Jump to content

List of Olympic medalists in ski jumping

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is the complete list of Olympic medalists in ski jumping.

It is controversial whether the Olympic Games from 1924 to 1960 were normal hill or large hill competitions. Even the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has no clear consensus on this.[1] [2][3][4]

Men

[edit]

Normal hill individual

[edit]
Games Gold Silver Bronze
1964 Innsbruck
details
Veikko Kankkonen
 Finland
Toralf Engan
 Norway
Torgeir Brandtzæg
 Norway
1968 Grenoble
details
Jiří Raška
 Czechoslovakia
Reinhold Bachler
 Austria
Baldur Preiml
 Austria
1972 Sapporo
details
Yukio Kasaya
 Japan
Akitsugu Konno
 Japan
Seiji Aochi
 Japan
1976 Innsbruck
details
Hans-Georg Aschenbach
 East Germany
Jochen Danneberg
 East Germany
Karl Schnabl
 Austria
1980 Lake Placid
details
Toni Innauer
 Austria
Manfred Deckert
 East Germany
Hirokazu Yagi
 Japan
not awarded
1984 Sarajevo
details
Jens Weißflog
 East Germany
Matti Nykänen
 Finland
Jari Puikkonen
 Finland
1988 Calgary
details
Matti Nykänen
 Finland
Pavel Ploc
 Czechoslovakia
Jiří Malec
 Czechoslovakia
1992 Albertville
details
Ernst Vettori
 Austria
Martin Höllwarth
 Austria
Toni Nieminen
 Finland
1994 Lillehammer
details
Espen Bredesen
 Norway
Lasse Ottesen
 Norway
Dieter Thoma
 Germany
1998 Nagano
details
Jani Soininen
 Finland
Kazuyoshi Funaki
 Japan
Andreas Widhölzl
 Austria
2002 Salt Lake City
details
Simon Ammann
 Switzerland
Sven Hannawald
 Germany
Adam Małysz
 Poland
2006 Turin
details
Lars Bystøl
 Norway
Matti Hautamäki
 Finland
Roar Ljøkelsøy
 Norway
2010 Vancouver
details
Simon Ammann
 Switzerland
Adam Małysz
 Poland
Gregor Schlierenzauer
 Austria
2014 Sochi
details
Kamil Stoch
 Poland
Peter Prevc
 Slovenia
Anders Bardal
 Norway
2018 Pyeongchang
details
Andreas Wellinger
 Germany
Johann André Forfang
 Norway
Robert Johansson
 Norway
2022 Beijing
details
Ryōyū Kobayashi
 Japan
Manuel Fettner
 Austria
Dawid Kubacki
 Poland
Medals
Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  Finland 3 2 2 7
2  Austria 2 3 4 9
3  Norway 2 3 4 9
4  Japan 2 3 1 6
5  East Germany 2 2 0 4
6  Switzerland 2 0 0 2
7  Poland 1 1 2 4
8  Czech Republic 1 1 1 3
 Germany 1 1 1 3
10  Slovenia 0 1 0 1
Total 10 nations 16 17 15 48

Large hill individual

[edit]

The individual large hill event is one of only ten events which have featured in every Winter Olympic Games.

