FIS Ski Jumping World Cup

Ski Jumping World Cup
GenreSki jumping, ski flying
Location(s)Europe
Asia
North America
Inaugurated27 December 1979 (1979-12-27) (men's individual)
12 January 1992 (1992-01-12) (men's team)
3 December 2011 (2011-12-03) (women's individual)
23 November 2012 (2012-11-23) (mixed team)
16 December 2017 (2017-12-16) (women's team)
FounderTorbjørn Yggeseth
Organised byInternational Ski Federation
PeopleCurrent race directors:
Sandro Pertile (M)
Chika Yoshida (L)
SponsorViessmann, Konica Minolta
2024–25 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup

The FIS Ski Jumping World Cup is the world's highest level of ski jumping and the FIS Ski Flying World Cup as the subdivisional part of the competition. It was founded by Torbjørn Yggeseth for the 1979/80 season and organized by the International Ski Federation. Women began competing during the 2011/12 season.[1]

The rounds are hosted primarily in Europe, with regular stops in Japan and rarely in North America. These have been hosted in total 21 countries around the world for both men 20 and women: Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, China, Canada, Czech Republic, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Norway, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Korea, Sweden, Switzerland and the United States.[2][nb 1]

Summer Grand Prix is the top level summer competition on plastic. The lower competitive circuits include the Continental Cup, the Inter-Continental Cup, the FIS Cup, the FIS Race and the Alpen Cup.

The Olympic Winter Games, the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships and the FIS Ski Flying World Championships do not count towards the World Cup. However, the 1984 Olympic Games, the 1982 Nordic World Ski Championships and the 1992, 1994, 1996 and 1998 Ski Flying World Championships were counted towards the World Cup.

Scoring system

Each season consists of 25–30 competitions, usually two competitions on the same hill during a weekend. One competition consists of a qualifying round; first round, with 50 competitors; and second round, with 30. Qualifying round for the main event was introduced in 1990 to limit the number of competitors. The top 30 in the first round advance to the second round, which is held in reverse order, so the best jumper in the first round jumps last. The aggregate score in the first and second rounds determine the competition results. The top 30 are awarded World Cup points. The winner gets 100 points while number 30 receives 1 point. At team events only top 8 receive points.

Men's Individual

Seasons 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
1979/801992/93 25 20 15 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 points were not awarded
1993/94–present 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

Women's Individual

Seasons 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
2011/12–present 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

Men's team

Seasons 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
1991/921992/93 60 50 40 30 20 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8
1993/941999/00 200 160 120 100 90 80 points were not awarded
2000/01–present 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 points are not being awarded

Women's team

Seasons 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
2017/18–present 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50

Mixed team

Seasons 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
2012/13–present 200 175 150 125 100 75 50 25

Men's standings

The table below shows the three highest ranked jumpers each year.

Overall

Season Winner Runner-up Third
1979/80 Hubert Neuper Armin Kogler Stanisław Bobak
1980/81 Armin Kogler Roger Ruud Horst Bulau
1981/82 Armin Kogler (2) Hubert Neuper Horst Bulau (2)
1982/83 Matti Nykänen Horst Bulau Armin Kogler
1983/84 Jens Weißflog Matti Nykänen Pavel Ploc
1984/85 Matti Nykänen Andreas Felder Ernst Vettori
1985/86 Matti Nykänen Ernst Vettori Andreas Felder
1986/87 Vegard Opaas Ernst Vettori Andreas Felder
1987/88 Matti Nykänen (4) Pavel Ploc Primož Ulaga
1988/89 Jan Boklöv Jens Weißflog Dieter Thoma
1989/90 Ari-Pekka Nikkola Ernst Vettori (3) Andreas Felder
1990/91 Andreas Felder    Stephan Zünd Dieter Thoma (2)
1991/92 Toni Nieminen Werner Rathmayr Andreas Felder (4)
1992/93 Andreas Goldberger Jaroslav Sakala Noriaki Kasai
1993/94 Espen Bredesen Jens Weißflog (2) Andreas Goldberger
1994/95 Andreas Goldberger Roberto Cecon Janne Ahonen
1995/96 Andreas Goldberger (3) Ari-Pekka Nikkola Janne Ahonen
1996/97 Primož Peterka Dieter Thoma Kazuyoshi Funaki
1997/98 Primož Peterka (2) Kazuyoshi Funaki Andreas Widhölzl
1998/99 Martin Schmitt Janne Ahonen Noriaki Kasai (2)
1999/00 Martin Schmitt (2) Andreas Widhölzl Janne Ahonen
2000/01 Adam Małysz Martin Schmitt Risto Jussilainen
2001/02 Adam Małysz Sven Hannawald Matti Hautamäki
2002/03 Adam Małysz Sven Hannawald (2) Andreas Widhölzl
2003/04 Janne Ahonen Roar Ljøkelsøy Bjørn Einar Romøren
2004/05 Janne Ahonen (2) Roar Ljøkelsøy (2) Matti Hautamäki (2)
2005/06 Jakub Janda Janne Ahonen (2)    Andreas Küttel
2006/07 Adam Małysz (4) Anders Jacobsen    Simon Ammann
2007/08 Thomas Morgenstern Gregor Schlierenzauer Janne Ahonen (4)
2008/09 Gregor Schlierenzauer    Simon Ammann Wolfgang Loitzl
2009/10    Simon Ammann Gregor Schlierenzauer Thomas Morgenstern
2010/11 Thomas Morgenstern (2)    Simon Ammann (2) Adam Małysz
2011/12 Anders Bardal Gregor Schlierenzauer (3) Andreas Kofler
2012/13 Gregor Schlierenzauer (2) Anders Bardal Kamil Stoch
2013/14 Kamil Stoch Peter Prevc Severin Freund
2014/15 Severin Freund Peter Prevc (2) Stefan Kraft
2015/16 Peter Prevc Severin Freund Kenneth Gangnes
2016/17 Stefan Kraft Kamil Stoch Daniel-André Tande
2017/18 Kamil Stoch (2) Richard Freitag Daniel-André Tande (2)
2018/19 Ryōyū Kobayashi Stefan Kraft Kamil Stoch
2019/20 Stefan Kraft Karl Geiger Ryōyū Kobayashi
2020/21 Halvor Egner Granerud Markus Eisenbichler Kamil Stoch (3)
2021/22 Ryōyū Kobayashi (2) Karl Geiger (2) Marius Lindvik
2022/23 Halvor Egner Granerud (2) Stefan Kraft (2) Anže Lanišek
2023/24 Stefan Kraft (3) Ryōyū Kobayashi Andreas Wellinger
2024/25 Daniel Tschofenig Jan Hörl Stefan Kraft (2)

