heini-Klopfer Mühlenkopfschanze
Lake Placid Sapporo Oslo Vikersund Lahti Planica
MacKenzie Intervale Ōkurayama Holmenkollbakken Vikersundbakken Salpausselkä Letalnica bratov Gorišek
Zhangjiakou Villach Zaō Ljubno ob Savinji Hinzenbach
Snow Ruyi Villacher Alpenarena Yamagata Savina Center Aigner-Schanze

Europe

Germany

Austria

United States

Asia

Men's Individual

Individual events in the World Cup history
Total F L N Winners[18]
1148 152 834 162 172

after final Flying hill event in Planica (30 March 2025)

All season titles

Daniel Tschofenig Domen Prevc Andreas Wellinger
Overall + 4H Tournament Ski Flying + Planica7 Raw Air

Calendar

Event key: L – large hill / F – flying hill[19]
All No. Date Place (Hill) Size Winner Second Third Overall leader R.
1120 1 23 November 2024 Lillehammer
(Lysgårdsbakken HS140)
L 812 Pius Paschke Daniel Tschofenig Maximilian Ortner Pius Paschke [20]
1121 2 24 November 2024 L 813 Jan Hörl Pius Paschke Daniel Tschofenig [21]
1122 3 30 November 2024 Ruka
(Rukatunturi HS142)
L 814 Pius Paschke Jan Hörl Stefan Kraft [22]
1123 4 [a]1 December 2024 L 815 Andreas Wellinger Stefan Kraft Karl Geiger [23]
1124 5 7 December 2024 Wisła
(Malinka HS134)
L 816 Daniel Tschofenig    Gregor Deschwanden Pius Paschke [24]
1125 6 8 December 2024 L 817 Pius Paschke Jan Hörl Stefan Kraft [25]
1126 7 14 December 2024 Titisee-Neustadt
(Hochfirstschanze HS142)
L 818 Pius Paschke    Gregor Deschwanden Daniel Tschofenig [26]
1127 8 15 December 2024 L 819 Pius Paschke Michael Hayböck Kristoffer Eriksen Sundal [27]
1128 9 21 December 2024    Engelberg
(Gross-Titlis HS140)
L 820 Jan Hörl Daniel Tschofenig    Gregor Deschwanden [28]
1129 10 22 December 2024 L 821 Daniel Tschofenig Jan Hörl Stefan Kraft [29]
1130 11 29 December 2024 Oberstdorf
(Schattenberg HS137)
L 822 Stefan Kraft Jan Hörl Daniel Tschofenig [30]
1131 12 1 January 2025 Garmisch-Pa
(Olympiaschanze HS142)
L 823 Daniel Tschofenig    Gregor Deschwanden Michael Hayböck Daniel Tschofenig [31]
1132 13 4 January 2025 Innsbruck
(Bergiselschanze HS128)
L 824 Stefan Kraft Jan Hörl Daniel Tschofenig [32]
1133 14 6 January 2025 Bischofshofen
(Paul-Ausserleitner HS142)
L 825 Daniel Tschofenig Jan Hörl Stefan Kraft [33]
73rd Four Hills Tournament Overall
(29 December 2024 – 6 January 2025)
Daniel Tschofenig Jan Hörl Stefan Kraft Four Hills Tournament [34]
