List of Olympic champions in ski jumping

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Ski jumping pictogram.svg
Four-time Olympic champion Matti Nykänen

The list of Olympic champions in ski jumping , broken down by competitions, lists all winners as well as the second and third places at the Olympic Winter Games in ski jumping since the first Winter Games in 1924 .

In addition, all Olympic champions are listed, including the medals from the team competition. The nation ranking forms the end of the list.

Competitions

Men

The competitions in ski jumping in men include since the Olympic Winter Games of Calgary the following three disciplines:

  • Jumping from the normal hill since the 1924 games with 23 competitions.
  • Jumping from the large hill since the 1964 games with 14 competitions.
  • Team jumping on the large hill since the games of 1988 with 8 competitions.

Women

The women's ski jumping competitions include the following discipline:

  • Jumping from the normal hill since the games of 2014 with 2 competitions.

Men

Large hill

Olympia K point gold silver bronze
1964 81 m NorwayNorway Toralf Engan FinlandFinland Veikko Kankkonen NorwayNorway Torgeir Brandtzæg
1968 90 m Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union Vladimir Belousov CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Jiří Raška NorwayNorway Lars Grini
1972 110 m Poland 1944Poland Wojciech Fortuna SwitzerlandSwitzerland Walter Steiner Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR Rainer Schmidt
1976 104 m AustriaAustria Karl Schnabl AustriaAustria Anton Innauer Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR Henry Glass
1980 114 m FinlandFinland Jouko Törmänen AustriaAustria Hubert Neuper FinlandFinland Jari Puikkonen
1984 112 m FinlandFinland Matti Nykänen Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR Jens Weißflog CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Pavel Ploc
1988 114 m FinlandFinland Matti Nykänen NorwayNorway Erik Johnsen YugoslaviaYugoslavia Matjaž Debelak
1992 120 m FinlandFinland Toni Nieminen AustriaAustria Martin Höllwarth AustriaAustria Heinz Kuttin
1994 120 m GermanyGermany Jens Weißflog NorwayNorway Espen Bredesen AustriaAustria Andreas Goldberger
1998 120 m Japan 1870Japan Kazuyoshi Funaki FinlandFinland Jani Soininen Japan 1870Japan Masahiko Harada
2002 120 m SwitzerlandSwitzerland Simon Ammann PolandPoland Adam Malysz FinlandFinland Matti Hautamäki
2006 125 m AustriaAustria Thomas Morgenstern AustriaAustria Andreas Kofler NorwayNorway Lars Bystøl
2010 125 m SwitzerlandSwitzerland Simon Ammann PolandPoland Adam Malysz AustriaAustria Gregor Schlierenzauer
2014 125 m PolandPoland Kamil Stoch JapanJapan Noriaki Kasai SloveniaSlovenia Peter Prevc
2018 125 m PolandPoland Kamil Stoch GermanyGermany Andreas Wellinger NorwayNorway Robert Johansson

Normal hill

Olympia K point gold silver bronze
1924 71 m NorwayNorway Jacob Tullin Thams NorwayNorway Narve Bonna United States 48United States Not so Haugen
1928 66 m NorwayNorway Alf Andersen NorwayNorway Sigmund Ruud Czechoslovakia 1920Czechoslovakia Rudolf Burkert
1932 61 m NorwayNorway Birger Ruud NorwayNorway Hans Beck NorwayNorway Kåre Walberg
1936 80 m NorwayNorway Birger Ruud SwedenSweden Sven Selånger NorwayNorway Reidar Andersen
1948 68 m NorwayNorway Petter Hugsted NorwayNorway Birger Ruud NorwayNorway Thorleif Schjelderup
1952 72 m NorwayNorway Arnfinn miner NorwayNorway Torbjørn Falkanger SwedenSweden Karl Holmström
1956 72 m FinlandFinland Antti Hyvärinen FinlandFinland Aulis Kallakorpi Germany team all German 1956All-German team Harry Glass
1960 80.5 m Germany team all GermanAll-German team Helmut Recknagel FinlandFinland Niilo halons AustriaAustria Otto Leodolter
1964 70 m FinlandFinland Veikko Kankkonen NorwayNorway Toralf Engan NorwayNorway Torgeir Brandtzæg
1968 70 m CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Jiří Raška AustriaAustria Reinhold Bachler AustriaAustria Baldur Preiml
1972 86 m Japan 1870Japan Yukio Kasaya Japan 1870Japan Akitsugu Konno Japan 1870Japan Seiji Aochi
1976 82 m Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR Hans-Georg Aschenbach Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR Jochen Danneberg AustriaAustria Karl Schnabl
1980 86 m AustriaAustria Anton Innauer Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR Manfred Deckert Hirokazu Yagi
Japan 1870Japan 
 
