2008–09 FIS Ski Flying World Cup

FIS Ski Flying World Cup 2008/09
Winners
Overall Gregor Schlierenzauer
Nations Cup (unofficial)Austria
Competitions
Venues4
Individual6
Team3

The 2008/09 FIS Ski Flying World Cup was the 12th official World Cup season in ski flying awarded with small crystal globe as the subdiscipline of FIS Ski Jumping World Cup. Competition with small globe award returned this season after eight years long break.[1]

Map of World Cup hosts

Bad Mitterndorf Oberstdorf Vikersund Planica
Kulm Heini-Klopfer Vikersundbakken Letalnica bratov Gorišek

Europe

Calendar

Men's Individual

All No. Date Place (Hill) Size Winner Second Third Ski flying leader R.
694 1 10 January 2009 Bad Mitterndorf
(Kulm HS200)
F 070 Gregor Schlierenzauer Simon Ammann Martin Koch G. Schlierenzauer [2]
695 2 11 January 2009 F 071 Gregor Schlierenzauer Harri Olli Simon Ammann [3]
703 3 14 February 2009 Oberstdorf
(Heini-Klopfer HS213)
F 072 Harri Olli Anders Jacobsen J. Remen Evensen [4]
707 4 15 March 2009 Vikersund
(Vikersundbakken HS207)
F 073 Gregor Schlierenzauer Simon Ammann Dimitry Vassiliev [5]
708 5 20 March 2009 Planica
(Letalnica b. Gorišek HS215)
F 074 Gregor Schlierenzauer Adam Małysz Dimitry Vassiliev [6]
709 6 22 March 2009 F 075 Harri Olli Adam Małysz Simon Ammann
Robert Kranjec
[7]
12th FIS Ski Flying Men's Overall
(10 January – 22 March 2009)
Gregor Schlierenzauer Harri Olli Simon Ammann Ski Flying Overall

Men's team

All No. Date Place (Hill) Size Winner Second Third R.
42 1 15 February 2009 Oberstdorf
(Heini-Klopfer HS213)
F 006  Finland
Kalle Keituri
Juha-Matti Ruuskanen
Matti Hautamäki
Harri Olli
 Russia
Denis Kornilov
Pavel Karelin
Ilya Rosliakov
Dimitry Vassiliev
 Austria
Wolfgang Loitzl
Markus Eggenhofer
Andreas Kofler
Martin Koch
[8]
44 2 14 March 2009 Vikersund
(Vikersundbakken HS207)
F 007  Austria
Martin Koch
Wolfgang Loitzl
Thomas Morgenstern
Gregor Schlierenzauer
 Finland
Matti Hautamäki
Kalle Keituri
Ville Larinto
Harri Olli
 Norway
Johan Remen Evensen
Bjørn Einar Romøren
Anders Bardal
Anders Jacobsen
[9]
45 3 21 March 2009 Planica
(Letalnica bratov Gorišek HS215)
F 008  Norway
Tom Hilde
Johan Remen Evensen
Anders Jacobsen
Anders Bardal
 Poland
Kamil Stoch
Łukasz Rutkowski
Stefan Hula
Adam Małysz
 Russia
Denis Kornilov
Pavel Karelin
Ilya Rosliakov
Dimitry Vassiliev
[10]

  Nordic Tournament (part of)
  FIS Team Tour (part of)

Standings

Ski Flying

Rank after 6 events 10/01/2009
Kulm
11/01/2009
Kulm
14/02/2009
Oberstdorf
15/03/2009
Vikersund
20/03/2009
Planica
22/03/2009
Planica
Total
Gregor Schlierenzauer 100 100 32 100 100 45 477
2 Harri Olli 24 80 100 36 32 100 372
3 Simon Ammann 80 60 50 80 40 60 370
4 Martin Koch 60 45 24 50 18 24 221
5 Anders Jacobsen 50 50 80 9 9 22 220
6 Dimitry Vassiliev 40 60 60 40 200
7 Robert Kranjec 22 15 14 45 36 60 192
Adam Małysz 32 80 80 192
9 Matti Hautamäki 29 40 45 24 14 4 156
10 Anders Bardal 26 11 36 50 20 143
11 Johan Remen Evensen 11 20 60 26 7 7 131
12 Wolfgang Loitzl 36 26 10 16 22 18 128
13 Martin Schmitt 20 22 16 22 11 26 117
14 Emmanuel Chedal 32 24 22 20 16 114
15 Tom Hilde 15 32 7 45 3 102
16 Andreas Küttel 29 29 24 15 97
17 Ville Larinto 45 36 10 2 93
18 Thomas Morgenstern 40 29 8 4 10 91
19 Roar Ljøkelsøy 18 14 20 16 13 81
20 Noriaki Kasai 40 3 36 79
21 Michael Neumayer 12 18 6 18 12 66
22 Kamil Stoch 26 32 58
23 Markus Eggenhofer 16 1 9 15 5 46
24 Kalle Keituri 26 12 6 44
25 Roman Koudelka 14 29 43
26 Bjørn Einar Romøren 13 13 15 41
Pavel Karelin 9 12 5 3 12 41
28 Michael Uhrmann 10 16 13 1 40
29 Vegard Haukø Sklett 13 4 20 37
30 Jernej Damjan 6 29 35

Nations Cup (unofficial)

Rank after 9 events Points
1 Austria 1924
2 Norway 1728
3 Finland 1475
4 Russia 973
5 Slovenia 927
6 Germany 743
7 Poland 670
8 Switzerland 467
9 Japan 353
10 Czech Republic 172
11 France 130
12 Kazakhstan 50
13 Italy 25
14 United States 15
15 Sweden 11
16 Ukraine 6

References

  1. ^ "2008/09 FIS Ski Flying World Cup final standings" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 20 March 2009.
  2. ^ "HS200: Kulm" (PDF). International Ski Federation. Retrieved 10 January 2009.
  3. ^ "HS200: Kulm" (PDF). International Ski Federation. Retrieved 11 January 2009.
  4. ^ "HS213: Oberstdorf" (PDF). International Ski Federation. Retrieved 14 February 2009.
  5. ^ "HS207: Vikersund" (PDF). International Ski Federation. Retrieved 15 March 2009.
  6. ^ "HS215: Planica" (PDF). International Ski Federation. Retrieved 20 March 2009.
  7. ^ "HS215: Planica" (PDF). International Ski Federation. Retrieved 22 March 2009.
  8. ^ "Team HS213: Oberstdorf" (PDF). International Ski Federation. Retrieved 15 February 2009.
  9. ^ "Team HS207: Vikersund" (PDF). International Ski Federation. Retrieved 14 March 2009.
  10. ^ "Team HS215: Planica" (PDF). International Ski Federation. Retrieved 21 March 2009.