1134 15 19 January 2025 Zakopane
(Wielka Krokiew HS140)
L 826 Daniel Tschofenig Johann André Forfang Jan Hörl Daniel Tschofenig [35]
1135 16 25 January 2025 Oberstdorf
(Heini-Klopfer HS235)
F 147 Timi Zajc Johann André Forfang Domen Prevc [36]
1136 17 26 January 2025 F 148 Domen Prevc Johann André Forfang Michael Hayböck [37]
1137 18 1 February 2025 Willingen
(Mühlenkopf HS147)
L 827 Daniel Tschofenig Anže Lanišek Maximilian Ortner [38]
1138 19 2 February 2025 L 828 Daniel Tschofenig Johann André Forfang Jan Hörl [39]
1139 20 8 February 2025 Lake Placid
(MacKenzie Int. HS128)
L 829 Johann André Forfang Jan Hörl Daniel Tschofenig [40]
1140 21 9 February 2025 L 830 Daniel Tschofenig Jan Hörl Anže Lanišek [41]
1141 22 15 February 2025 Sapporo
(Ōkurayama HS137)
L 831 Ryōyū Kobayashi Jan Hörl Domen Prevc [42]
1142 23 16 February 2025 L 832 Ryōyū Kobayashi Marius Lindvik Johann André Forfang [43]
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2025
(1 – 8 March • Trondheim,  Norway)
prologue 13 March 2025 Oslo
(Holmenkollen HS134)
L Qro Karl Geiger Andreas Wellinger Ryōyū Kobayashi [44]
1143 24 L 833 Ryōyū Kobayashi Jan Hörl Karl Geiger Daniel Tschofenig [45]
prologue 14 March 2025 Vikersund
(Vikersundbakken HS240)
F Qro Domen Prevc Stefan Kraft Timi Zajc [46]
1144 25 15 March 2025 F 149 Andreas Wellinger Timi Zajc Anže Lanišek Daniel Tschofenig [47]
prologue [b]16 March 2025 F Qro cancelled due to strong wind
1145 26 F 150 Domen Prevc Andreas Wellinger Ryōyū Kobayashi Daniel Tschofenig [48]
8th Raw Air Overall
(13 – 16 March 2025)
Andreas Wellinger Domen Prevc Ryōyū Kobayashi Raw Air [49]
1146 27 22 March 2025 Lahti
(Salpausselkä HS130)
L 834 Anže Lanišek Stefan Kraft Paweł Wąsek Daniel Tschofenig [50]
qualifying 27 March 2025 Planica
(Letalnica b. Gorišek HS240)
F Qro Andreas Wellinger Pius Paschke Markus Eisenbichler [51]
1147 28 28 March 2025 F 151 Domen Prevc Anže Lanišek Ryōyū Kobayashi Daniel Tschofenig [52]
team 29 March 2025 F T Domen Prevc Andreas Wellinger Anže Lanišek [53]
1148 29 30 March 2025 F 152 Anže Lanišek Domen Prevc Andreas Wellinger Daniel Tschofenig [54]
7th Planica7 Overall
(27 – 30 March 2025)
Domen Prevc Anže Lanišek Andreas Wellinger Planica7 [55]
46th FIS World Cup Overall
(23 November 2024 – 30 March 2025)
Daniel Tschofenig Jan Hörl Stefan Kraft World Cup Overall [56]