Nations Cup

Season Winner Runner-up Third
1979/80  Austria  Norway  Japan
1980/81 Austria Norway  Finland
1981/82 Austria Norway Finland
1982/83 Norway Finland Austria
1983/84 Finland  East Germany  Czechoslovakia
1984/85 Finland Austria Norway
1985/86 Austria Finland Norway
1986/87 Norway Finland Austria
1987/88 Finland Czechoslovakia Norway
1988/89 Norway Finland Austria
1989/90 Austria Czechoslovakia (2) Finland
1990/91 Austria  Germany Finland
1991/92 Austria Finland Czechoslovakia (2)
1992/93 Austria Japan Norway
1993/94 Norway Japan Austria
1994/95 Finland Austria Japan
1995/96 Finland Japan (3) Austria
1996/97 Japan Norway Finland
1997/98 Japan Austria Germany
1998/99 Japan (3) Germany Austria
1999/00 Finland Austria Germany
2000/01 Finland (7) Austria Germany
2001/02 Germany Austria Finland
2002/03 Austria Finland Norway
2003/04 Norway Finland Austria
2004/05 Austria Finland Norway
2005/06 Austria Norway Finland
2006/07 Austria Norway  Switzerland
2007/08 Austria Norway Finland (8)
2008/09 Austria Finland (9) Norway
2009/10 Austria Norway Germany
2010/11 Austria Norway  Poland
2011/12 Austria Norway Germany
2012/13 Norway Austria Germany
2013/14 Austria Germany  Slovenia
2014/15 Germany Norway Austria (8)
2015/16 Norway Slovenia Germany
2016/17 Poland Austria Germany
2017/18 Norway Germany Poland (2)
2018/19 Poland (2) Germany Japan (3)
2019/20 Germany (3) Austria (9) Norway
2020/21 Norway (9) Poland Germany
2021/22 Austria Slovenia Germany
2022/23 Austria Norway (12) Slovenia (2)
2023/24 Austria Slovenia (3) Germany (11)
2024/25 Austria (22) Germany (6) Norway (9)

Ski Flying

Season Winner Runner-up Third
1990/91    Stephan Zünd Stefan Horngacher Ralf Gebstedt
1991/92 Werner Rathmayr Andreas Goldberger Andreas Felder
1992/93 Jaroslav Sakala Didier Mollard Andreas Goldberger
1993/94 Jaroslav Sakala (2) Espen Bredesen Roberto Cecon
1994/95 Andreas Goldberger Takanobu Okabe Roberto Cecon (2)
1995/96 Andreas Goldberger (2) Janne Ahonen Christof Duffner
1996/97 Primož Peterka Takanobu Okabe (2) Kazuyoshi Funaki
1997/98 Sven Hannawald Kazuyoshi Funaki Andreas Widhölzl
Primož Peterka
1998/99 Martin Schmitt Noriaki Kasai Hideharu Miyahira
1999/00 Sven Hannawald (2) Janne Ahonen (2) Tommy Ingebrigtsen
2000/01 Martin Schmitt (2) Adam Malysz Risto Jussilainen
2008/09 Gregor Schlierenzauer Harri Olli    Simon Ammann
2009/10 Robert Kranjec Gregor Schlierenzauer    Simon Ammann
2010/11 Gregor Schlierenzauer Martin Koch Thomas Morgenstern
2011/12 Robert Kranjec (2) Martin Koch (2)    Simon Ammann (3)
2012/13 Gregor Schlierenzauer (3) Robert Kranjec Andreas Stjernen
2013/14 Peter Prevc Noriaki Kasai (2) Gregor Schlierenzauer
2014/15 Peter Prevc Severin Freund Jurij Tepeš
2015/16 Peter Prevc (3) Robert Kranjec (2) Johann André Forfang
2016/17 Stefan Kraft Andreas Wellinger Kamil Stoch
2017/18 Andreas Stjernen Robert Johansson
Kamil Stoch
2018/19 Ryōyū Kobayashi Markus Eisenbichler Piotr Żyła
2019/20 Stefan Kraft Timi Zajc Piotr Żyła (2)
2020/21 Karl Geiger Ryōyū Kobayashi Markus Eisenbichler
2021/22 Žiga Jelar Timi Zajc (2) Stefan Kraft
2022/23 Stefan Kraft (3) Halvor Egner Granerud Anže Lanišek
2023/24 Daniel Huber Stefan Kraft Peter Prevc
2024/25 Domen Prevc Anže Lanišek Andreas Wellinger

