FIS Ski Flying World Cup


The FIS Ski Flying World Cup is an annual competition in ski flying, contested as part of the FIS Ski Jumping World Cup and organized by International Ski Federation. It should not be confused with the FIS Ski Flying World Championships, which are a separate one-off event contested biennially during the World Cup season, but with points not counting towards it.
Four World Championships in ski flying organized in 1992, 1994, 1996 and 1998 also counted for World Cup points.
From 1979/80 until 1989/90 ski flying world cup events were organized as K.O.P. Ski Flying Week Tournaments and were not awarded with trophies but counted in overall ranking. Ski Flying World Cup was first time officially organized from 1990/91 until 2000/01 and after eight years break again since 2008/09 have been awarded with small crystal globe. Only forty competitors can enter the competition.
First individual event organized in 1980 is the only world cup event in history where single event took three days in total. First team event in history was organized in 2000 in Planica.
There are six ski flying hills that exists in the world: Planica, Oberstdorf, Vikersund, Kulm, Harrachov and Ironwood. They are joined in the »K.O.P.« ski flying hills association founded in 1962 in Ljubljana. The only hill located outside of Europe is Ironwood which is expected to be reopened and covered with plastic mate in 2017 as the only flying hill active all year round.

Scoring system

Each season consists of 2–7 competitions, usually two competitions on the same hill during a weekend. One competition consists of a qualifying round, first round and second round. The top 10 jumpers in FIS ranking qualify directly to the first round, while the rest of the jumpers fight for the remaining 30 spots. The top 30 men in the first round advance to the second round, which is held in reverse order, so the best jumper in the first round jumps last. The aggregate score in the first and second rounds determine the competition results. The top 30 are awarded World Cup points. The winner gets 100 points while number 30 receives 1 point. At team events only top 8 receive points.

Individual

Men's team

Full list

Individual

Team

World Cup standings

Ski Flying

Nations Cup unofficial

Stats

EventsWinners
12550

Wins

Podiums

Top ten appearances

update: 24 March 2019

Medals table

Individual

Rank1st2nd3rdTotal
1 Gregor Schlierenzauer141419
2 Peter Prevc74112
3 Robert Kranjec65617
4 Adam Małysz64515
5 Matti Nykänen6219
6 Andreas Goldberger54413
7 Stefan Kraft53513
8 Kamil Stoch5027
9 Sven Hannawald4318
10 Martin Koch42713
11 Andreas Felder3418
12 Martin Schmitt3227
13 Takanobu Okabe3216
14 Noriaki Kasai31711
15 Ole Gunnar Fidjestøl3104
16 Matti Hautamäki3036
17 Jaroslav Sakala3014
18 Janne Ahonen2417
19 Andreas Widhölzl2316
20 Ryōyū Kobayashi2305
21 Anders Jacobsen2215
22 Jurij Tepeš2136
23 Harri Olli2114
24 Hubert Neuper2103
25 Bjørn Einar Romøren2024
26 Severin Freund2002
Werner Rathmayr2002
Alois Lipburger2002
29 Thomas Morgenstern1405
30 Roar Ljøkelsøy1304
Kazuyoshi Funaki1304
32 Andreas Stjernen1214
33 Risto Jussilainen1135
Markus Eisenbichler1135
35 Johan Remen Evensen1124
36 Primož Peterka1113
Hideharu Miyahira1113
Timi Zajc1113
39 Stephan Zünd1102
Stefan Horngacher1102
Florian Liegl1102
Ralph Gebstedt1102
43 Domen Prevc1102
44 Piotr Żyła1023
45 Janne Happonen1012
Anders Bardal1012
Akira Higashi1012
48 Per Bergerud1001
Staffan Tällberg1001
Richard Freitag1001
Robert Johansson1001
52 Simon Ammann09514
53 Andreas Wellinger0404
54 Johann André Forfang0336
55 Pavel Ploc0314
56 Christof Duffner0213
57 Tom Hilde0202
Daiki Ito0202
Anders Fannemel0202
60 Roberto Cecon0134
61/ Jens Weißflog 0123
Daniel-André Tande0123
63 Ole Bremseth0112
Dieter Thoma0112
Ari-Pekka Nikkola0112
Rune Velta0112
Jan Matura0112
Dawid Kubacki0112
69 Miran Tepeš0101
Stanislaw Bobak0101
Hans Wallner0101
Horst Bulau0101
Olav Hansson0101
Mike Holland0101
Werner Haim0101
Didier Mollard0101
Hiroya Saito0101
Espen Bredesen0101
Michael Neumayer0101
Ernst Vettori0101
Matjaž Zupan0101
Veli-Matti Lindström0101
Kenneth Gangnes0101
Evgeniy Klimov0101
85 Piotr Fijas0022
Lasse Ottesen0022
Tommy Ingebrigtsen0022
Dimitry Vassiliev0022
89 Kristian Brenden0011
Martin Höllwarth0011
André Kiesewetter0011
Armin Kogler0011
Mikael Martinsson0011
Jani Soininen0011
Ján Tánczoš0011
John Broman0011
Tuomo Ylipulli0011
Jan Boklöv0011
Per-Inge Tällberg0011
Heinz Kuttin0011
Jiří Parma0011
Tadeusz Fijas0011
Trond Jøran Pedersen0011
Thomas Klauser0011
Fritz Koch0011
Jernej Damjan0011
Roman Koudelka0011
Michael Hayböck0011

Team events

Rank1st2nd3rdTotal
186317
254817
34318
441510
51528
61315
70112
80022

Titles

Titles by country

As of 24 March 2019
RankTitles
17
26
34
42
51
1
1

Individual wins by country

As of 24 March 2019
RankWins
141
218
315
413
512
11
11
83
91
1

Total wins by country

As of 24 March 2019
RankWins
146
222
321
19
513
612
711
83
91
1

Individual team wins

As of 24 March 2019
RankWins
1 Martin Koch5
Andreas Stjernen5
Gregor Schlierenzauer5
Johann André Forfang5
5 Thomas Morgenstern4
Andreas Kofler4
Daniel-André Tande4
Robert Johansson4
Peter Prevc4
10 Veli-Matti Lindström3
Anders Jacobsen3
Matti Hautamäki3
Anders Bardal3
Robert Kranjec3
Jurij Tepeš3
Tom Hilde3
17 Wolfgang Loitzl2
Tami Kiuru2
Risto Jussilainen2
Janne Ahonen2
Anders Fannemel2
Anže Semenič2
23 Michael Uhrmann1
Jure Šinkovec1
Martin Schmitt1
Juha-Matti Ruuskanen1
Kalle Keituri1
Hansjörg Jäkle1
Jussi Hautamäki1
Johan Remen Evensen1
Sven Hannawald1
Andraž Pograjc1
Timi Zajc1
Domen Prevc1
Harri Olli1
Kenneth Gangnes1
Jakub Wolny1
Kamil Stoch1
Dawid Kubacki1
Piotr Żyła1

Various

Timeline calendar

Last updated: 16 February 2020

Individual hosts

Team hosts

Ski flying rankings overall leader