Standings

Women's Individual

Individual events in the World Cup history
Total F L N Winners[64]
257 2 81 174 28

after final Large hill event in Lahti (21 March 2025)

All season titles

Nika Križnar
Overall + Raw Air + 2 Nights

Calendar

Event key: N – normal hill / L – large hill / F – flying hill[65]
All No. Date Place (Hill) Size Winner Second Third Overall R.
234 1 23 November 2024 Lillehammer
(Lysgårdsbakken HS140)
L 069 Nika Prevc Katharina Schmid Selina Freitag Nika Prevc [66]
235 2 24 November 2024 L 070 Katharina Schmid Selina Freitag Lisa Eder Katharina Schmid [67]
236 3 14 December 2024 Zhangjiakou
(Snow Ruyi HS106)
N 165 Katharina Schmid Eirin Maria Kvandal Nika Prevc [68]
237 4 15 December 2024 N 166 Katharina Schmid Ema Klinec Lisa Eder [69]
238 5 21 December 2024    Engelberg
(Gross-Titlis HS140)
L 071 Nika Prevc Katharina Schmid Thea Minyan Bjørseth [70]
22 December 2024 L cnx cancelled due to bad weather after 47 of 55 jumpers completed their jumps
239 6 31 December 2024 Garmisch-Pa
(Olympiaschanze HS142)
L 072 Nika Prevc Eirin Maria Kvandal Eva Pinkelnig Katharina Schmid [71]
240 7 1 January 2025 Oberstdorf
(Schattenberg HS137)
L 073 Nika Prevc Anna Odine Strøm Eirin Maria Kvandal [72]
2nd Two Nights Tournament Overall
(31 December 2024 – 1 January 2025)
Nika Prevc Eirin Maria Kvandal Katharina Schmid Two Nights Tournament [73]
241 8 5 January 2025 Villach
(Alpenarena HS98)
N 167 Katharina Schmid Nika Prevc Jacqueline Seifriedsberger Katharina Schmid [74]
242 9 6 January 2025 N 168 Eva Pinkelnig Katharina Schmid Nika Prevc [75]
243 10 18 January 2025 Sapporo
(Ōkurayama HS137)
L 074 Alexandria Loutitt Lisa Eder Eirin Maria Kvandal [76]
244 11 19 January 2025 L 075 Eirin Maria Kvandal Selina Freitag Thea Minyan Bjørseth [77]
245 12 24 January 2025 Zaō
(Yamagata HS102)
N 169 Nika Prevc Thea Minyan Bjørseth Eva Pinkelnig Nika Prevc [78]
246 13 26 January 2025 N 170 Jacqueline Seifriedsberger Eirin Maria Kvandal Nika Prevc [79]
247 14 1 February 2025 Willingen
(Mühlenkopf HS147)
L 076 Eirin Maria Kvandal Anna Odine Strøm Jacqueline Seifriedsberger [80]
248 15 [c]7 February 2025 Lake Placid
(MacKenzie Int. HS128)
L 077 Nika Prevc Eirin Maria Kvandal Alexandria Loutitt [81]
249 16 8 February 2025 L 078 Nika Prevc Agnes Reisch Selina Freitag [82]
250 17 15 February 2025 Ljubno
(Savina HS94)
N 171 Nika Prevc Selina Freitag Thea Minyan Bjørseth [83]
251 18 16 February 2025 N 172 Nika Prevc Selina Freitag Lisa Eder [84]
252 19 22 February 2025 Hinzenbach
(Aigner-Schanze HS90)
N 173 Nika Prevc Selina Freitag Jacqueline Seifriedsberger [85]
253 20 23 February 2025 N 174 Nika Prevc Selina Freitag Abigail Strate [86]
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2025
(27 February – 7 March • Trondheim,  Norway)
prologue 13 March 2025 Oslo
(Holmenkollen HS134)
L Qro cancelled due to strong wind
254 21 L 079 Nika Prevc Anna Odine Strøm Eirin Maria Kvandal Nika Prevc [87]
255 22 [d]15 March 2025 Vikersund
(Vikersundbakken HS240)
F 002 Nika Prevc Ema Klinec Selina Freitag [88]
16 March 2025 F cnx cancelled due to strong wind
5th Raw Air Overall
(13 – 16 March 2025)
Nika Prevc Eirin Maria Kvandal Anna Odine Strøm Raw Air [89]
256 23 20 March 2025 Lahti
(Salpausselkä HS130)
L 080 Nika Prevc Selina Freitag Alexandria Loutitt Nika Prevc [90]
257 24 21 March 2025 L 081 Nika Prevc Selina Freitag Ema Klinec [91]
14th FIS World Cup Overall
(23 November 2024 – 21 March 2025)
Nika Prevc Selina Freitag Katharina Schmid World Cup Overall [92]

Standings

Team events

Team events in the World Cup history
Total F L N Winners Competition
10 7 3 5 Mixed team
7 1 5 1 4 Men's super team
124 28 94 2 7 Men's team
3 3 3 Women's super team

after final Team F event in Planica (29 March 2025)