Ski Jumping (JP) Cup

Season Winner Runner-up Third
1995/96 Ari-Pekka Nikkola Andreas Goldberger Masahiko Harada
1996/97 Dieter Thoma Primož Peterka Hiroya Saito
1997/98 Primož Peterka Masahiko Harada Andreas Widhölzl
1998/99 Janne Ahonen Martin Schmitt Kazuyoshi Funaki
1999/00 Martin Schmitt Andreas Widhölzl Janne Ahonen

*This additional title was awarded from 1996 to 2000 for the best individual normal and large hill results only.
The winner received a small Crystal Globe. This title was distinct from the overall WC, which included ski flying.

  • Titles Overall:
Rank Nation Wins Second Third Total
1  Austria 15 14 14 43
2  Finland 8 4 7 19
3  Poland 6 1 5 12
4  Norway 5 5 5 15
5  Germany 3 10 4 19
6  Slovenia 3 2 1 6
7  Japan 2 2 4 8
8  Switzerland 1 3 2 6
9  Czech Republic 1 1 2
9  East Germany 1 1 2
11  Sweden 1 1
12  Canada 1 2 3
13  Czechoslovakia 1 1 2
13  Italy 1 1
14  Yugoslavia 1 1
  • Nations Cup:
Rank Nation Wins Second Third Total
1  Austria 22 9 8 39
2  Norway 9 12 9 30
3  Finland 7 9 8 24
4  Germany 3 6 11 20
5  Japan 3 3 3 9
6  Poland 2 1 2 5
7  Czechoslovakia 2 2 4
8  Slovenia 3 2 5
9  East Germany 1 1
10  Switzerland 1 1
  • Ski Flying:
Rank Nation Wins Second Third Total
1  Austria 10 6 6 22
2  Slovenia 8 5 4 17
3  Germany 5 3 4 12
4  Czech Republic 2 2
5  Japan 1 6 2 9
6  Norway 1 3 3 7
7  Switzerland 1 3 4
8  Finland 3 1 4
9  Poland 2 3 5
10  France 1 1
11  Italy 2 2

Men's tournaments

There are other tournaments as part of the World Cup:

K.O.P. International Ski Flying Week

Season Winner Runner-up Third
1980 Per Bergerud Stanisław Bobak Ján Tánczos
1981 Alois Lipburger Andreas Felder John Broman
1982 Hubert Neuper Matti Nykänen Andreas Felder
1983 Matti Nykänen Pavel Ploc Horst Bulau
1984 Matti Nykänen (2) Pavel Ploc (2) Jens Weißflog
1985 Ole Gunnar Fidjestøl Miran Tepeš Jiří Parma
Trond Jøran Pedersen
Tadeusz Fijas
1986 Andreas Felder Matti Nykänen (2) Ernst Vettori
1987 Andreas Felder (2) Ole Gunnar Fidjestøl Miran Tepeš
1989 Ole Gunnar Fidjestøl (2) Mike Holland Jan Boklöv

Nordic Tournament

Season Winner Runner-up Third
1997 Kazuyoshi Funaki Kristian Brenden Andreas Widhölzl
1998 Andreas Widhölzl Sven Hannawald Hiroya Saito
1999 Noriaki Kasai Kazuyoshi Funaki Sven Hannawald
2000 Sven Hannawald Janne Ahonen Ville Kantee
2001 Adam Małysz Andreas Goldberger Martin Schmitt
2002 Matti Hautamäki Adam Małysz Martin Schmitt (2)
2003 Adam Małysz Matti Hautamäki Tami Kiuru
2004 Roar Ljøkelsøy Bjørn Einar Romøren    Simon Ammann
2005 Matti Hautamäki (2) Roar Ljøkelsøy Michael Uhrmann
2006 Thomas Morgenstern    Andreas Küttel Janne Happonen
2007 Adam Małysz (3) Andreas Kofler    Simon Ammann
2008 Gregor Schlierenzauer Tom Hilde Janne Happonen (2)
2009 Gregor Schlierenzauer (2) Harri Olli    Simon Ammann (3)
2010    Simon Ammann Adam Małysz (2) Thomas Morgenstern

Raw Air

Season Winner Runner-up Third
2017 Stefan Kraft Kamil Stoch Andreas Wellinger
2018 Kamil Stoch Robert Johansson Andreas Stjernen
2019 Ryōyū Kobayashi Stefan Kraft Robert Johansson
2020 Kamil Stoch (2) Ryōyū Kobayashi Marius Lindvik
2022 Stefan Kraft Karl Geiger Ryōyū Kobayashi
2023 Halvor Egner Granerud Stefan Kraft (2) Anže Lanišek
2024 Stefan Kraft (3) Peter Prevc Daniel Huber
2025 Andreas Wellinger Domen Prevc Ryōyū Kobayashi (2)

