Ski jumping at the 2002 Winter Olympics – Normal hill individual

Men's normal hill individual
at the XIX Olympic Winter Games
Pictogram for ski jumping
VenuePark City
DatesFebruary 10
Competitors60 from 21 nations
winning score269.0
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Simon Ammann
 Switzerland
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Sven Hannawald
 Germany
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Adam Małysz
 Poland
← 1998
2006 →

The men's normal hill individual ski jumping competition for the 2002 Winter Olympics was held in Park City, Utah. Both qualifying and the final rounds took place on 10 February 2002 after heavy wind caused a cancellation of the qualifying round on 9 February 2002.[1]

Results

Qualifying

Twelve skiers were pre-qualified, on the basis of their World Cup performance, meaning that they directly advanced to the final round. These skiers still jumped in the qualifying round, but they were not included with non-pre-qualified skiers in the standings. The fifty-four skiers who were not pre-qualified competed for thirty-eight spots in the final round.[2]

Rank Name Country Score Notes
1 Janne Ahonen  Finland 125.0
2 Robert Kranjec  Slovenia 122.0
2 Primož Peterka  Slovenia 122.0
4 Toni Nieminen  Finland 119.0
5 Valery Kobelev  Russia 118.0
5 Michael Uhrmann  Germany 118.0
7 Christof Duffner  Germany 117.5
7 Nicolas Dessum  France 117.5
9 Anders Bardal  Norway 116.0
10 Robert Mateja  Poland 115.5
11 Alan Alborn  United States 114.5
11 Masahiko Harada  Japan 114.5
13 Veli-Matti Lindström  Finland 114.0
13 Andreas Küttel  Switzerland 114.0
15 Sylvain Freiholz  Switzerland 112.0
16 Stanislav Filimonov  Kazakhstan 111.5
17 Choi Yong-Jik  South Korea 111.0
18 Tommy Ingebrigtsen  Norway 110.5
19 Jan Mazoch  Czech Republic 110.0
20 Lars Bystøl  Norway 109.5
21 Roar Ljøkelsøy  Norway 109.0
22 Tomasz Pochwała  Poland 108.5
23 Damjan Fras  Slovenia 108.0
24 Maxim Polunin  Kazakhstan 106.5
24 Kim Hyun-Ki  South Korea 106.5
26 Choi Heung-Chul  South Korea 105.5
27 Dmitry Chvykov  Kyrgyzstan 104.0
28 Hiroki Yamada  Japan 103.0
29 Noriaki Kasai  Japan 101.5
29 Kang Chil-Gu  South Korea 101.5
31 Wojciech Skupień  Poland 97.0
32 Jan Matura  Czech Republic 95.5
33 Andrey Lyskovets  Belarus 95.0
33 Jakub Janda  Czech Republic 92.5
35 Pavel Gayduk  Kazakhstan 92.0
36 Michal Doležal  Czech Republic 91.5
36 Brendan Doran  United States 91.5
38 Aleksandr Korobov  Kazakhstan 90.5
39 Clint Jones  United States 89.5
39 Brian Welch  United States 89.5
41 Ildar Fatkullin  Russia 89.0
42 Aleksandr Belov  Russia 88.5
43 Glynn Pedersen  Great Britain 88.0
44 Jaan Jüris  Estonia 79.0
45 Georgi Zharkov  Bulgaria 76.5
46 Kakha Tsakadze  Georgia 75.0
47 Volodymyr Hlyvka  Ukraine 72.0
48 Aleksey Silayev  Russia 56.0
* Sven Hannawald  Germany 133.0 [1]
* Simon Ammann  Switzerland 132.0 [1]
* Adam Małysz  Poland 128.0 [1]
* Kazuyoshi Funaki  Japan 124.5 [1]
* Matti Hautamäki  Finland 118.5 [1]
* Andreas Widhölzl  Austria 118.0 [1]
* Martin Schmitt  Germany 117.5 [1]
* Peter Žonta  Slovenia 116.5 [1]
* Martin Koch  Austria 114.5 [1]
* Martin Höllwarth  Austria 112.5 [1]
* Roberto Cecon  Italy 103.5 [1]
* Stefan Horngacher  Austria 102.0 [1]

^ 1: These skiers were pre-qualified; they did perform jumps in the qualification round, but were not ranked with the non-pre-qualified jumpers.