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1924 Chamonix
details
Jacob Tullin Thams
 Norway
Narve Bonna
 Norway
Anders Haugen
 United States
1928 St. Moritz
details
Alf Andersen
 Norway
Sigmund Ruud
 Norway
Rudolf Burkert
 Czechoslovakia
1932 Lake Placid
details
Birger Ruud
 Norway
Hans Beck
 Norway
Kaare Wahlberg
 Norway
1936 Garmisch-Partenkirchen
details
Birger Ruud
 Norway
Sven Eriksson
 Sweden
Reidar Andersen
 Norway
1948 St. Moritz
details
Petter Hugsted
 Norway
Birger Ruud
 Norway
Thorleif Schjelderup
 Norway
1952 Oslo
details
Arnfinn Bergmann
 Norway
Torbjørn Falkanger
 Norway
Karl Holmström
 Sweden
1956 Cortina d'Ampezzo
details
Antti Hyvärinen
 Finland
Aulis Kallakorpi
 Finland
Harry Glaß
 United Team of Germany
1960 Squaw Valley
details
Helmut Recknagel
 United Team of Germany
Niilo Halonen
 Finland
Otto Leodolter
 Austria
1964 Innsbruck
details
Toralf Engan
 Norway
Veikko Kankkonen
 Finland
Torgeir Brandtzæg
 Norway
1968 Grenoble
details
Vladimir Belousov
 Soviet Union
Jiří Raška
 Czechoslovakia
Lars Grini
 Norway
1972 Sapporo
details
Wojciech Fortuna
 Poland
Walter Steiner
 Switzerland
Rainer Schmidt
 East Germany
1976 Innsbruck
details
Karl Schnabl
 Austria
Toni Innauer
 Austria
Henry Glaß
 East Germany
1980 Lake Placid
details
Jouko Törmänen
 Finland
Hubert Neuper
 Austria
Jari Puikkonen
 Finland
1984 Sarajevo
details
Matti Nykänen
 Finland
Jens Weißflog
 East Germany
Pavel Ploc
 Czechoslovakia
1988 Calgary
details
Matti Nykänen
 Finland
Erik Johnsen
 Norway
Matjaž Debelak
 Yugoslavia
1992 Albertville
details
Toni Nieminen
 Finland
Martin Höllwarth
 Austria
Heinz Kuttin
 Austria
1994 Lillehammer
details
Jens Weißflog
 Germany
Espen Bredesen
 Norway
Andreas Goldberger
 Austria
1998 Nagano
details
Kazuyoshi Funaki
 Japan
Jani Soininen
 Finland
Masahiko Harada
 Japan
2002 Salt Lake City
details
Simon Ammann
 Switzerland
Adam Małysz
 Poland
Matti Hautamäki
 Finland
2006 Turin
details
Thomas Morgenstern
 Austria
Andreas Kofler
 Austria
Lars Bystøl
 Norway
2010 Vancouver
details
Simon Ammann
 Switzerland
Adam Małysz
 Poland
Gregor Schlierenzauer
 Austria
2014 Sochi
details
Kamil Stoch
 Poland
Noriaki Kasai
 Japan
Peter Prevc
 Slovenia
2018 Pyeongchang
details
Kamil Stoch
 Poland
Andreas Wellinger
 Germany
Robert Johansson
 Norway
2022 Beijing
details
Marius Lindvik
 Norway
Ryōyū Kobayashi
 Japan
Karl Geiger
 Germany
Medals
Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  Norway 8 7 7 22
2  Finland 5 4 2 11
3  Poland 3 2 0 5
4  Austria 2 4 4 10
5  Switzerland 2 1 0 3
6  Japan 1 2 1 4
7  Germany 1 1 1 3
8  United Team of Germany 1 0 1 2
9  Soviet Union 1 0 0 1
10  Czechoslovakia 0 1 2 3
 East Germany 0 1 2 3
12  Sweden 0 1 1 2
13  Slovenia 0 0 1 1
 United States 0 0 1 1
 Yugoslavia 0 0 1 1
Total 15 nations 23 23 23 69