Planica7

Season Winner Runner-up Third
2018 Kamil Stoch Johann André Forfang Robert Johansson
2019 Ryōyū Kobayashi Markus Eisenbichler Timi Zajc
2021 Karl Geiger Ryōyū Kobayashi Markus Eisenbichler
2022 Timi Zajc Marius Lindvik Peter Prevc
2023 Stefan Kraft Anže Lanišek Timi Zajc (2)
2024 Daniel Huber Peter Prevc Johann André Forfang
2025 Domen Prevc Anže Lanišek (2) Andreas Wellinger

Swiss Tournament

Season Winner Runner-up Third
1980 Roger Ruud Johan Sætre    Hansjörg Sumi
1981 Armin Kogler Hubert Neuper Johan Sætre
1982 Massimo Rigoni Klaus Ostwald Andreas Bauer
1983 Per Bergerud Pentti Kokkonen Jari Puikkonen
1985 Jens Weißflog Ernst Vettori Per Bergerud
1986 Rolf Åge Berg Matti Nykänen Ulf Findeisen
1988 Matti Nykänen Miran Tepeš Ernst Vettori
1990 František Jež Heinz Kuttin Ari-Pekka Nikkola
1992 Andreas Felder Werner Rathmayr    Stephan Zünd

Bohemia Tournament

Season Winner Runner-up Third
1981 Roger Ruud Armin Kogler Hans Wallner
1983 Klaus Ostwald Markku Pusenius Pavel Ploc
1984 Jens Weißflog Jiří Parma Holger Freitag
1986 Matti Nykänen Ernst Vettori Jiří Parma
1989 Jon Inge Kjørum Pavel Ploc Ladislav Dluhoš
1990 Werner Haim Ladislav Dluhoš Ernst Vettori
1994 Espen Bredesen Jaroslav Sakala Lasse Ottesen

FIS Team Tour

Season Winner Runner-up Third
2009  Norway  Austria  Finland
2010 Austria Norway  Germany
2011 Austria Norway Germany (2)
2012 Austria (3) Norway (3)  Slovenia
2013 Norway (2) Slovenia Austria

Willingen Five (2018–2020) / Six (2021)

Season Winner Runner-up Third
2018 Kamil Stoch Johann Andre Forfang Daniel-André Tande
2019 Ryōyū Kobayashi Piotr Żyła Karl Geiger
2020 Stephan Leyhe Stefan Kraft Marius Lindvik
2021 Halvor Egner Granerud Daniel-André Tande Markus Eisenbichler

Titisee-Neustadt Five

Season Winner Runner-up Third
2020 Ryōyū Kobayashi Dawid Kubacki Stephan Leyhe

PolSKI Tour

Season Winner Runner-up Third
2024 Austria Slovenia Germany

Women's standings

Overall

Season Winner Runner-up Third
2011/12 Sarah Hendrickson Daniela Iraschko Sara Takanashi
2012/13 Sara Takanashi Sarah Hendrickson Coline Mattel
2013/14 Sara Takanashi Carina Vogt Yūki Itō
2014/15 Daniela Iraschko-Stolz Sara Takanashi Carina Vogt
2015/16 Sara Takanashi Daniela Iraschko-Stolz (2) Maja Vtič
2016/17 Sara Takanashi (4) Yūki Itō Maren Lundby
2017/18 Maren Lundby Katharina Althaus Sara Takanashi (2)
2018/19 Maren Lundby Katharina Althaus Juliane Seyfarth
2019/20 Maren Lundby (3) Chiara Hölzl Eva Pinkelnig
2020/21 Nika Križnar Sara Takanashi (2) Marita Kramer
2021/22 Marita Kramer Nika Križnar Urša Bogataj
2022/23 Eva Pinkelnig Katharina Althaus (3) Ema Klinec
2023/24 Nika Prevc Eva Pinkelnig Alexandria Loutitt
2024/25 Nika Prevc (2) Selina Freitag Katharina Schmid

Nations Cup

Season Winner Runner-up Third
2011/12  United States  Germany  Japan
2012/13 United States (2)  Slovenia Japan
2013/14 Japan Germany Slovenia
2014/15  Austria Japan Germany
2015/16 Austria Japan Slovenia
2016/17 Japan (2) Germany Slovenia (3)
2017/18 Germany Japan (3)  Norway
2018/19 Germany Norway Austria
2019/20 Austria Norway Japan
2020/21 Austria Slovenia Norway
2021/22 Slovenia Austria Japan
2022/23 Austria Germany (4) Norway (3)
2023/24 Austria (6) Slovenia (3) Japan (5)
2024/25 Germany (3) Norway (3) Austria (2)

Raw Air

Season Winner Runner-up Third
2019 Maren Lundby Katharina Althaus Juliane Seyfarth
2020 Maren Lundby (2) Silje Opseth Eva Pinkelnig
2022 Nika Križnar Sara Takanashi Urša Bogataj
2023 Ema Klinec Katharina Althaus (2) Selina Freitag
2024 Eirin Maria Kvandal Silje Opseth (2) Eva Pinkelnig (2)
2025 Nika Prevc Eirin Maria Kvandal Anna Odine Strøm

Russia Tour Blue Bird

Season Winner Runner-up Third
2019 Juliane Seyfarth Maren Lundby Katharina Althaus
2021 Marita Kramer Sara Takanashi Nika Križnar