1984 90 m Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR Jens Weißflog FinlandFinland Matti Nykänen FinlandFinland Jari Puikkonen
1988 89 m FinlandFinland Matti Nykänen CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Pavel Ploc CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Jiří Malec
1992 90 m AustriaAustria Ernst Vettori AustriaAustria Martin Höllwarth FinlandFinland Toni Nieminen
1994 90 m NorwayNorway Espen Bredesen NorwayNorway Let Ottesen GermanyGermany Dieter Thoma
1998 90 m FinlandFinland Jani Soininen Japan 1870Japan Kazuyoshi Funaki AustriaAustria Andreas Widhölzl
2002 90 m SwitzerlandSwitzerland Simon Ammann GermanyGermany Sven Hannawald PolandPoland Adam Malysz
2006 95 m NorwayNorway Lars Bystøl FinlandFinland Matti Hautamäki NorwayNorway Roar Ljøkelsøy
2010 95 m SwitzerlandSwitzerland Simon Ammann PolandPoland Adam Malysz AustriaAustria Gregor Schlierenzauer
2014 95 m PolandPoland Kamil Stoch SloveniaSlovenia Peter Prevc NorwayNorway Bardal is different
2018 98 m GermanyGermany Andreas Wellinger NorwayNorway Johann André Forfang NorwayNorway Robert Johansson

team

Olympia gold silver bronze
1988 FinlandFinland Finland
Ari-Pekka Nikkola
Matti Nykänen
Tuomo Ylipulli
Jari Puikkonen
YugoslaviaYugoslavia Yugoslavia
Primož Ulaga
Matjaž Zupan
Matjaž Debelak
Miran Tepeš
NorwayNorway Norway
Ole Christian Eidhammer
Jon Inge Kjørum
Ole Gunnar Fidjestøl
Erik Johnsen
1992 FinlandFinland Finland
Ari-Pekka Nikkola
Mika Laitinen
Risto Laakkonen
Toni Nieminen
AustriaAustria Austria
Heinz Kuttin
Ernst Vettori
Martin Höllwarth
Andreas Felder
CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Czechoslovakia
František Jež
Tomáš G or
Jaroslav Sakala
Jiří Parma
1994 GermanyGermany Germany
Hansjörg Jäkle
Christof Duffner
Dieter Thoma
Jens Weißflog
Japan 1870Japan Japan
Jin'ya Nishikata
Takanobu Okabe
Noriaki Kasai
Masahiko Harada
AustriaAustria Austria
Heinz Kuttin
Christian Moser
Stefan Horngacher
Andreas Goldberger
1998 Japan 1870Japan Japan
Takanobu Okabe
Hiroya Saitō
Masahiko Harada
Kazuyoshi Funaki
GermanyGermany Germany
Sven Hannawald
Martin Schmitt
Hansjörg Jäkle
Dieter Thoma
AustriaAustria Austria
Reinhard Schwarzenberger
Martin Höllwarth
Stefan Horngacher
Andreas Widhölzl
2002 GermanyGermany Germany
Sven Hannawald
Stephan Hocke
Michael Uhrmann
Martin Schmitt
FinlandFinland Finland
Matti Hautamäki
Veli-Matti Lindström
Risto Jussilainen
Janne Ahonen
SloveniaSlovenia Slovenia
Damjan Fras
Primož Peterka
Robert Kranjec
Peter Žonta
2006 AustriaAustria Austria
Andreas Widhölzl
Andreas Kofler
Martin Koch
Thomas Morgenstern
FinlandFinland Finland
Tami Kiuru
Janne Happonen
Janne Ahonen
Matti Hautamäki
NorwayNorway Norway
Lars Bystøl
Bjørn Einar Romøren
Tommy Ingebrigtsen
Roar Ljøkelsøy
2010 AustriaAustria Austria
Wolfgang Loitzl
Andreas Kofler
Thomas Morgenstern
Gregor Schlierenzauer
GermanyGermany Germany
Michael Neumayer
Andreas Wank
Martin Schmitt
Michael Uhrmann
NorwayNorway Norway
Anders Bardal
Tom Hilde
Johan Remen Evensen
Anders Jacobsen
2014 GermanyGermany Germany
Andreas Wank
Marinus Kraus
Andreas Wellinger
Severin Freund
AustriaAustria Austria
Michael Hayböck
Thomas Morgenstern
Thomas Diethart
Gregor Schlierenzauer
JapanJapan Japan
Reruhi Shimizu
Taku Takeuchi
Daiki Itō
Noriaki Kasai
2018 NorwayNorway Norway
Daniel-André Tande
Andreas Stjernen
Johann André Forfang
Robert Johansson
GermanyGermany Germany
Karl Geiger
Stephan Leyhe
Richard Freitag
Andreas Wellinger
PolandPoland Poland
Maciej Kot
Stefan Hula
Dawid Kubacki
Kamil Stoch

