| Ski Jumping World Cup |
|---|
 |
| Genre | Ski jumping, ski flying |
|---|
| Locations | Europe Asia North America |
|---|
| Inaugurated | 27 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) |
|---|
| Founder | Torbjørn Yggeseth |
|---|
| Organised by | International Ski Federation |
|---|
| People | Current race directors: Sandro Pertile (M) Chika Yoshida (L) |
|---|
| Sponsor | Viessmann, Konica Minolta |
|---|
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][a]
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
Women's Individual
Men's team
Women's team
Mixed team
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)
|
| 2025/26
|
Domen Prevc
|
Ryōyū Kobayashi (2)
|
Daniel Tschofenig
|
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
|
| 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
|
Germany (11)
|
| 2024/25
|
Austria
|
Germany (6)
|
Norway (9)
|
| 2025/26
|
Austria (23)
|
Slovenia (4)
|
Japan (4)
|
Ski Flying
Ski Jumping (JP) Cup
*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.
Men's tournaments
There are other tournaments as part of the World Cup:
K.O.P. International Ski Flying Week
Nordic Tournament
Raw Air
Planica7
Swiss Tournament
Bohemia Tournament
FIS Team Tour
Willingen Five (2018–2020) / Six (2021)
Titisee-Neustadt Five
PolSKI Tour
Women's standings
Overall
Ski Flying
Nations Cup
Raw Air
Russia Tour Blue Bird
Alpenkrone
Lillehammer Triple
Silvester Tournament
2 Nights Tour
Titles
Overall
|
Ski Flying
Ski Jumping (JP) Cup
|
Men's general statistics
update: 29 March 2026
Wins
|
Podiums
|
Top ten appearances
|
Ski flying section
update: 29 March 2026
Wins
|
Podiums
|
Top ten appearances
|
Women's statistics
retired female ski jumper
update: 28 March 2026
Wins
Wins per season
Consecutive wins
Top 10 appearances
Average points per season
|
Podiums
Podiums per season
Overall leader (in yellow) by total events
Most points in a season
|
Team events
Individual team wins
(includes team, super team & mixed-team events)
Men's team
Men's super team
|
Women's team
Women's super team
Mixed team
|
|
Various
Youngest winners
Oldest winners
Youngest on podium
Oldest on podium
Consecutive wins
Consecutive podiums
Wins in a season
Podiums in a season
Most points in a season
|
Most points in a season to 1992/93
Most points in a ski flying season
Highest win rate in a season
Highest podium rate in a season
Average points per competition
Average points per competition to 1992/93
Highest overall advantage
Highest overall advantage to 1992/93
Career total points
Individual starts
Overall leader (in yellow) by total events
All seasons included (yellow jersey introduced in 1988/89 season).
Ski flying leader by total events
|
updated: 29 March 2026
World Cup winners by nation
The table below lists those nations which have won at least one World Cup race (correct as of 29 March 2026).
Men
- after 1177 individual events (13 double wins).
Men's team
- after 125 men's team events.
Men's super team
- after 9 men's super team events.
|
Women
- after 290 individual events (2 double wins).
Women's team
- after 8 women's team events.
Women's super team
- after 3 women's super team events.
Mixed team
|
those countries no longer exist
Hosts
Men
Mixed
Women's super team
updated: 29 March 2026
|
Women
Men's team
Women's team
Men's super team
|
Timeline calendar
Last updated: 29 March 2026
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
- 2026 —
Planica (37)
|
Women
|
|
- 2022 —
Oberhof
- 2023 —
Lahti
- 2024 —
Planica
- 2025 —
Lahti (2)
- 2026 —
Planica (3)
|
World Cup all-time records
Men
| Category |
Name |
Record
|
| 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 |
129
|
| individual ski flying wins |
Gregor Schlierenzauer |
14
|
| individual ski flying podiums |
Stefan Kraft |
25
|
| team wins |
Stefan Kraft |
18
|
| team podiums |
Stefan Kraft |
48
|
| individual top 10s |
Janne Ahonen |
248
|
| individual ski flying top 10s |
Stefan Kraft |
43
|
| career total points |
Stefan Kraft |
16197
|
| most times winning individual points |
Noriaki Kasai |
466x
|
| consecutive wins |
Janne Ahonen Matti Hautamäki Thomas Morgenstern Gregor Schlierenzauer Ryōyū Kobayashi Domen Prevc |
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 |
Peter Prevc Domen 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 |
Peter Prevc Domen 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 (2025/26) |
Domen Prevc |
954
|
| 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
|
| most wins on a large hill |
Gregor Schlierenzauer |
36
|
| most wins on a normal hill |
Matti Nykänen |
15
|
| 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 (2 rounds, Vikersund '11) |
Gregor Schlierenzauer
Johan Remen Evensen |
498,6
|
| 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
|
update: 29 March 2026
Women
| Category |
Name |
Record
|
| overall titles |
Sara Takanashi |
4
|
| consecutive overall titles |
Nika Prevc 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 |
224
|
| career total points |
Sara Takanashi |
15271
|
| consecutive wins |
Sara Takanashi Nika Prevc |
10
|
| consecutive podiums |
Sara Takanashi |
27
|
| wins in a single season (2025/26) |
Nika Prevc |
18
|
| podiums in a single season (2025/26) |
Nika Prevc |
28
|
| overall points in a single season (2025/26) |
Nika Prevc |
2676
|
| 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 |
272
|
| 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: 28 March 2026
One country podium sweep
Men
Women
Shared wins
Men
Women
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 |
3–8
|
Armin Kogler Roger Ruud |
1 January 1982 |
17 January 1982 |
8
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Armin Kogler |
17 January 1982 |
27 February 1983 |
9–12
|
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
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Armin Kogler Matti Nykänen |
26 March 1983 |
10 December 1983 |
13
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Armin Kogler Matti Nykänen Horst Bulau |
10 December 1983 |
18 February 1984 |
13
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Matti Nykänen |
18 February 1984 |
26 January 2013 |
14–46
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Matti Nykänen Gregor Schlierenzauer |
26 January 2013 |
3 February 2013 |
46
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Gregor Schlierenzauer |
3 February 2013 |
streak in run |
47–53
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Multiple major titles
All with at least five different major titles
On 6 March 2026, Domen Prevc became the only ski jumper in history to achieve all 7 prestigious individual titles.[12]
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.[13] 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
- ^ Note that the rounds hosted in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Slovakia were held when the countries were still part of Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia respectively.
- ^ Matti Nykänen would be best by points in ski flying in 1983 and 1984 seasons, but at that time they didn't yet specifically count ski flights, nor did they award small crystal globes. It is the only title he is missing. In 1991 when he still competed they already awarded small globes, but he was in downfall.
References
External links
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- See also: World championships
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