Large hill team

[edit]
Games Gold Silver Bronze
1988 Calgary
details
 Finland
Ari-Pekka Nikkola
Matti Nykänen
Tuomo Ylipulli
Jari Puikkonen
 Yugoslavia
Primož Ulaga
Matjaž Zupan
Matjaž Debelak
Miran Tepeš
 Norway
Ole Christian Eidhammer
Jon Inge Kjørum
Ole Gunnar Fidjestøl
Erik Johnsen
1992 Albertville
details
 Finland
Ari-Pekka Nikkola
Mika Laitinen
Risto Laakkonen
Toni Nieminen
 Austria
Heinz Kuttin
Ernst Vettori
Martin Höllwarth
Andreas Felder
 Czechoslovakia
František Jež
Tomáš Goder
Jaroslav Sakala
Jiří Parma
1994 Lillehammer
details
 Germany
Hansjörg Jäkle
Christof Duffner
Dieter Thoma
Jens Weißflog
 Japan
Jin'ya Nishikata
Takanobu Okabe
Noriaki Kasai
Masahiko Harada
 Austria
Heinz Kuttin
Christian Moser
Stefan Horngacher
Andreas Goldberger
1998 Nagano
details
 Japan
Takanobu Okabe
Hiroya Saitō
Masahiko Harada
Kazuyoshi Funaki
 Germany
Sven Hannawald
Martin Schmitt
Hansjörg Jäkle
Dieter Thoma
 Austria
Reinhard Schwarzenberger
Martin Höllwarth
Stefan Horngacher
Andreas Widhölzl
2002 Salt Lake City
details
 Germany
Michael Uhrmann
Stephan Hocke
Sven Hannawald
Martin Schmitt
 Finland
Matti Hautamäki
Veli-Matti Lindström
Risto Jussilainen
Janne Ahonen
 Slovenia
Damjan Fras
Primož Peterka
Robert Kranjec
Peter Žonta
2006 Turin
details
 Austria
Andreas Widhölzl
Andreas Kofler
Martin Koch
Thomas Morgenstern
 Finland
Tami Kiuru
Janne Happonen
Janne Ahonen
Matti Hautamäki
 Norway
Lars Bystøl
Bjørn Einar Romøren
Tommy Ingebrigtsen
Roar Ljøkelsøy
2010 Vancouver
details
 Austria
Wolfgang Loitzl
Andreas Kofler
Thomas Morgenstern
Gregor Schlierenzauer
 Germany
Michael Neumayer
Andreas Wank
Martin Schmitt
Michael Uhrmann
 Norway
Anders Bardal
Tom Hilde
Johan Remen Evensen
Anders Jacobsen
2014 Sochi
details
 Germany
Andreas Wank
Marinus Kraus
Andreas Wellinger
Severin Freund
 Austria
Michael Hayböck
Thomas Morgenstern
Thomas Diethart
Gregor Schlierenzauer
 Japan
Reruhi Shimizu
Taku Takeuchi
Daiki Ito
Noriaki Kasai
2018 Pyeongchang
details
 Norway
Daniel-André Tande
Andreas Stjernen
Johann André Forfang
Robert Johansson
 Germany
Karl Geiger
Stephan Leyhe
Richard Freitag
Andreas Wellinger
 Poland
Maciej Kot
Stefan Hula
Dawid Kubacki
Kamil Stoch
2022 Beijing
details
 Austria
Stefan Kraft
Daniel Huber
Jan Hörl
Manuel Fettner
 Slovenia
Lovro Kos
Cene Prevc
Timi Zajc
Peter Prevc
 Germany
Constantin Schmid
Stephan Leyhe
Markus Eisenbichler
Karl Geiger
Medals
Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  Germany 3 3 1 7
2  Austria 3 2 2 7
3  Finland 2 2 0 4
4  Norway 1 0 3 4
5  Japan 1 1 1 3
6  Slovenia 0 1 1 2
7  Yugoslavia 0 1 0 1
8  Czechoslovakia 0 0 1 1
 Poland 0 0 1 1
Total 9 nations 10 10 10 30

Women

[edit]

Normal hill individual

[edit]
Games Gold Silver Bronze
2014 Sochi
details
Carina Vogt
 Germany
Daniela Iraschko-Stolz
 Austria
Coline Mattel
 France
2018 Pyeongchang
details
Maren Lundby
 Norway
Katharina Althaus
 Germany
Sara Takanashi
 Japan
2022 Beijing
details
Urša Bogataj
 Slovenia
Katharina Althaus
 Germany
Nika Križnar
 Slovenia
Medals
Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  Germany 1 2 0 3
2  Slovenia 1 0 1 2
3  Norway 1 0 0 1
4  Austria 0 1 0 1
5  France 0 0 1 1
 Japan 0 0 1 1
Total 6 nations 3 3 3 9