Calendar

Event key: F – flying hill, L – large hill, N – normal hill
All No. Date Place (Hill) Size Winner Second Third R.
Mixed team
8 1 22 November 2024 Lillehammer
(Lysgårdsbakken HS140)
L 005  Germany
1. Selina Freitag
2. Andreas Wellinger
3. Katharina Schmid
4. Pius Paschke
 Norway
1. Anna Odine Strøm
2. Kristoffer Eriksen Sundal
3. Eirin Maria Kvandal
4. Marius Lindvik
 Austria
1. Lisa Eder
2. Daniel Tschofenig
3. Eva Pinkelnig
4. Jan Hörl
[98]
9 2 31 January 2025 Willingen
(Mühlenkopf HS147)
L 006  Norway
1. Thea Minyan Bjørseth
2. Kristoffer Eriksen Sundal
3. Eirin Maria Kvandal
4. Johann André Forfang
 Austria
1. Lisa Eder
2. Jan Hörl
3. Jacqueline Seifriedsberger
4. Daniel Tschofenig
 Germany
1. Katharina Schmid
2. Philipp Raimund
3. Selina Freitag
4. Andreas Wellinger
[99]
10 3 8 February 2025 Lake Placid
(MacKenzie Int. HS128)
L 007  Germany
1. Agnes Reisch
2. Philipp Raimund
3. Selina Freitag
4. Andreas Wellinger
 Norway
1. Thea Minyan Bjørseth
2. Kristoffer Eriksen Sundal
3. Eirin Maria Kvandal
4. Johann André Forfang
 Austria
1. Lisa Eder
2. Jan Hörl
3. Jacqueline Seifriedsberger
4. Daniel Tschofenig
[100]
Men's super team
6 1 13 December 2024 Titisee-Neustadt
(Hochfirstschanze HS142)
L 004  Germany
1. Andreas Wellinger
2. Pius Paschke
 Austria
1. Daniel Tschofenig
2. Jan Hörl
 Norway
1. Halvor Egner Granerud
2. Kristoffer Eriksen Sundal
[101]
7 2 23 March 2025 Lahti
(Salpausselkä HS130)
L 005  Slovenia
1. Lovro Kos
2. Anže Lanišek
 Austria
1. Manuel Fettner
2. Stefan Kraft
 Japan
1. Ren Nikaidō
2. Ryōyū Kobayashi
[102]
Men's team
123 1 18 January 2025 Zakopane
(Wielka Krokiew HS140)
L 094  Austria
1. Jan Hörl
2. Maximilian Ortner
3. Stefan Kraft
4. Daniel Tschofenig
 Slovenia
1. Lovro Kos
2. Timi Zajc
3. Domen Prevc
4. Anže Lanišek
 Norway
1. Kristoffer Eriksen Sundal
2. Benjamin Østvold
3. Halvor Egner Granerud
4. Johann André Forfang
[103]
124 2 29 March 2025 Planica
(Letalnica b. Gorišek HS240)
F 028  Austria
1. Daniel Tschofenig
2. Manuel Fettner
3. Jan Hörl
4. Stefan Kraft
 Germany
1. Karl Geiger
2. Andreas Wellinger
3. Pius Paschke
4. Markus Eisenbichler
 Slovenia
1. Lovro Kos
2. Domen Prevc
3. Timi Zajc
4. Anže Lanišek
[53]
Women's super team
3 1 25 January 2025 Zaō
(Yamagata HS102)
N 003  Germany
1. Selina Freitag
2. Agnes Reisch
 Norway
1. Thea Minyan Bjørseth
2. Eirin Maria Kvandal
 Austria
1. Jacqueline Seifriedsberger
2. Eva Pinkelnig
[104]

Podium table by nation

Table showing the World Cup podium places (gold–1st place, silver–2nd place, bronze–3rd place) by the countries represented by the athletes.

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Slovenia228939
2 Austria16192661
3 Germany1515838
4 Norway4161030
5 Japan3036
6 Canada1034
7 Switzerland0314
8 Poland0011
Totals (8 entries)616161183

Points distribution

The table shows the number of points won in the 2024–25 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup for men and women.

Place 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
Individual 100 80 60 50 45 40 36 32 29 26 24 22 20 18 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
M + W + Mixed Team 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 points not awarded
Super Team 200 160 120 100 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 points not awarded

Qualifications

In case the number of participating athletes is 50 (men) / 40 (women) or lower, a Prologue competition round must be organized.

Men

No. Place Qualifications Competition Size Winner R.
1 Lillehammer 23 November 2024 L Jan Hörl [105]
2 24 November 2024 Jan Hörl [106]
3 Ruka 30 November 2024 Timi Zajc [107]
4 1 December 2024 Pius Paschke [108]
5 Wisła 6 December 2024 7 December 2024 Daniel Tschofenig [109]
6 8 December 2024 Pius Paschke [110]
7 Titisee-Neustadt 14 December 2024    Gregor Deschwanden [111]
8 15 December 2024 Michael Hayböck [112]
9    Engelberg 20 December 2024 21 December 2024 Daniel Tschofenig [113]
10 22 December 2024 Maximilian Ortner [114]
11 Oberstdorf 28 December 2024 29 December 2024 Daniel Tschofenig [115]
12 Garmisch-Partenkirchen 31 December 2024 1 January 2025 Jan Hörl [116]
13 Innsbruck 3 January 2025 4 January 2025 Jan Hörl [117]
14 Bischofshofen 5 January 2025 6 January 2025 Stefan Kraft [118]
15 Zakopane 17 January 2025 19 January 2025 Daniel Tschofenig [119]
16 Oberstdorf 24 January 2025 25 January 2025 F Johann André Forfang [120]
17 26 January 2025 Timi Zajc [121]
18 Willingen 1 February 2025 L Anže Lanišek [122]
19 2 February 2025 Anže Lanišek [123]
20 Lake Placid 7 February 2025 8 February 2025 Domen Prevc [124]
21 9 February 2025 Domen Prevc [125]
22 Sapporo 14 February 2025 15 February 2025 Stefan Kraft [126]
23 16 February 2025 Domen Prevc [127]
24 Oslo 13 March 2025 Karl Geiger [44]
25 Vikersund 14 March 2025 15 March 2025 F Domen Prevc [46]
16 March 2025 cancelled due to strong wind;
all 53 athletes at start
26 Lahti 22 March 2025 L Jan Hörl [128]
27 Planica 27 March 2025 28 March 2025 F Andreas Wellinger [51]

