List of large hills
The list of large hills contains all ski jumps in the world with a hill size of 110 to 184 meters and a K-point between 100 and 145 meters. The list contains 75 ski jumps, 37 of which have a valid FIS certificate. The list shows the size of the hill with hill size and K-point and the current hill record, as well as whether it is a plastic covered hill. Jumping competitions held on the hill under the direction of the FIS are mentioned. The largest large hill with a valid FIS certificate is the Mühlenkopfschanze ( hill size 145 meters) in Willingen with the hill record of 152.0 meters by Janne Ahonen and Jurij Tepes from 2005 and 2014.
Note: This list only deals with large hills .
- Jumps from a hill size of 185 meters (or K-point from 145 meters), so-called flying hills → list of ski flying hills .
- Jumps with a hill size of 85 to 109 meters (or with the K-point of 75 to 99 meters), so-called normal hills → list of normal hills .
Explanation
- Location: Indicates the location of the ski jump.
- Hill name : gives the name of the ski jump.
- Country: Name the country of the ski jump.
- Year of construction: Indicates when the ski jump was built. Information in (brackets) stands for the last major renovation or expansion.
- Still: Indicates whether the ski jumping hill has already been closed and, if known, the year it was closed.
- FIS: Indicates until when the ski jump was homologated by the FIS . Competitions with international participation may only be held on these jumps. The national ski association must apply to the relevant FIS sub-committee for the certificate for a hill. If the hill meets the FIS guidelines, it receives a certificate that is valid for five years. If no profile changes have been made to the hill, this certificate can be extended after five years.
- Mat: Indicates whether the ski jump has a mat allocation for use in summer.
Hillsize (meters) |
number |
---|---|
110-119 | 4th |
120-129 | 6th |
130-139 | 15th |
over 140 | 12 |
-
HS (m): HS (hill size) is the size of the ski jump in meters. The list contains all ski jumps with a hill size of 110 meters or more.
Details in (brackets) represent the width of the jury. Jumps that do not have a valid certificate are designated with the older jury width , which was used until summer 2004 . The jury width usually differs only by a few meters from the hill size. Older hills that are no longer in use have neither jury widths nor hill sizes. - KP (m): Indicates the construction point of the ski jump. Based on this value, the jumped distances are converted according to a point system. The base value is 60 points for the width of the construction point. 1.8 points are added or subtracted for each meter above or below the K-point width. Until the summer of 2004, a ski jump from a K-point of 100 meters was considered a large hill. Jumps without a valid hill size will be shown in the list from this value.
- Record (m): Calls the official hill record. Official hill records can only be set during a valid qualification round or in a valid evaluation run in competitions.
- Events: Names the competitions that were held on the ski jump. All Olympic Winter Games ( ) and Nordic World Ski Championships ( ) are mentioned. At Ski Jumping World Cup ( ) and the Nordic Combined World Cup ( ) is the last contest is called. Information in brackets stands for the Ski Jumping Continental Cup or the B World Cup in Nordic Combined.
- Image: Shows a picture of the ski jump.
Note: The list can be sorted : by clicking on a column header, the list is sorted according to this column, clicking twice reverses the sorting. Any desired sorting combination can be achieved by clicking two columns in a row.
Large hills
Individual evidence
- ↑ http://www.fis-ski.com/data/document/schanzenliste-mit-hs-01.04.2012.pdf (link not available)
- ↑ a b International Ski Competition Rules ( Memento from September 29, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Hill record regulation at skispringen.com
- ^ FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2015. Falun (SWE). Ski jumping. Innsbruck (AUT). Men Large Hill Team. Official Results. (PDF) Fédération Internationale de Ski, February 28, 2015, accessed on February 28, 2015 .
- ↑ http://www.skisprungschanzen.com/DE/Schanzen/SVK-Slowakei/Králiky/0505-Dukla/
- ↑ http://www.skisprungschanzen.com/DE/Schanzen/RUS-Russland/Krasnoyarsk/0417-Nikolayevskaya+Sopka/
- ↑ Will be completely rebuilt from 2008 to 2016 as the K 125.
- ↑ Converted to a K 90 in 2003.
- ↑ Ski jumping hill archive Switzerland
literature
- Jens Jahn, Egon Theiner: Encyclopedia of Ski Jumping. Westermann Druck, Zwickau 2004, ISBN 3-89784-099-5 .
- Tina Schlosser: Ski jumping - made understandable. Copress Verlag in the Stiebner Verlag GmbH, Munich 2001, ISBN 3-7679-0546-9 .
See also
- List of normal hills
- List of ski jumping hills
- List of Olympic ski jumping hills
- List of ski stadiums
Web links
- International Ski Competition Rules of the FIS, Volume III, Oberhofen September 2004. (PDF file)
- Ski jumping hill archive
- Ski jumping hills at Skijumping-info.de