Mixed

[edit]

Normal hill team

[edit]
Games Gold Silver Bronze
2022 Beijing
details
 Slovenia
Nika Križnar
Timi Zajc
Urša Bogataj
Peter Prevc
 ROC (ROC)
Irma Makhinia
Danil Sadreev
Irina Avvakumova
Evgenii Klimov
 Canada
Alexandria Loutitt
Matthew Soukup
Abigail Strate
Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes
Medals
Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  Slovenia 1 0 0 1
2  ROC (ROC) 0 1 0 1
3  Canada 0 0 1 1
Total 3 nations 1 1 1 3

Statistics

[edit]

Athlete medal leaders (men)

[edit]

Three or more Olympic medals in ski jumping:[5]

Athlete Nation Medal Winning Span Gold Silver Bronze Total
Matti Nykänen  Finland 1984–1988 4 1 0 5
Simon Ammann  Switzerland 2002–2010 4 0 0 4
Jens Weißflog  East Germany
 Germany
1984–1994 3 1 0 4
Thomas Morgenstern  Austria 2006–2014 3 1 0 4
Kamil Stoch  Poland 2014–2018 3 0 1 4
Andreas Wellinger  Germany 2014–2018 2 2 0 4
Peter Prevc  Slovenia 2014–2022 1 2 1 4
Gregor Schlierenzauer  Austria 2010–2014 1 1 2 4
Martin Höllwarth  Austria 1992–1998 0 3 1 4
Adam Małysz  Poland 2002–2010 0 3 1 4
Matti Hautamäki  Finland 2002–2006 0 3 1 4
Kazuyoshi Funaki  Japan 1998 2 1 0 3
Birger Ruud  Norway 1932–1948 2 1 0 3
Andreas Kofler  Austria 2006–2010 2 1 0 3
Toni Nieminen  Finland 1992 2 0 1 3
Sven Hannawald  Germany 1998–2002 1 2 0 3
Martin Schmitt  Germany 1998–2010 1 2 0 3
Dieter Thoma  Germany 1994–1998 1 1 1 3
Masahiko Harada  Japan 1994–1998 1 1 1 3
Lars Bystøl  Norway 2006 1 0 2 3
Robert Johansson  Norway 2018 1 0 2 3
Jari Puikkonen  Finland 1980–1988 1 0 2 3
Andreas Widhölzl  Austria 1998–2006 1 0 2 3
Noriaki Kasai  Japan 1994–2014 0 2 1 3
Heinz Kuttin  Austria 1992–1994 0 1 2 3
Karl Geiger  Germany 2018–2022 0 1 2 3

Most individual medals (athletes with at least one gold medal or at least two medals including at least one silver medal):[5]

Athlete Nation Medal Winning Span Gold Silver Bronze Total
Simon Ammann  Switzerland 2002–2010 4 0 0 4
Matti Nykänen  Finland 1984–1988 3 1 0 4
Kamil Stoch  Poland 2014–2018 3 0 0 3
Birger Ruud  Norway 1932–1948 2 1 0 3
Jens Weißflog  East Germany
 Germany
1984–1994 2 1 0 3
Andreas Wellinger  Germany 2014–2018 1 1 0 2
Toralf Engan  Norway 1964 1 1 0 2
Jiří Raška  Czech Republic 1968 1 1 0 2
Toni Innauer  Austria 1976–1980 1 1 0 2
Espen Bredesen  Norway 1994 1 1 0 2
Jani Soininen  Finland 1998 1 1 0 2
Kazuyoshi Funaki  Japan 1998 1 1 0 2
Veikko Kankkonen  Finland 1964 1 1 0 2
Ryōyū Kobayashi  Japan 2022 1 1 0 2
Karl Schnabl  Austria 1976 1 0 1 2
Toni Nieminen  Finland 1992 1 0 1 2
Lars Bystøl  Norway 2006 1 0 1 2
Thomas Morgenstern  Austria 2006–2014 1 0 0 1
Jacob Tullin Thams  Norway 1924 1 0 0 1
Alf Andersen  Norway 1928 1 0 0 1
Petter Hugsted  Norway 1948 1 0 0 1
Arnfinn Bergmann  Norway 1952 1 0 0 1
Antti Hyvärinen  Finland 1956 1 0 0 1
Helmut Recknagel  Germany 1960 1 0 0 1
Vladimir Belousov  Soviet Union 1968 1 0 0 1
Wojciech Fortuna  Poland 1972 1 0 0 1
Jouko Törmänen  Finland 1980 1 0 0 1
Hans-Georg Aschenbach  Germany 1976 1 0 0 1
Yukio Kasaya  Japan 1972 1 0 0 1
Ernst Vettori  Austria 1992 1 0 0 1
Marius Lindvik  Norway 2022 1 0 0 1
Adam Małysz  Poland 2002–2010 0 3 1 4
Martin Höllwarth  Austria 1992–1998 0 2 0 2
Matti Hautamäki  Finland 2002–2006 0 1 1 2
Pavel Ploc  Czech Republic 1984–1988 0 1 1 2
Peter Prevc  Slovenia 2014 0 1 1 2

