1974–75 Four Hills Tournament

At the 23rd edition of the annual Four Hills Tournament, Willi Pürstl became the first Austrian tour winner since Sepp Bradl, who won the inaugural tournament.

Karl Schnabl, who only placed 35th (170.5 pts) in Oberstdorf, became the third person within five years to win three out of four events and still fail to win the tournament.

Four Hills Tournament
VenuesSchattenbergschanze, Bergiselschanze, Große Olympiaschanze, Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze
LocationWest Germany, Austria
Dates29 December 1974 (1974-12-29) – 6 January 1975 (1975-01-06)
Competitors86 from 17 nations
Medalists
gold medal 
silver medal 
bronze medal 

Participating nations and athletes

NationNumber of AthletesAthletes
 West Germany5Toni Angerer, Peter Dubb, Alfred Grosche, Sepp Schwinghammer, Rudi Tusch
 Austria8Reinhold Bachler, Edi Federer, Alois Lipburger, Hans Millonig, Alfred Pungg, Willi Pürstl, Karl Schnabl, Hans Wallner
 Canada5Richard Grady, Richard Graves, Paul Martin, Lyle Speers, Peter Wilson
Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia6Jindřich Balcar, Rudolf Höhnl, Karel Kodejška, Břetislav Novák, František Novák, Leoš Škoda
 East Germany8Dietmar Aschenbach, Hans-Georg Aschenbach, Jochen Danneberg, Henry Glaß, Dietrich Kampf, Rainer Schmidt, Eberhard Seifert, Heinz Wosipiwo
 Finland4Harri Blumen, Paavo Maunu, Esko Rautionaho, Jouko Törmänen, Kari Ylianttila
 France4Jacques Gaillard, Philippe Jacoberger, Gilbert Poirot, Michel Roche
 Hungary2Gyula Henyel, István Roman
 Italy3Marcello Bazana, Leo De Crignis, Lido Tomasi
Japan Japan6Kasuhiro Akimoto, Takao Itō, Koji Kakuta, Yūji Katsuro, Hideyuki Kuwabara, Manabu Ono
 Norway6Per Bergerud, Dag Fossum, Finn Halvorsen, Odd Hammernes, Johan Sætre, Kai Solbustad
 Poland4Stanisław Bobak, Wojciech Fortuna, Adam Krzysztofiak, Aleksander Stołowski
Soviet Union Soviet Union5Dimitri Abramow, Aleksey Borovitin, Yury Kalinin, Alexei Petrow, Sergey Suslikov
 Sweden3Odd Brandsegg, Lennart Elimä, Christer Karlsson
  Switzerland4Ernst Egloff, Robert Mösching, Hans Schmid, Ernst von Grünigen
 United States6Gene Burmeister, Jim Denney, Tom Dargay, Terry Kern, Ron Steele, Greg Windsperger
 Yugoslavia6Janez Demšar, Branko Dolhar, Bogdan Norčič, Marian Prelovšek, Danilo Pudgar, Stane Rakar

Results

Oberstdorf

West Germany Schattenbergschanze, Oberstdorf
29 December 1974[1]

RankNamePoints
1Austria Willi Pürstl217.4
2Poland Stanisław Bobak210.9
3East Germany Rainer Schmidt210.6
4Norway Finn Halvorsen203.0
5Norway Johan Sætre200.9
6Austria Edi Federer200.5
7Soviet Union Yury Kalinin199.3
8Finland Paavo Maunu198.8
9East Germany Heinz Wosipiwo194.6
10Switzerland Hans Schmid193.8

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

West Germany Große Olympiaschanze, Garmisch-Partenkirchen
1 January 1975[2]

RankNamePoints
1Austria Karl Schnabl226.2
2Finland Kari Ylianttila226.0
3Austria Hans Millonig222.2
4Austria Edi Federer221.6
5Austria Willi Pürstl220.7
6East Germany Rainer Schmidt220.3
7East Germany Hans-Georg Aschenbach220.1
8Austria Alois Lipburger216.2
9Soviet Union Sergey Suslikov213.5
10East Germany Jochen Danneberg209.4

Innsbruck

Austria Bergiselschanze, Innsbruck
3 January 1975[3]

RankNamePoints
1Austria Karl Schnabl239.6
2Austria Edi Federer233.3
3Austria Hans Wallner231.3
4Czechoslovakia Karel Kodejška226.4
5Austria Willi Pürstl226.0
6Poland Stanisław Bobak225.3
7East Germany Jochen Danneberg224.8
8Czechoslovakia Rudolf Höhnl224.3
9Austria Reinhold Bachler222.7
10East Germany Dietrich Kampf221.7

Bischofshofen

Austria Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze, Bischofshofen
6 January 1975[4]

RankNamePoints
1Austria Karl Schnabl227.0
2Czechoslovakia Karel Kodejška224.6
3East Germany Hans-Georg Aschenbach221.1
4Czechoslovakia Rudolf Höhnl220.9
5Austria Edi Federer218.8
6Austria Hans Millonig215.7
7Austria Willi Pürstl214.9
8East Germany Jochen Danneberg211.3
9East Germany Dietrich Kampf210.0
10East Germany Eberhard Seifert208.8

Final ranking

RankNameOberstdorfGarmisch-PartenkirchenInnsbruckBischofshofenPoints
1Austria Willi Pürstl1st5th5th7th879.0
2Austria Edi Federer6th4th2nd5th874.2
3Austria Karl Schnabl35th1st1st1st863.3
4Czechoslovakia Karel Kodejška11th14th4th2nd853.2
5Poland Stanisław Bobak2nd18th6th22nd839.4
6East Germany Rainer Schmidt3rd6th12th30th834.4
7Czechoslovakia Rudolf Höhnl24th22nd8th4th831.7
8East Germany Jochen Danneberg21st10th7th8th829.2
9Soviet Union Yury Kalinin7th12th19th12th821.8
10Austria Hans Wallner17th24th3rd20th821.6

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.