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1970–71 Four Hills Tournament

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In 1971, Jiří Raška became the first Czechoslovakian to win the Four Hills Tournament. For the first time, an athlete who won three out of four events did not end up winning the tournament after Ingolf Mork lost twenty points to Raška and Hubac in Innsbruck.

For the first time in four years, Raška did not actually win any event in the tournament. It was a desolate year for the two host nations: No athlete from Germany or Austria placed in the Top 15 at any event.

Four Hills Tournament
VenuesSchattenbergschanze, Bergiselschanze, Große Olympiaschanze, Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze
LocationGermany, Austria
Dates30 December 1970 (1970-12-30) – 6 January 1971 (1971-01-06)
Competitors84 from 13 nations
Medalists
gold medal
 
silver medal
 
bronze medal
 
← 1969-70
1971-72 →

Participating nations and athletes

The national groups of Germany and Austria only competed at the two events in their respective countries.

Nation Number of Athletes Athletes
 Germany 8 (+8) Günther Göllner, Alfred Grosche, Wilhelm Haydt, Franz Keller, Henrik Ohlmayr, Sepp Schwinghammer, Ernst Wursthorn, Bernd Zapf
National Group: Tim Ackermann, Georg Bühl, Peter Dubb, Helmut Fischer, Toni Guggemoos, Peter Hauser, Heini Ihle, Heinz Rudhart
 Austria 9 (+8) Reinhold Bachler, Helmut Diess, Max Golser, Walter Habersatter, Ernst Kröll, Sepp Lichtenegger, Franz Salhofer, Siegfried Scheutz, Walter Schwabl,
National Group: Edi Federer, Hermann Heindl, Hans Millonig, Karl Schnabl, Hans Wallner, Rudolf Wanner, Ernst Wimmer, Harald Winkler
Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 7 Bohumil Doležal, Rudolf Doubek, Rudolf Höhnl, Zbynek Hubac, Josef Kraus, Bohuslav Novák, Jiří Raška
 East Germany 5 Bernd Eckstein, Henry Glaß, Horst Queck, Eberhard Seifert, Wolfgang Stöhr
 Finland 3 Tauno Käyhkö, Matti Niemi, Juhani Ruotsalainen
 France 3 Jacques Gaillard, Alain Macle, Gilbert Poirot
 Hungary 3 Mihály Gellér, Gyula Molnár, Antal Zámbó
 Italy 4 Giacomo Aimoni, Albino Bazana, Mario Ceccon, Bruno Patti
 Norway 6 Jo Inge Bjørnebye, Odd Grette, Ingolf Mork, Didrik Müller Ellefsen, Frithjof Prydz, Bent Tomtum
 Poland 6 Jan Bieniek, Stanisław Gąsienica Daniel, Adam Krzysztofiak, Tadeusz Pawlusiak, Józef Przybyla, Ryszard Witke
 Sweden 4 Karl-Erik Johansson, Eilerth Mähler, Håkon Lindbäck, Rolf Nordgren
  Switzerland 4 Hans Schmid, Walter Steiner, Ernst von Grünigen, Sepp Zehnder
 United States 4 Bill Bakke, Scott Berry, Bruce Jennings, Greg Swor
 Yugoslavia 6 Janez Demsa, Branko Dolhar, Marjan Mesec, Drago Pudgar, Peter Štefančič, Ludvik Zajc

Results

Oberstdorf

Germany Schattenbergschanze, Oberstdorf
30 December 1970[1]

Rank Name Points
1 Norway Ingolf Mork 235.8
2 Norway Bent Tomtum 234.1
3 Poland Tadeusz Pawlusiak 233.7
4 Czechoslovakia Zbynek Hubac 232.5
5 Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška 227.5
6 Czechoslovakia Rudolf Höhnl 221.6
7 East Germany Horst Queck 221.2
8 East Germany Bernd Eckstein 221.1
9 Finland Tauno Käyhkö 220.5
10 Poland Józef Przybyla 220.0

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Germany Große Olympiaschanze, Garmisch-Partenkirchen
1 January 1971[2]

Rank Name Points
1 Norway Ingolf Mork 238.0
2 Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška 235.5
3 Finland Tauno Käyhkö 229.0
4 Norway Jo Inge Bjørnebye 225.0
5 Czechoslovakia Zbynek Hubac 222.5
6 Norway Didrik Müller Ellefsen 220.5
7 East Germany Bernd Eckstein 220.0
8 Norway Odd Grette 218.0
Norway Frithjof Prydz 218.0
10 Czechoslovakia Bohuslav Novák 217.5

Innsbruck

Austria Bergiselschanze, Innsbruck
3 January 1971[3]

Rank Name Points
1 Czechoslovakia Zbynek Hubac 246.0
2 Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška 243.9
3 Czechoslovakia Rudolf Höhnl 240.2
4 Norway Bent Tomtum 237.0
5 Czechoslovakia Josef Kraus 235.9
6 Switzerland Walter Steiner 235.4
7 Finland Tauno Käyhkö 234.1
8 Norway Jo Inge Bjørnebye 233.8
9 Czechoslovakia Bohumil Doležal 230.9
10 Switzerland Hans Schmid 228.4

Bischofshofen

Austria Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze, Bischofshofen
6 January 1971[4]

Rank Name Points
1 Norway Ingolf Mork 241.2
2 Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška 238.9
3 Czechoslovakia Zbynek Hubac 226.6
4 Finland Tauno Käyhkö 225.5
5 Poland Tadeusz Pawlusiak 224.8
6 Switzerland Walter Steiner 223.3
7 Norway Frithjof Prydz 220.8
8 Czechoslovakia Josef Kraus 220.7
9 Czechoslovakia Bohumil Doležal 220.6
10 Czechoslovakia Rudolf Höhnl 219.8
Norway Didrik Müller Ellefsen 219.8

Final ranking

Rank Name Oberstdorf Garmisch-Partenkirchen Innsbruck Bischofshofen Points
1 Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška 5th 2nd 2nd 2nd 945.8
2 Norway Ingolf Mork 1st 1st 16th 1st 938.7
3 Czechoslovakia Zbynek Hubac 4th 5th 1st 3rd 927.6
4 Finland Tauno Käyhkö 9th 3rd 7th 4th 909.1
5 Czechoslovakia Rudolf Höhnl 6th 11th 3rd 11th 897.1
6 Poland Tadeusz Pawlusiak 3rd 13th 22nd 5th 890.9
7 Norway Jo Inge Bjørnebye 11th 4th 8th 14th 890.7
8 Switzerland Walter Steiner 12th 24th 6th 6th 881.3
9 Norway Frithjof Prydz 14th 8th 12th 7th 879.5
10 East Germany Bernd Eckstein 8th 7th 20th 16th 870.6

References

  1. ^ "Oberstdorf (GER)". FIS.
  2. ^ "Garmisch-Partenkirchen (GER)". FIS.
  3. ^ "Innsbruck (AUT)". FIS.
  4. ^ "Bischofshofen (AUT)". FIS.

External links

This page was last edited on 19 February 2023, at 12:25
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