Alpenkrone

Season Winner Runner-up Third
2022 Nika Križnar Marita Kramer Lisa Eder

Lillehammer Triple

Season Winner Runner-up Third
2017/18 Katharina Althaus Maren Lundby Sara Takanashi
2018/19 Katharina Althaus (2) Juliane Seyfarth Ramona Straub

Silvester Tournament

Season Winner Runner-up Third
2021/22 Marita Kramer Nika Križnar Sara Takanashi
2022/23 Eva Pinkelnig Anna Odine Strøm Nika Križnar

2 Nights Tour

Season Winner Runner-up Third
2023/24 Nika Prevc Eva Pinkelnig Abigail Strate
2024/25 Nika Prevc (2) Eirin Maria Kvandal Katharina Schmid
  • Nations Cup:
Rank Nation Wins Second Third Total
1  Austria 6 1 2 9
2  Germany 3 4 1 8
3  Japan 2 3 5 10
4  United States 2 2
5  Slovenia 1 3 3 7
6  Norway 3 3 6

Titles

Men's general statistics

Events Winners
1148 172

update: 30 March 2025

Ski flying section

Events Winners
152 57

update: 30 March 2025

Women's statistics

  retired female ski jumper
Events Winners
257 28

update: 21 March 2025

Team events

  • updated: 29 March 2025

Various

updated: 30 March 2025

World Cup winners by nations

The table below lists those nations which have won at least one World Cup race (current as of 30 March 2025).

  those countries no longer exist

Hosts

Timeline calendar

Season   Men's
Individual
  Men's
Team
  Women's
Individual
  Women's
Team
  Mixed
Team
  Men's
Super team
  Women's
Super team
FH LH NH Total FH LH NH Total FH LH NH Total LH NH Total LH NH Total FH LH NH Total LH NH Total
1979/80 1 16 8 25
1980/81 2 14 8 24
1981/82 3 10 9 22
1982/83 3 15 7 25
1983/84 2 14 8 24
1984/85 1 12 8 21
1985/86 2 14 9 25
1986/87 2 10 10 22
1987/88 12 8 20
1988/89 1 11 8 20
1989/90 16 9 25
1990/91 4 13 5 22
1991/92 3 12 6 21 2 2
1992/93 2 13 2 17 2 2
1993/94 1 11 7 19 2 2
1994/95 3 11 7 21 1 1
1995/96 3 16 9 28 4 4
1996/97 4 19 2 25 1 1
1997/98 4 19 4 27
1998/99 3 23 3 29 1 1
1999/00 2 22 2 26 1 2 3
2000/01 5 16 21 1 3 4
2001/02 21 1 22 1 3 1 5
2002/03 4 23 27 1 1 2
2003/04 1 22 23 2 2
2004/05 4 24 28 3 3
2005/06 2 20 22 2 2
2006/07 4 20 24 2 2
2007/08 3 22 2 27 1 2 3
2008/09 6 20 1 27 3 3 6
2009/10 3 20 23 1 3 4
2010/11 7 19 26 2 3 5
2011/12 5 19 2 26 2 3 1 6 13 13
2012/13 7 17 3 27 2 4 6 1 15 16 1 1
2013/14 2 25 1 28 4 4 2 16 18 1 1
2014/15 5 25 1 31 1 4 5 1 12 13
2015/16 6 20 3 29 1 5 6 1 16 17
2016/17 5 20 1 26 2 4 6 3 16 19
2017/18 4 18 22 2 6 8 2 13 15 2 2
2018/19 6 22 28 2 5 7 9 15 24 2 2
2019/20 2 21 4 27 5 5 9 7 16 2 2
2020/21 3 21 1 25 1 3 4 3 10 13 2 2 1 1
2021/22 4 24 28 1 4 5 9 10 19 1 1 2 2
2022/23 6 25 1 32 1 2 3 15 11 26 2 2 1 1 2 1 1
2023/24 6 24 2 32 1 2 3 1 13 10 24 1 2 3 1 1
2024/25 6 23 29 1 1 2 1 13 10 24 3 3 2 2 1 1
Events 152 834 162 1148 28 94 2 124 2 81 174 257 9 9 7 3 10 1 5 1 7 3 3
Double wins 1 11 1 13 2 2
Winners 153 845 163 1161 28 94 2 124 2 81 176 259 9 9 7 3 10 1 5 1 7 3 3

Last updated: 30 March 2025

World Cup finals

Men

  • 1980 — Štrbské Pleso
  • 1981 — Planica
  • 1982 — Planica
  • 1983 — Planica
  • 1984 — Planica
  • 1985 — Štrbské Pleso
  • 1986 — Planica
  • 1987 — Oslo
  • 1988 — Planica
  • 1989 — Planica
  • 1990 — Planica
  • 1991 — Štrbské Pleso (3)
  • 1992 — Planica
  • 1993 — Planica
  • 1994 — Thunder Bay
  • 1995 — Oberstdorf
  • 1996 — Oslo
  • 1997 — Planica
  • 1998 — Planica
  • 1999 — Planica
  • 2000 — Planica
  • 2001 — Planica
  • 2002 — Planica
  • 2003 — Planica
  • 2004 — Oslo
  • 2005 — Planica
  • 2006 — Planica
  • 2007 — Planica
  • 2008 — Planica
  • 2009 — Planica
  • 2010 — Oslo (4)
  • 2011 — Planica
  • 2012 — Planica
  • 2013 — Planica
  • 2014 — Planica
  • 2015 — Planica
  • 2016 — Planica
  • 2017 — Planica
  • 2018 — Planica
  • 2019 — Planica
  • 2020 — Trondheim
  • 2021 — Planica
  • 2022 — Planica
  • 2023 — Planica
  • 2024 — Planica
  • 2025 — Planica (36)