total

  • Placement: Indicates the order of the athletes. This is determined by the number of gold medals. If the number is the same, the silver medals are compared, then the bronze medals.
  • Name: gives the name of the athlete.
  • Country: Name the country for which the athlete started. When changing nationality, the country for which the athlete won the last medal is named.
  • By: The year the athlete won the first medal.
  • Until: The year in which the athlete won the last medal.
  • Gold: states the number of gold medals won.
  • Silver: states the number of silver medals won.
  • Bronze: states the number of bronze medals won.
  • Total: states the number of all medals won.
space Surname country From To gold silver bronze total
1. Matti Nykänen FinlandFinland Finland 1984 1988 4th 1 - 5
2. Simon Ammann SwitzerlandSwitzerland Switzerland 2002 2010 4th - - 4th
3. Thomas Morgenstern AustriaAustria Austria 2006 2014 3 1 - 4th
3. Jens Weißflog GermanyGermany Germany 1984 1994 3 1 - 4th
5. Kamil Stoch PolandPoland Poland 2014 2018 3 - 1 4th
6th Andreas Wellinger GermanyGermany Germany 2014 2018 2 2 - 4th
7th Kazuyoshi Funaki JapanJapan Japan 1998 1998 2 1 - 3
7th Andreas Kofler AustriaAustria Austria 2006 2010 2 1 - 3
7th Birger Ruud NorwayNorway Norway 1932 1948 2 1 - 3
10. Toni Nieminen FinlandFinland Finland 1992 1992 2 - 1 3
11. Ari-Pekka Nikkola FinlandFinland Finland 1988 1992 2 - - 2
12. Sven Hannawald GermanyGermany Germany 1998 2002 1 2 - 3
12. Martin Schmitt GermanyGermany Germany 1998 2010 1 2 - 3
14th Gregor Schlierenzauer AustriaAustria Austria 2010 2014 1 1 2 4th
15th Masahiko Harada JapanJapan Japan 1994 1998 1 1 1 3
15th Dieter Thoma GermanyGermany Germany 1994 1998 1 1 1 3
17th Espen Bredesen NorwayNorway Norway 1994 1994 1 1 - 2
17th Toralf Engan NorwayNorway Norway 1964 1964 1 1 - 2
17th Johann André Forfang NorwayNorway Norway 2018 2018 1 1 - 2
17th Anton Innauer AustriaAustria Austria 1976 1980 1 1 - 2
17th Hansjörg Jäkle GermanyGermany Germany 1994 1998 1 1 - 2
17th Veikko Kankkonen FinlandFinland Finland 1964 1964 1 1 - 2
17th Takanobu Okabe JapanJapan Japan 1994 1998 1 1 - 2
17th Jiří Raška CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 1968 1968 1 1 - 2
17th Jani Soininen FinlandFinland Finland 1998 1998 1 1 - 2
17th Michael Uhrmann GermanyGermany Germany 2002 2010 1 1 - 2
17th Ernst Vettori AustriaAustria Austria 1992 1992 1 1 - 2
17th Andreas Wank GermanyGermany Germany 2010 2014 1 1 - 2
29 Lars Bystøl NorwayNorway Norway 2006 2006 1 - 2 3
29 Robert Johansson NorwayNorway Norway 2018 2018 1 - 2 3
29 Jari Puikkonen FinlandFinland Finland 1980 1988 1 - 2 3
29 Andreas Widhölzl AustriaAustria Austria 1998 2006 1 - 2 3
33. Karl Schnabl AustriaAustria Austria 1976 1976 1 - 1 2
34. Alf Andersen NorwayNorway Norway 1928 1928 1 - - 1
34. Hans-Georg Aschenbach Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR German Democratic Republic 1976 1976 1 - - 1
34. Vladimir Belousov Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union Soviet Union 1968 1968 1 - - 1
34. Arnfinn miner NorwayNorway Norway 1952 1952 1 - - 1
34. Christof Duffner GermanyGermany Germany 1994 1994 1 - - 1
34. Wojciech Fortuna PolandPoland Poland 1972 1972 1 - - 1
34. Severin friend GermanyGermany Germany 2014 2014 1 - - 1
34. Stephan Hocke GermanyGermany Germany 2002 2002 1 - - 1
34. Petter Hugsted NorwayNorway Norway 1948 1948 1 - - 1
34. Antti Hyvärinen FinlandFinland Finland 1956 1956 1 - - 1
34. Yukio Kasaya JapanJapan Japan 1972 1972 1 - - 1
34. Martin Koch AustriaAustria Austria 2006 2006 1 - - 1
34. Marinus Kraus GermanyGermany Germany 2014 2014 1 - - 1
34. Risto Laakkonen FinlandFinland Finland 1992 1992 1 - - 1
34. Mika Laitinen FinlandFinland Finland 1992 1992 1 - - 1
34. Wolfgang Loitzl AustriaAustria Austria 2010 2010 1 - - 1
34. Helmut Recknagel German Olympic flag (1959-1968) .svg Germany 1960 1960 1 - - 1
34. Hiroya Saitō JapanJapan Japan 1998 1998 1 - - 1
34. Andreas Stjernen NorwayNorway Norway 2018 2018 1 - - 1
34. Jacob Tullin Thams NorwayNorway Norway 1924 1924 1 - - 1
34. Jouko Törmänen FinlandFinland Finland 1980 1980 1 - - 1
34. Tuomo Ylipulli FinlandFinland Finland 1988 1988 1 - - 1

