2016 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix

Last updated
Grand Prix 2016
DisciplineMenWomen
Overall Flag of Poland.svg Maciej Kot Flag of Japan.svg Sara Takanashi
Nations CupFlag of Poland.svg  Poland Flag of Japan.svg  Japan
Competition
Edition 23rd 5th
Locations 8 2
Individual 10 3
Team 1
Cancelled 2 2
2015
2017

The 2016 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix was the 23rd Summer Grand Prix season in ski jumping on plastic for men and the 5th for ladies.

Contents

Other competitive circuits this season included the World Cup, Continental Cup, FIS Cup, FIS Race and Alpen Cup.

Map of grand prix hosts

All eight scheduled locations for men (8) and for ladies (2) in this season. Only Almaty was canceled before the season start.

2016 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix (Europe)
Asia laea location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Almaty (canceled)
2016 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix (Asia)

Calendar

Men

NumSeasonDatePlaceHillSizeWinnerSecondThirdYellow bibRef.
168116 July 2016   Flag of France.svg Courchevel Tremplin du Praz HS132LH Flag of Poland.svg Maciej Kot Flag of Poland.svg Kamil Stoch Flag of Austria.svg Stefan Kraft Flag of Poland.svg Maciej Kot [1]
169223 July 2016   Flag of Poland.svg Wisła Malinka HS134LH Flag of Poland.svg Maciej Kot Flag of Norway.svg Anders Fannemel Flag of Germany.svg Andreas Wellinger [2]
170330 July 2016   Flag of Germany.svg Hinterzarten Rothaus-Schanze HS108 (night)NH Flag of Germany.svg Andreas Wellinger Flag of Poland.svg Maciej Kot
Flag of Austria.svg Stefan Kraft
[3]
17146 August 2016   Flag of Switzerland.svg Einsiedeln Andreas Küttel Schanze HS117 (night)LH Flag of Poland.svg Maciej Kot Flag of Poland.svg Kamil Stoch Flag of Austria.svg Michael Hayböck [4]
172527 August 2016   Flag of Japan.svg Hakuba Olympic Ski Jumps HS131 (night)LH Flag of Norway.svg Anders Fannemel Flag of Japan.svg Taku Takeuchi Flag of Germany.svg Andreas Wellinger [5]
173628 August 2016   Flag of Japan.svg Hakuba Olympic Ski Jumps HS131LH Flag of Japan.svg Taku Takeuchi Flag of Norway.svg Joachim Hauer Flag of Norway.svg Anders Fannemel [6]
174710 September 2016   Flag of Russia.svg Chaykovsky Snezhinka HS140LH Flag of Slovenia.svg Robert Kranjec Flag of Slovenia.svg Anže Semenič Flag of Germany.svg Karl Geiger [7]
175811 September 2016   Flag of Russia.svg Chaykovsky Snezhinka HS140LH Flag of Slovenia.svg Anže Semenič Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Tomáš Vančura Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Vojtěch Štursa [8]
17 September 2016   Flag of Kazakhstan.svg Almaty Sunkar HS140 (night)LHcanceled two days after calendar was officially confirmed in June 2016 for financial reasons; Almaty will invest all money in 2017 Winter Universiade
18 September 2016   Flag of Kazakhstan.svg Almaty Sunkar HS140 (night)LH
17691 October 2016   Flag of Austria.svg Hinzenbach Aigner-Schanze HS94NH Flag of Poland.svg Maciej Kot Flag of Poland.svg Dawid Kubacki Flag of Slovenia.svg Peter Prevc Flag of Poland.svg Maciej Kot [9]
177102 October 2016   Flag of Germany.svg Klingenthal Vogtland Arena HS140LH Flag of Poland.svg Maciej Kot Flag of Poland.svg Kamil Stoch Flag of Slovenia.svg Peter Prevc [10]

Ladies

NumSeasonDatePlaceHillSizeWinnerSecondThirdYellow bibRef.
18116 July 2016   Flag of France.svg Courchevel Tremplin du Praz HS96NH Flag of Japan.svg Sara Takanashi Flag of Austria.svg Chiara Hölzl Flag of Japan.svg Yūki Itō Flag of Japan.svg Sara Takanashi [11]
19210 September 2016   Flag of Russia.svg Chaykovsky Snezhinka HS106NH Flag of Japan.svg Sara Takanashi Flag of Norway.svg Maren Lundby Flag of Slovenia.svg Maja Vtič [12]
20311 September 2016   Flag of Russia.svg Chaykovsky Snezhinka HS106NH Flag of Japan.svg Sara Takanashi Flag of Germany.svg Carina Vogt Flag of Russia.svg Irina Avvakumova [13]
17 September 2016   Flag of Kazakhstan.svg Almaty Sunkar HS106NHcanceled two days after calendar was officially confirmed in June 2016 for financial reasons; Almaty will invest all money in 2017 Winter Universiade
18 September 2016   Flag of Kazakhstan.svg Almaty Sunkar HS106NH

Men's team

NumSeasonDatePlaceHillSizeWinnerSecondThirdYellow bibRef.
21122 July 2016   Flag of Poland.svg Wisła Malinka HS134LHFlag of Norway.svg  Norway
Johann André Forfang
Tom Hilde
Joachim Hauer
Anders Fannemel
Flag of Slovenia.svg  Slovenia
Jurij Tepeš
Robert Kranjec
Jaka Hvala
Peter Prevc
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany
Andreas Wank
Karl Geiger
Richard Freitag
Andreas Wellinger
Flag of Norway.svg  Norway [14]

Men's standings

Ladies' standings

Related Research Articles

FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix

The FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix is a summer circuit yearly arranged by International Ski Federation. This competition for men was first arranged in 1994 and for the first time for women in 2012. The competition is held on ski jumps with artificial surfaces. There are about 10 competitions per season, held in the months between July and October. Regular venues for the competition are Courchevel, Hakuba, Einsiedeln, Wisla, Hinterzarten and Klingenthal. First official mixed team event with four jumpers was organized in 2012. The most successful participants are Adam Małysz and Thomas Morgenstern, each having won the Grand Prix three times.