Women

  • 2022 — Oberhof
  • 2023 — Lahti
  • 2024 — Planica (2)
  • 2025 — Lahti (2)

World Cup all-time records

Men

Category Name Record
record prize money per single season (2008/09) Gregor Schlierenzauer 524,500 CHF
overall titles Adam Małysz
Matti Nykänen
4
consecutive overall titles Adam Małysz 3
overall podiums Janne Ahonen 8
consecutive overall podiums Armin Kogler
Matti Nykänen
Andreas Goldberger
4
ski flying titles Gregor Schlierenzauer
Peter Prevc
Stefan Kraft
3
ski flying title podiums Gregor Schlierenzauer
Stefan Kraft
5
individual wins Gregor Schlierenzauer 53
individual podiums Stefan Kraft 126
individual ski flying wins Gregor Schlierenzauer 14
individual ski flying podiums Stefan Kraft 25
team wins Gregor Schlierenzauer
Stefan Kraft
17
team podiums Stefan Kraft 46
individual top 10s Janne Ahonen 248
individual ski flying top 10s Stefan Kraft 42
career total points Janne Ahonen 15753
career total points (since 1993/94) Janne Ahonen 15748
career total points (to 1992/93) Matti Nykänen 1712
most times winning individual points Noriaki Kasai 466x
consecutive wins Janne Ahonen
Matti Hautamäki
Thomas Morgenstern
Gregor Schlierenzauer
Ryōyū Kobayashi
6
consecutive podiums Janne Ahonen 13
wins in a single season (2015/16) Peter Prevc 15
ski flying wins in a single season Gregor Schlierenzauer
Peter Prevc
Stefan Kraft
4
podiums in a single season (2015/16) Peter Prevc 22
ski flying podiums in a single season Gregor Schlierenzauer
Stefan Kraft
6
overall points in a single season (2015/16) Peter Prevc 2303
overall points in a single season to 1992/93 (1989/90) Ari-Pekka Nikkola 287
points in a single ski flying season (2012/13) Gregor Schlierenzauer 544
highest win rate in a season (2000/01) Adam Małysz 52,4%
highest podium rate in a season (2015/16) Peter Prevc 75,9%
average points per competition in a season (2015/16) Peter Prevc 79.41
average points per competition in a season to 1992/93 (1987/88) Matti Nykänen 14.10
highest overall advantage in a season (2015/16) Peter Prevc 813
highest overall advantage in a season to 1992/93 (1987/88) Matti Nykänen 95
most wins in a calendar year (2001) Adam Małysz 17
most podiums in a calendar year (2001) Adam Małysz 22
most points in a calendar year (2001) Adam Małysz 2307
most wins at one venue (Lahti) Matti Nykänen 8
youngest winner overall (1991/92) Toni Nieminen 16 years, 295 days
oldest winner overall (2023/24) Stefan Kraft 30 years, 309 days
youngest winner (Lahti '80) Steve Collins 15 years, 362 days
oldest winner (Ruka '14) Noriaki Kasai 42 years, 176 days
youngest jumper on podium Steve Collins 15 years, 362 days
oldest jumper on podium Noriaki Kasai 44 years, 293 days
youngest jumper in top 10 Steve Collins 15 years, 289 days
oldest jumper in top 10 Noriaki Kasai 46 years, 235 days
oldest jumper performing Noriaki Kasai 52 years, 255 days
individual performances Noriaki Kasai 579
team performances Noriaki Kasai 73
all performances Noriaki Kasai 652
# of seasons performing Noriaki Kasai 34
overall leader by total events Janne Ahonen 73
ski flying leader by total events Gregor Schlierenzauer 16
most points in a single competition (Ruka '23) Stefan Kraft 363.5
most points in a ski flying competition (Vikersund '11) Gregor Schlierenzauer
Johan Remen Evensen
498,6
most points in a ski flying competition with 3 rounds (Vikersund '24) Daniel Huber 689,2
win with the highest point advantage (Planica '87) Andreas Felder 47,5
longest time between first and last win Noriaki Kasai 22 years, 253 days
longest time between first and last podium Noriaki Kasai 25 years, 26 days
career total wins (individual & team) Gregor Schlierenzauer 70
career total podiums (individual & team) Stefan Kraft 172
wins on a large hill Gregor Schlierenzauer 36
wins on a normal hill Matti Nykänen 15