Women

Normal hill

Olympia K point gold silver bronze
2014 95 m GermanyGermany Carina Vogt AustriaAustria Daniela Iraschko-Stolz FranceFrance Coline Mattel
2018 98 m NorwayNorway Maren Lundby GermanyGermany Katharina Althaus JapanJapan Sara Takanashi

total

  • Placement: Indicates the order of the athletes. This is determined by the number of gold medals. If the number is the same, the silver medals are compared, then the bronze medals.
  • Name: gives the name of the athlete.
  • Country: Name the country for which the athlete started. When changing nationality, the country for which the athlete won the last medal is named.
  • By: The year the athlete won the first medal.
  • Until: The year in which the athlete won the last medal.
  • Gold: states the number of gold medals won.
  • Silver: states the number of silver medals won.
  • Bronze: states the number of bronze medals won.
  • Total: states the number of all medals won.
space Surname country From To gold silver bronze total
1. Maren Lundby NorwayNorway Norway 2018 2018 1 - - 1
1. Carina Vogt GermanyGermany Germany 2014 2014 1 - - 1

Nations ranking

space country gold silver bronze total
1. NorwayNorway Norway 11 10 14th 35
2. FinlandFinland Finland 10 8th 4th 22nd
3. GermanyGermany Germany 7th 6th 2 15th
4th AustriaAustria Austria 6th 9 10 25th
5. PolandPoland Poland 4th 3 2 9
6th SwitzerlandSwitzerland Switzerland 4th 1 - 5
7th JapanJapan Japan 3 5 4th 12
8th. Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR German Democratic Republic 2 3 2 7th
9. CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 1 2 4th 7th
10. Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union 1 - - 1
11. SloveniaSlovenia Slovenia - 1 2 3
12. Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Yugoslavia - 1 1 2
13. SwedenSweden Sweden - 1 1 2
14th United StatesUnited States United States - - 1 1
15th FranceFrance France - - 1 1

See also

Web links

This version was added to the selection of informative lists and portals on May 2, 2007 .