Athlete medal leaders (women)

[edit]

Athletes with at least two medals.

Athlete Nation Medal Winning Span Gold Silver Bronze Total
Urša Bogataj  Slovenia 2022 2 0 0 2
Nika Križnar  Slovenia 2022 1 0 1 2
Katharina Althaus  Germany 2018–2022 0 2 0 2

Most individual medals (athletes with at least one gold medal or at least two medals including at least one silver medal).

Athlete Nation Medal Winning Span Gold Silver Bronze Total
Katharina Althaus  Germany 2018–2022 0 2 0 2

Medals per year

[edit]
× NOC did not exist or did not participate # Number of medals won by the NOC NOC did not win any medals
Nation 24 28 32 36 48 52 56 60 64 68 72 76 80 84 88 92 94 98 02 06 10 14 18 22 Total
 Austria 1 2 3 2 5 2 2 3 3 2 2 27
 Canada 1 1
 Czechoslovakia 1 2 1 2 1 × × × × × × × × 7
 Finland 2 1 2 2 3 3 3 2 2 2 22
 France 1 1
 Germany × × × × × × × × × × × 3 1 2 1 2 4 3 16
 United Team of Germany × × × × × × 1 1 × × × × × × × × × × × × × × × 2
 East Germany × × × × × × × × × × 1 3 1 2 × × × × × × × × × 7
 Japan × × 3 1 1 4 2 1 2 14
 Norway 2 2 3 2 3 2 4 1 2 3 4 1 1 5 1 36
 Poland 1 2 2 2 2 1 10
 ROC (ROC) × × × × × × × × × × × × × × × × × × × × × × × 1 1
 Slovenia × × × × × × × × × × × × × × × 1 2 4 7
 Soviet Union × × × × × × 1 × × × × × × × × × 1
 Sweden 1 1 2
 Switzerland 1 2 2 5
 United States 1 1
 Yugoslavia × × 2 × × × × × × × × 2
Total 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 6 6 6 6 6 6 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 12 12 15 162

Medal sweep events

[edit]

These are events in which athletes from one NOC won all three medals.

Games Event Nation Gold Silver Bronze
1932 Lake Placid Large Hill  Norway Birger Ruud Hans Beck Kaare Wahlberg
1948 St. Moritz Large Hill  Norway Petter Hugsted Birger Ruud Thorleif Schjelderup
1972 Sapporo Normal Hill  Japan Yukio Kasaya Akitsugu Konno Seiji Aochi

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Chamonix 1924 Ski Jumping Normal Hill Individual men Results". www.olympics.com.
  2. ^ "Squaw Valley 1960 Ski Jumping Normal Hill Individual men Results". www.olympics.com.
  3. ^ "Ski jumping". www.olympics.com.
  4. ^ "Olympedia – Ski Jumping". www.olympedia.org.
  5. ^ a b Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Ski Jumping". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 2020-04-17. Retrieved 2016-12-05.