update: 30 March 2025

Women

Category Name Record
record prize money per single season (2024/25) Nika Prevc 129,569 CHF
overall titles Sara Takanashi 4
consecutive overall titles Maren Lundby 3
overall podiums Sara Takanashi 8
consecutive overall podiums Sara Takanashi 7
individual wins Sara Takanashi 63
individual podiums Sara Takanashi 116
individual top 10s Sara Takanashi 204
career total points Sara Takanashi 14332
consecutive wins Sara Takanashi
Nika Prevc
10
consecutive podiums Sara Takanashi 27
wins in a single season Sara Takanashi
Nika Prevc
15
podiums in a single season Maren Lundby
Nika Prevc
19
overall points in a single season (2024/25) Nika Prevc 1933
average points per competition in a season (2013/14) Sara Takanashi 95.56
highest overall advantage in a season (2013/14) Sara Takanashi 914
most wins at one venue (Hinzenbach) Sara Takanashi 8
youngest winner (Yamagata '12) Sara Takanashi 15 years, 147 days
oldest winner (Planica '24) Eva Pinkelnig 36 years, 224 days
youngest jumper on podium Gianina Ernst 14 years, 341 days
oldest jumper on podium Daniela Iraschko-Stolz 38 years, 5 days
individual performances Sara Takanashi 241
overall leader by total events Sara Takanashi 77
most points in a single competition (Lahti '25) Nika Prevc 328,8
most points in a ski flying competition (Vikersund '24) Eirin Maria Kvandal 431,2
win with the highest point advantage (Lahti '25) Nika Prevc 51,4
longest time between first and last win Jacqueline Seifriedsberger 11 years, 358 days

update: 21 March 2025

One country podium sweep

Men

No. Date Place Season Winner Second Third
1 27 December 1979   Cortina d'Ampezzo 1979/80 Toni Innauer Hubert Neuper Alfred Groyer
2 20 January 1980   Thunder Bay Armin Kogler Hubert Neuper Toni Innauer
3 22 March 1980   Planica Hubert Neuper Armin Kogler Hans Millonig
4 25 March 1980   Štrbské Pleso Armin Kogler Hans Millonig Hubert Neuper
5 14 February 1981   Ironwood 1980/81 Alois Lipburger Andreas Felder Fritz Koch
6 22 March 1982   Štrbské Pleso 1981/82 Ole Bremseth Olav Hansson Johan Sætre
7 15 December 1990   Sapporo 1990/91 André Kiesewetter Dieter Thoma Josef Heumann
8 2 March 1991   Lahti 1990/91 Andreas Felder Heinz Kuttin Werner Haim
9 17 January 1992   St. Moritz 1991/92 Andreas Felder Werner Rathmayr Martin Höllwarth
10 26 January 1992   Oberstdorf Werner Rathmayr Andreas Felder Andreas Goldberger
11 1 January 1998   Garmisch-Partenkirchen 1997/98 Kazuyoshi Funaki Masahiko Harada Hiroya Saitō
12 11 January 1998   Ramsau am Dachstein Masahiko Harada Kazuyoshi Funaki Hiroya Saitō
13 1 March 1998   Vikersund Takanobu Okabe Hiroya Saitō Noriaki Kasai
14 3 March 2001   Oberstdorf 2000/01 Risto Jussilainen Veli-Matti Lindström Matti Hautamäki
15 24 January 2002   Hakuba 2001/02 Andreas Widhölzl Martin Koch Stefan Horngacher
16 15 December 2002   Titisee-Neustadt 2002/03 Martin Höllwarth Andreas Goldberger Andreas Kofler
17 28 January 2006   Zakopane 2005/06 Matti Hautamäki Tami Kiuru Janne Ahonen
18 9 December 2007   Trondheim 2007/08 Thomas Morgenstern Andreas Kofler Wolfgang Loitzl
19 31 January 2009   Sapporo 2008/09 Gregor Schlierenzauer Thomas Morgenstern Wolfgang Loitzl
20 17 December 2010   Engelberg 2010/11 Thomas Morgenstern Andreas Kofler Wolfgang Loitzl
21 18 March 2011   Planica Gregor Schlierenzauer Thomas Morgenstern Martin Koch
22 27 November 2011   Ruka 2011/12 Andreas Kofler Gregor Schlierenzauer Thomas Morgenstern
23 30 December 2011   Oberstdorf Gregor Schlierenzauer Andreas Kofler Thomas Morgenstern
24 26 January 2014   Sapporo 2013/14 Jernej Damjan Peter Prevc Robert Kranjec
25 30 January 2016   Sapporo 2015/16 Peter Prevc Domen Prevc Robert Kranjec
26 18 March 2018   Vikersund 2017/18 Robert Johansson Andreas Stjernen Daniel-André Tande
27 6 December 2020   Nizhny Tagil 2020/21 Halvor Egner Granerud Robert Johansson Marius Lindvik
28 25 March 2022   Planica 2021/22 Žiga Jelar Peter Prevc Anže Lanišek
29 13 March 2024   Trondheim 2023/24 Stefan Kraft Daniel Tschofenig Jan Hörl
30 22 December 2024   Engelberg 2024/25 Daniel Tschofenig Jan Hörl Stefan Kraft
31 29 December 2024   Oberstdorf Stefan Kraft Jan Hörl Daniel Tschofenig
32 4 January 2025   Innsbruck Stefan Kraft Jan Hörl Daniel Tschofenig
33 6 January 2025   Bischofshofen Daniel Tschofenig Jan Hörl Stefan Kraft

Women

No. Date Place Season Winner Second Third
1 12 February 2017   Ljubno 2016/17 Katharina Althaus Carina Vogt Svenja Würth
2 13 March 2022   Oberhof 2021/22 Urša Bogataj Nika Križnar Ema Klinec
3 5 February 2023   Willingen 2022/23 Yuki Ito Nozomi Maruyama Sara Takanashi