Women

No. Place Qualifications Competition Size Winner R.
1 Lillehammer 23 November 2024 L Alexandria Loutitt [129]
2 24 November 2024 Selina Freitag [130]
3 Zhangjiakou 13 December 2024 14 December 2024 N Nika Prevc [131]
4 15 December 2024 Jacqueline Seifriedsberger [132]
5    Engelberg 21 December 2024 L Katharina Schmid [133]
22 December 2024 cancelled due to organizational changes caused by the bad weather forecast; all 55 athletes at start
6 Garmisch-Partenkirchen 30 December 2024 31 December 2024 Selina Freitag [134]
7 Oberstdorf 1 January 2025 Katharina Schmid [135]
8 Villach 5 January 2025 N Katharina Schmid [136]
9 6 January 2025 Katharina Schmid [137]
10 Sapporo 18 January 2025 L Thea Minyan Bjørseth [138]
11 19 January 2025 Nika Prevc [139]
12 Zaō 23 January 2025 24 January 2025 N Eirin Maria Kvandal [140]
13 26 January 2025 Jacqueline Seifriedsberger [141]
Willingen 31 January 2025 1 February 2025 L cancelled due to strong wind
(re-categorized to prologue)
14 Lake Placid 6 February 2025 7 February 2025 Eirin Maria Kvandal [142]
15 8 February 2025 Eirin Maria Kvandal [143]
16 Ljubno 14 February 2025 15 February 2025 N Nika Prevc [144]
17 16 February 2025 Nika Prevc [145]
18 Hinzenbach 22 February 2025 Selina Freitag [146]
19 23 February 2025 Selina Freitag [147]
Oslo 13 March 2025 L cancelled due to strong wind;
all 46 athletes at start
20 Lahti 20 March 2025 Nika Prevc [148]

Prize money distribution

The total prize money for each individual World Cup event is 86,100 Swiss franc (CHF) for men and 30,229 CHF for women. Men's qualification winners also received an additional 3,000 CHF on normal and large hills and 5,000 CHF on ski-flying hills.[149]

Achievements

First World Cup career victory
First World Cup podium
Number of wins this season (in brackets are all-time wins)

Retirements

The following notable ski jumpers, who competed in the World Cup, retire during or after the 2024–25 season:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Individual men's event in Ruka (1 December) had only one round due to strong wind.
  2. ^ Individual men's ski flying event in Vikersund (16 March) had only one round due to strong wind.
  3. ^ Individual women's event in Lake Placid (7 February) was interrupted due to strong winds after 14 jumpers and later restarted from the beginning.
  4. ^ Ind. women's event in Vikersund (15 March) interrupted before last jumper in 1st round due to strong wind. And rescheduled on later with one round only.

References

  1. ^ "FIS Ski Jumping". www.fis-ski.com.
  2. ^ "Rules for the FIS Ski Jumping World Cup Edition 2024/25 – Men" (PDF). fis-ski.com. Retrieved 14 August 2024.
  3. ^ "Rules for the FIS Ski Jumping World Cup Edition 2024/25 – Women" (PDF). fis-ski.com. Retrieved 10 September 2024.
  4. ^ "Krótszy sezon Letniego Grand Prix. Dodatkowy konkurs w Pucharze Świata 2024/2025". skijumping.pl. Retrieved 8 May 2024.
  5. ^ "World Cup Calendar Men's Ski Jumping 2024/25" (PDF). FIS. Retrieved 23 September 2024.
  6. ^ "World Cup Calendar Women's Ski Jumping 2024/25" (PDF). FIS. Retrieved 21 September 2024.
  7. ^ "Hybrydowe zawody i finał w listopadzie - wstępny kalendarz Letniego Grand Prix 2024". skijumping.pl. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  8. ^ "Proponowane kalendarze LGP i PŚ na sezon 2024/2025". skijumping.pl. Retrieved 13 April 2024.
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