Ski jumping world cup 2005/06
World Cup 2005/06 | |
winner | |
Overall World Cup | Jakub Janda |
Four Hills Tournament | Jakub Janda / Janne Ahonen |
Nordic Tournament | Thomas Morgenstern |
Nations ranking | Austria |
Competitions | |
Venues | 16 |
Individual competitions | 22nd |
Team competitions | 2 |
Called off | 1 (made up) |
Canceled | 1 |
← 2004/05 | 2006/07 → |
The Ski Jumping World Cup 2005/06 (official sponsor name : e-on Ruhrgas FIS Ski Jumping World Cup 2005/06 ) was a series of competitions held by the FIS World Ski Association between November 25, 2005 and March 19, 2006 at 16 different locations in Europe and Asia Ski jumping . The original plan was to hold 23 individual and two team competitions. One individual competition had to be canceled, but could be rescheduled the next day, another had to be canceled without a result, so that 22 individual competitions were included in the evaluation. The Czech Jakub Janda won the overall standings, followed by the Finnish defending champion Janne Ahonen and the Swiss Andreas Küttel in second and third place . The national championship was won by defending champion Austria , ahead of the teams from Norway and Finland .
Changes to the regulations
At the beginning of the season, the following changes to the regulations came into force: The quota regulation, which regulates the maximum number of participants in a nation, will be changed. Regularly only six instead of the previous eight jumpers per country can compete. However, with additional starting places for the World Cup leader and the leader of the Nations Cup, the number can increase to up to eight. In the future, the jumpers will have ten seconds instead of the previous five seconds to drive off from the start bar after approval by the assistant to the race director. This is to increase the possibility of the trainers influencing the starting time. Jump suits must have a uniform cut in the future. This is intended to counteract a material battle.
Results and ratings
World Cup overview
* = Replacement for the jumping event canceled the day before, only one competition run
** = Replacement venue for Trondheim, where jumping was not possible due to lack of snow.
Ratings
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Final result after 24 jumps | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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See also
Web links
Footnotes
- ↑ FIS reduces the number of starters in the World Cup
- ↑ More green light? - FIS is planning tests at the SGP
- ↑ Innovations leave a positive impression on Walter Hofer
- ↑ FIS absolutely wants to prevent manipulation