The 2013–14 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup was the 35th World Cup season in ski jumping for men, the 17th official World Cup season in ski flying and the 3rd World Cup season for ladies. It begun on 23 November 2013 in Klingenthal, Germany and ended on 23 March 2014 in Planica, Slovenia. A break took place during the season to accommodate the ski jumping event at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. From 13 to 16 March 2014, FIS Ski Flying World Championships 2014 took place in Harrachov, Czech Republic.

The 2014 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix was the 21st Summer Grand Prix season in ski jumping on plastic for men and the 3rd for ladies. The season began on 25 July 2014 in Wisła, Poland and will end on 4 October 2014 in Klingenthal, Germany.

The 2014/15 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup was the 24th in a row Continental Cup winter season in ski jumping for men and the 11th for ladies. This was also the 13th summer continental cup season for men and 7th for ladies.

The 2015 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix was the 22nd Summer Grand Prix season in ski jumping on plastic for men and the 4th for ladies.

The 2015/16 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup was the 25th in a row Continental Cup winter season in ski jumping for men and the 12th for ladies. This was also the 14th summer continental cup season for men and 8th for ladies.

The 2016/17 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup was the 26th in a row Continental Cup winter season in ski jumping for men and the 13th for ladies. This is also the 15th summer continental cup season for men and 9th for ladies.

The 2016/17 FIS Race was the 18th FIS Race regular season as the fourth level of ski jumping competition since 1999/00. Although even before the world cup and in the old days FIS Race events were all top level organized competitions.

The 2017/18 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup was the 27th in a row Continental Cup winter season in ski jumping for men and the 14th for ladies. This was also the 16th summer continental cup season for men and 10th for ladies.

The 2017 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix was the 24th Summer Grand Prix season in ski jumping on plastic for men and the 6th for ladies.

The 2018–19 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup was the 40th World Cup season in ski jumping for men, the 22nd official World Cup season in ski flying, and the 8th World Cup season for ladies. The season began on 17 November 2018 in Wisła for men and in Lillehammer for ladies; the season concluded on 24 March 2019 in Planica for men and in Chaykovsky for ladies.

The 2018/19 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup is the 28th in a row Continental Cup winter season in ski jumping for men and the 15th for ladies. This is also the 17th summer continental cup season for men and 11th for ladies.

The 2018 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix was the 25th Summer Grand Prix season in ski jumping on plastic for men and the 7th for ladies.

The 2019/20 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup is the 29th in a row Continental Cup winter season in ski jumping for men and the 16th for ladies. This is also the 18th summer continental cup season for men and 12th for ladies.

The 2019 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix was the 26th Summer Grand Prix season in ski jumping for men and the 8th for ladies.

The 2020–21 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup was the 42nd World Cup season in ski jumping for men, the 24th official World Cup season in ski flying, and the 10th World Cup season for women. The men's season started in November in Wisła and ended in March in Planica. The women's season started in December in Ramsau and ended in Chaykovsky.

The 2020 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix was the 27th Summer Grand Prix season in ski jumping for men and the 9th for ladies. On July 31, the International Ski Federation announced the decision that due to the cancellation of most competitions in the series, no prize will be awarded to the winner of the general classification.

The 2020/21 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup is the 30th in a row Continental Cup winter season in ski jumping for men and the 17th for ladies. This is also the 19th summer continental cup season for men.

The 2021–22 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup is the 43rd World Cup season in ski jumping for men, the 25th official World Cup season in ski flying, and the 11th World Cup season for women. The men's season started in November in Nizhny Tagil, Russia and will conclude in March in Planica, Slovenia. The women's season will start in December in Lillehammer, Norway and will conclude in March in Chaykovsky, Russia.

The 2021 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix was the 28th Summer Grand Prix season in ski jumping for men and the 10th for women.

References

  1. "Men HS132: Courchevel" (PDF). International Ski Federation . Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  2. "Men HS134: Wisła" (PDF). International Ski Federation . Retrieved 23 July 2016.
  3. "Men HS108: Hinterzarten" (PDF). International Ski Federation . Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  4. "Men HS117: Einsiedeln" (PDF). International Ski Federation . Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  5. "Men HS131: Hakuba" (PDF). International Ski Federation . Retrieved 26 August 2016.
  6. "Men HS131: Hakuba" (PDF). International Ski Federation . Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  7. "Men HS140: Chaykovsky" (PDF). International Ski Federation . Retrieved 10 September 2016.
  8. "Men HS140: Chaykovsky" (PDF). International Ski Federation . Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  9. "Men HS95: Hinzenbach" (PDF). International Ski Federation . Retrieved 1 October 2016.
  10. "Men HS140: Klingenthal" (PDF). International Ski Federation . Retrieved 2 October 2016.
  11. "Ladies HS96: Courchevel" (PDF). International Ski Federation . Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  12. "Ladies HS106: Chaykovsky" (PDF). International Ski Federation . Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  13. "Ladies HS106: Chaykovsky" (PDF). International Ski Federation . Retrieved 11 September 2015.
  14. "Men Team HS134: Wisła" (PDF). International Ski Federation . Retrieved 22 July 2016.