| Four Hills Tournament at the 2016–17 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Venue | Schattenbergschanze, Große Olympiaschanze, Bergiselschanze, Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze | ||||||
| Location | Germany, Austria | ||||||
| Dates | 29 December 2016 – 6 January 2017 | ||||||
| Medalists | |||||||
| 
 | |||||||
The 2016–17 Four Hills Tournament took place at the four traditional venues of Oberstdorf, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Innsbruck and Bischofshofen, located in Germany and Austria, between 29 December 2016 and 6 January 2017.
Results
Oberstdorf
 HS 137 Schattenbergschanze, Germany
 HS 137 Schattenbergschanze, Germany
30 December 2016[1]
| Rank | Name | Nationality | Jump 1 (m) | Jump 2 (m) | Points | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Stefan Kraft |  Austria | 139.0 | 134.5 | 308.0 | 
| 2 | Kamil Stoch |  Poland | 137.0 | 135.0 | 305.2 | 
| 3 | Michael Hayböck |  Austria | 135.0 | 133.0 | 296.2 | 
| 4 | Daniel-André Tande |  Norway | 130.5 | 138.5 | 295.4 | 
| 5 | Manuel Fettner |  Austria | 132.5 | 135.0 | 294.9 | 
| 6 | Markus Eisenbichler |  Germany | 135.0 | 133.5 | 293.1 | 
| 7 | Piotr Żyła |  Poland | 133.0 | 133.0 | 291.9 | 
| 8 | Cene Prevc |  Slovenia | 132.5 | 132.0 | 284.4 | 
| 9 | Jurij Tepeš |  Slovenia | 133.5 | 131.0 | 283.2 | 
| 10 | Peter Prevc |  Slovenia | 130.0 | 135.0 | 281.8 | 
Garmisch-Partenkirchen
 HS 140 Große Olympiaschanze, Germany
 HS 140 Große Olympiaschanze, Germany
1 January 2017[2]
| Rank | Name | Nationality | Jump 1 (m) | Jump 2 (m) | Points | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Daniel-André Tande |  Norway | 138.0 | 142.0 | 289.2 | 
| 2 | Kamil Stoch |  Poland | 135.5 | 143.0 | 286.0 | 
| 3 | Stefan Kraft |  Austria | 137.0 | 140.0 | 282.4 | 
| 4 | Markus Eisenbichler |  Germany | 136.5 | 139.5 | 278.9 | 
| 5 | Domen Prevc |  Slovenia | 136.0 | 139.0 | 278.5 | 
| 6 | Piotr Żyła |  Poland | 137.0 | 137.0 | 278.1 | 
| 7 | Maciej Kot |  Poland | 135.5 | 135.0 | 269.6 | 
| 8 | Stephan Leyhe |  Germany | 135.5 | 134.0 | 268.8 | 
| 9 | Vincent Descombes Sevoie |  France | 133.0 | 137.0 | 268.1 | 
| 10 | Michael Hayböck |  Austria | 133.0 | 135.5 | 265.3 | 
Innsbruck
 HS 130 Bergiselschanze, Austria
 HS 130 Bergiselschanze, Austria
 4 January 2017[3]
| Rank | Name | Nationality | Jump 1 (m) | Jump 2 (m) | Points | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Daniel-André Tande |  Norway | 128.5 | Cancelled (wind) | 125.7 | 
| 2 | Robert Johansson |  Norway | 133.0 | 123.1 | |
| 3 | Evgeniy Klimov |  Russia | 127.0 | 119.1 | |
| 4 | Kamil Stoch |  Poland | 120.5 | 117.4 | |
| 5 | Andreas Stjernen |  Norway | 122.5 | 117.1 | |
| 6 | Maciej Kot |  Poland | 121.0 | 117.0 | |
| 7 | Manuel Fettner |  Austria | 120.0 | 116.7 | |
| 8 | Piotr Żyła |  Poland | 121.0 | 116.7 | |
| 9 | Sebastian Colloredo |  Italy | 122.5 | 114.4 | |
| 10 | Noriaki Kasai |  Japan | 125.5 | 114.3 | 
Bischofshofen
 HS 140 Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze, Austria
 HS 140 Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze, Austria
 6 January 2017[4]
| Rank | Name | Nationality | Jump 1 (m) | Jump 2 (m) | Points | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kamil Stoch |  Poland | 134.5 | 138.5 | 289.2 | 
| 2 | Michael Hayboeck |  Austria | 130.5 | 142.0 | 283.3 | 
| 3 | Piotr Żyła |  Poland | 131.0 | 137.0 | 275.8 | 
| 4 | Domen Prevc |  Slovenia | 130.5 | 139.5 | 275.2 | 
| 5 | Maciej Kot |  Poland | 130.5 | 135.0 | 268.8 | 
| 6 | Richard Freitag |  Germany | 130.5 | 134.0 | 267.4 | 
| 7 | Jurij Tepeš |  Slovenia | 141.0 | 124.5 | 261.6 | 
| 8 | Stephan Leyhe |  Germany | 126.5 | 132.0 | 259.9 | 
| 9 | Karl Geiger |  Germany | 127.0 | 132.0 | 259.0 | 
| 10 | Andreas Stjernen |  Norway | 130.5 | 129.0 | 258.7 | 
Overall standings
The final standings after all four events:[5]
| Rank | Name | Nationality | Oberstdorf | Garmisch- Partenkirchen | Innsbruck | Bischofshofen | Total Points | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|  | Kamil Stoch |  Poland | 305.2 (2) | 286.0 (2) | 117.4 (4) | 289.2 (1) | 997.8 | 
|  | Piotr Żyła |  Poland | 291.9 (7) | 278.1 (6) | 116.7 (7) | 275.8 (3) | 962.5 | 
|  | Daniel-André Tande |  Norway | 295.4 (4) | 289.2 (1) | 125.7 (1) | 231.5 (26) | 941.8 | 
| 4 | Maciej Kot |  Poland | 278.9 (12) | 269.6 (7) | 117.0 (6) | 268.8 (5) | 934.3 | 
| 5 | Manuel Fettner |  Austria | 294.9 (5) | 259.5 (12) | 116.7 (7) | 255.7 (12) | 926.8 | 
| 6 | Stefan Kraft |  Austria | 308.0 (1) | 282.4 (3) | 103.3 (18) | 232.8 (25) | 926.5 | 
| 7 | Markus Eisenbichler |  Germany | 293.1 (6) | 278.9 (4) | 97.0 (29) | 255.4 (13) | 924.4 | 
| 8 | Stephan Leyhe |  Germany | 269.4 (17) | 268.8 (8) | 113.0 (11) | 259.9 (8) | 911.1 | 
| 9 | Domen Prevc |  Slovenia | 254.7 (26) | 278.5 (5) | 100.4 (25) | 275.2 (4) | 908.8 | 
| 10 | Andreas Stjernen |  Norway | 266.0 (19) | 258.5 (14) | 117.1 (5) | 258.7 (10) | 900.3 | 
References
External links
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.