Shared wins

Men

No. Season Date Place Hill Size Winners
1 1981/82 3 January 1982   Innsbruck Bergiselschanze K104 LH Manfred Deckert Per Bergerud
2 1985/86 19 January 1986   Oberwiesenthal Fichtelbergschanzen K90 NH Ulf Findeisen Ernst Vettori
3 1988/89 14 January 1989   Liberec Ještěd A K120 LH Pavel Ploc Jon Inge Kjørum
4 1989/90 11 February 1990      Engelberg Gross-Titlis-Schanze K120 LH Ari-Pekka Nikkola Franci Petek
5 1990/91 1 January 1991   Garmisch-Pa Große Olympiaschanze K107 LH Jens Weißflog Andreas Felder
6 1995/96 21 January 1996   Sapporo Ōkurayama K115 LH Ari-Pekka Nikkola Andreas Goldberger
7 2004/05 29 January 2005   Zakopane Wielka Krokiew HS134 LH Adam Małysz Roar Ljøkelsøy
8 2010/11 12 February 2011   Vikersund Vikersundbakken HS225 FH Gregor Schlierenzauer Johan Remen Evensen
9 2012/13 17 March 2013   Oslo Holmenkollbakken HS134 LH Gregor Schlierenzauer Piotr Żyła
10 2014/15 29 November 2014   Ruka Rukatunturi HS142 LH    Simon Ammann Noriaki Kasai
11 2016/17 11 February 2017   Sapporo Ōkurayama HS137 LH Maciej Kot Peter Prevc
12 2021/22 27 February 2022   Lahti Salpausselkä HS130 LH Ryōyū Kobayashi Halvor Egner Granerud
13 2022/23 27 November 2022   Ruka Rukatunturi HS142 LH Halvor Egner Granerud Stefan Kraft

Women

No. Season Date Place Hill Size Winners
1 2012/13 9 December 2012   Sochi RusSki Gorki HS106 NH Daniela Iraschko-Stolz Coline Mattel
2 2014/15 15 February 2015   Ljubno Savina HS95 NH Daniela Iraschko-Stolz Sara Takanashi

Timeline of record World Cup winners

Name Start End Wins
Toni Innauer 27 December 1979   30 December 1979   1
Toni Innauer
Jochen Danneberg
30 December 1979   1 January 1980   1
Toni Innauer
Jochen Danneberg
Hubert Neuper
1 January 1980   4 January 1980   1
Hubert Neuper 4 January 1980   20 January 1980   2
Hubert Neuper
Armin Kogler
20 January 1980   9 February 1980   2
Hubert Neuper
Armin Kogler
Piotr Fijas
9 February 1980   2 March 1980   2
Hubert Neuper
Armin Kogler
Piotr Fijas
Toni Innauer
2 March 1980   8 March 1980   2
Armin Kogler 8 March 1980   1 January 1982   38
Armin Kogler
Roger Ruud
1 January 1982   17 January 1982   8
Armin Kogler 17 January 1982   27 February 1983   912
Armin Kogler
Matti Nykänen
27 February 1983   6 March 1983   12
Armin Kogler
Matti Nykänen
Horst Bulau
6 March 1983   11 March 1983   12
Armin Kogler 11 March 1983   26 March 1983   13
Armin Kogler
Matti Nykänen
26 March 1983   10 December 1983   13
Armin Kogler
Matti Nykänen
Horst Bulau
10 December 1983   18 February 1984   13
Matti Nykänen 18 February 1984   26 January 2013   1446
Matti Nykänen
Gregor Schlierenzauer
26 January 2013   3 February 2013   46
Gregor Schlierenzauer 3 February 2013   streak in run   4753

Key people

Torbjørn Yggeseth was a founder of World Cup in 1979. A new function race director was established in 1988 by International Ski Federation, with its first director Niilo Halonen then called FIS coordinator for ski jumping. Before that season this function did not exist.[12] In the premiere Women's 2011/12 World Cup season Chika Yoshida was entitled as World Cup Coordinator, but since the season 2012/13 Yoshida is called Race Director.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Note that the rounds hosted in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Slovakia were held when the countries were still part of Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia respectively.

References

  1. ^ Eric Williams (9 June 2010). "FIS approves World Cup circuit for women's ski jumping". Skiracing. Retrieved 17 January 2016.
  2. ^ "FIS: Complete Calendar of FIS Ski Jumping and Ski Flying World Cup races". Archived from the original on 29 June 2013. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
  3. ^ "Men's individual winners all-time". FIS Ski.
  4. ^ "Men's individual podiums all-time". FIS Ski.
  5. ^ "Men's individual Top 10 appearances all-time". FIS Ski.
  6. ^ "Men's individual winners all-time – Ski flying". FIS Ski.
  7. ^ "Men's individual podiums all-time – Ski flying". FIS Ski.
  8. ^ "Men's individual Top 10 appearances all-time – Ski flying". FIS Ski.
  9. ^ "Women's individual winners all-time". FIS Ski.
  10. ^ "Women's individual podiums all-time". FIS Ski.
  11. ^ "Women's individual Top 10 appearances all-time". FIS Ski.
  12. ^ "Walter Hofer: "Man muss auf dem Boden bleiben"". kleine zeitung. 4 August 2012. Retrieved 4 August 2012.