Final

The final consisted of two jumps, with the top thirty after the first jump qualifying for the second jump. The combined total of the two jumps was used to determine the final ranking.

Rank Bib Name Country Jump 1 Rank Jump 2 Rank Total
1st place, gold medalist(s) 53 Simon Ammann  Switzerland 133.5 1 135.5 2 269.0
2nd place, silver medalist(s) 59 Sven Hannawald  Germany 131.0 2 136.5 1 267.5
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 60 Adam Małysz  Poland 129.5 3 133.5 3 263.0
4 42 Janne Ahonen  Finland 128.0 4 133.5 3 261.5
5 47 Veli-Matti Lindström  Finland 126.5 5 126.5 7 253.0
6 57 Matti Hautamäki  Finland 121.5 7 131.0 5 252.5
7 55 Martin Schmitt  Germany 125.5 6 124.5 9 250.0
8 35 Michael Uhrmann  Germany 118.0 12 127.0 6 245.0
9 51 Kazuyoshi Funaki  Japan 119.5 10 123.5 10 243.0
10 36 Primož Peterka  Slovenia 121.5 7 119.0 13 240.5
11 46 Alan Alborn  United States 118.0 12 122.0 12 240.0
11 52 Stefan Horngacher  Austria 117.5 14 122.5 11 240.0
13 50 Peter Žonta  Slovenia 114.0 24 125.5 8 239.5
14 54 Martin Koch  Austria 120.5 9 116.5 19 237.0
15 43 Robert Kranjec  Slovenia 117.5 14 118.5 14 236.0
16 41 Toni Nieminen  Finland 117.0 18 118.5 14 235.5
17 40 Christof Duffner  Germany 117.5 14 117.5 16 235.0
18 32 Roar Ljøkelsøy  Norway 119.0 11 114.5 24 233.5
19 49 Roberto Cecon  Italy 117.0 18 116.0 20 233.0
20 34 Masahiko Harada  Japan 117.5 14 114.5 24 232.0
20 Tommy Ingebrigtsen  Norway 116.5 20 115.5 21 232.0
22 Nicolas Dessum  France 114.0 24 117.5 16 231.5
22 Andreas Küttel  Switzerland 114.0 24 117.5 16 231.5
24 58 Andreas Widhölzl  Austria 115.0 22 115.5 21 230.5
25 Sylvain Freiholz  Switzerland 113.0 27 115.0 23 228.0
25 56 Martin Höllwarth  Austria 115.0 22 113.0 28 228.0
27 Anders Bardal  Norway 116.5 20 110.5 29 227.0
28 Damjan Fras  Slovenia 110.5 30 114.5 24 225.0
29 48 Valery Kobelev  Russia 111.0 29 113.5 27 224.5
30 Choi Heung-Chul  South Korea 110.5 30 105.5 30 216.0
31 Lars Bystøl  Norway 110.5 30 104.5 31 215.0
32 Stanislav Filimonov  Kazakhstan 111.5 28 98.0 32 209.5
33 44 Hiroki Yamada  Japan 109.5 33
34 Choi Yong-Jik  South Korea 109.0 34
35 Jan Mazoch  Czech Republic 108.5 35
36 Kim Hyun-Ki  South Korea 106.0 36
37 Robert Mateja  Poland 104.5 37
38 Maxim Polunin  Kazakhstan 103.5 38
39 Jakub Janda  Czech Republic 103.0 39
40 Tomasz Pochwała  Poland 102.0 40
41 Dmitry Chvykov  Kyrgyzstan 101.5 41
42 Andrey Lyskovets  Belarus 98.0 42
42 Wojciech Skupień  Poland 98.0 42
44 Brendan Doran  United States 96.5 44
44 Pavel Gayduk  Kazakhstan 96.5 44
46 Kang Chil-Gu  South Korea 96.0 46
47 Jan Matura  Czech Republic 91.5 47
48 Aleksandr Korobov  Kazakhstan 85.5 48
49 45 Noriaki Kasai  Japan 83.0 49
50 Michal Doležal  Czech Republic 82.5 50

References

  1. ^ "Ski Jumping at the 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Games: Men's Normal Hill, Individual". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 1 September 2019.
  2. ^ "Results Part 3" (PDF). Salt Lake City Winter Olympics Official Report. LA84 Foundation. Retrieved 21 December 2010.

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