FIS Ski Jumping World Cup


The FIS Ski Jumping World Cup is the world's highest level of ski jumping and the FIS Ski Flying World Cup as the subdivisional part of the competition. It was founded by Torbjørn Yggeseth for the 1979/80 season and organized by the International Ski Federation. Ladies began competing during the 2011/12 season.
The rounds are hosted primarily in Europe, with regular stops in Japan and rarely in North America. These have been hosted in 20 different countries around the world for both men and ladies: Austria, Bosnia, Canada, Czech Republic, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Norway, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Korea, Sweden, Switzerland and the United States.
Summer Grand Prix is the top level summer competition on plastic. The lower competitive circuits include the Continental Cup, the FIS Cup, the FIS Race and the Alpen Cup.

Global map of all world cup hosts

The maps display all 64 locations around the globe that have hosted World Cup events for men and ladies at least one time in the history of the competition. Pyeongchang in 2017 was the latest new host.
Four Hills Tournament
Nordic Tour ; Raw Air
Swiss Tour
Bohemia Tour
Nordic Tour
FIS Team Tour

Scoring system

Each season consists of 25–30 competitions, usually two competitions on the same hill during a weekend. One competition consists of a qualifying round; first round, with 50 competitors; and second round, with 30. Qualifying round for the main event was introduced in 1990 to limit the number of competitors: the top 10 jumpers in FIS ranking qualify directly to the first round, while the rest of the jumpers fight for the remaining 40 spots. The top 30 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.

Men's Individual

Ladies's Individual

Men's team

Ladies's team

Mixed team

Men's standings

The table below shows the three highest ranked jumpers each year.

Overall

Nations Cup

Ski Flying

Ski Jumping (JP) Cup

including ski flying. The winner thus received a smaller version of the Crystal Globe trophy. This title
was distinct from the overall World Cup, which included ski flying results.
There are other tournaments as part of the World Cup:

K.O.P. International Ski Flying Week

Nordic Tournament

Raw Air

Planica7

Swiss Tournament

Bohemia Tournament

FIS Team Tour

Willingen Five

Titisee-Neustadt Five

Ladies' standings

Overall

Ladies Raw Air

Russia Tour Blue Bird

Nations Cup

Lillehammer Triple

Titles

Overall

Ski Flying

Ski Jumping (JP) Cup

Men's general statistics

Wins

Podiums

Top ten appearances

update: 10 March 2020

One country podium sweep

Ski flying section

EventsWinners
12751

Wins

Podiums

Top ten appearances

update: 16 February 2020

Ladies' statistics

Wins

Wins per season

Podiums

Podiums per season

Consecutive wins

Average points per season

As of 2 May 2020

Team events

Individual team wins

Ladies' team

Men's team

Mixed

Youngest winners

Youngest on podium

Oldest winners

Oldest on podium

Wins in a season

Podiums in a season

Most points in a season

Highest overall advantage

Average points per competition

Consecutive wins

Overall leader by total events

Individual starts

Consecutive podiums

Ski flying leader by total events

updated: 10 March 2020

World Cup winners by nations

The table below lists those nations which have won at least one World Cup race.

Men

Men

Mixed

Ladies

Men's team

Ladies' team

Timeline calendar

Last updated: 9 March 2020

World Cup finals

Men

Ladies

World Cup all-time records

Shared wins

Men

Ladies

Key people

was a founder and a leader of this competition for the first 13 seasons. A new function called Race Director was introduced by International Ski Federation in 1992/93 with its first president Walter Hofer. Before that season this function didn't exist. In the premiere Ladies 2011/12 World Cup season Chika Yoshida was entitled as World Cup Coordinator, but since the season 2012/13 Yoshida is called Race Director.

Men

Ladies