2017–18 Four Hills Tournament

The 2017–18 Four Hills Tournament, part of the 2017–18 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup, is currently taking place at the four traditional venues of Oberstdorf, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Innsbruck and Bischofshofen, located in Germany and Austria, between 30 December 2017 and 6 January 2018.

Four Hills Tournament
at the 2017–18 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup
VenueSchattenbergschanze, Große Olympiaschanze, Bergiselschanze, Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze
LocationGermany, Austria
Dates30 December 2017 (2017-12-30) – 6 January 2018 (2018-01-06)
Medalists
gold medal 
silver medal 
bronze medal 

Kamil Stoch successfully defended his title, becoming the first ski jumper since Gregor Schlierenzauer in 2012–13 to do so. By winning all four events, Stoch became the second ski jumper in history to achieve this feat, Sven Hannawald being the first in 2001–02.

Results

Oberstdorf

Germany HS 137 Schattenbergschanze, Germany
30 December 2017[1]

RankNameNationalityJump 1 (m)Jump 2 (m)Points
1Kamil Stoch Poland126.0137.0279.7
2Richard Freitag Germany128.5127.0275.5
3Dawid Kubacki Poland126.5129.0270.1
4Stefan Kraft Austria132.0119.0262.8
5Stefan Hula Poland123.0120.5259.2
6Junshirō Kobayashi Japan126.5123.0257.1
7Johann André Forfang Norway114.5126.5255.3
7Anders Fannemel Norway129.0124.5255.3
9Markus Eisenbichler Germany128.5117.5255.1
10Andreas Wellinger Germany115.0123.0254.0

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Germany HS 140 Große Olympiaschanze, Germany
1 January 2018[2]

RankNameNationalityJump 1 (m)Jump 2 (m)Points
1Kamil Stoch Poland135.5139.5283.4
2Richard Freitag Germany132.0137.0275.8
3Anders Fannemel Norway132.5136.5270.2
4Junshirō Kobayashi Japan137.0131.5269.2
5Tilen Bartol Slovenia136.0133.5268.9
6Andreas Stjernen Norway132.0137.5268.7
7Karl Geiger Germany136.0133.5268.2
8Peter Prevc Slovenia129.0138.0266.9
9Johann André Forfang Norway124.0138.5263.4
10Stephan Leyhe Germany130.5137.5263.3

Innsbruck

Austria HS 130 Bergiselschanze, Austria
4 January 2018[3]

RankNameNationalityJump 1 (m)Jump 2 (m)Points
1Kamil Stoch Poland130.0128.5270.1
2Daniel-André Tande Norway129.5125.0255.6
3Andreas Wellinger Germany133.0126.0253.5
4Andreas Stjernen Norway125.0127.0241.1
5Jernej Damjan Slovenia127.0120.0239.9
6Junshirō Kobayashi Japan123.0121.5239.4
7Robert Johansson Norway124.5123.0237.3
8Markus Eisenbichler Germany128.5117.0236.1
9Stephan Leyhe Germany123.5119.0235.1
10Michael Hayböck Austria123.5122.5234.7

Bischofshofen

Austria HS 140 Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze, Austria
6 January 2018[4]

RankNameNationalityJump 1 (m)Jump 2 (m)Points
1Kamil Stoch Poland132.5137.0275.6
2Anders Fannemel Norway130.0139.0272.4
3Andreas Wellinger Germany129.0139.5270.5
4Stefan Kraft Austria130.5135.5268.6
5Robert Johansson Norway127.0140.0268.2
6Andreas Stjernen Norway129.5138.5267.2
7Junshirō Kobayashi Japan126.5134.5255.4
8Peter Prevc Slovenia127.5131.5253.8
9Dawid Kubacki Poland132.0127.5253.3
10Markus Eisenbichler Germany126.5129.0244.5

Overall standings

The final standings after all four events:[5]

RankNameNationalityOberstdorfGarmisch-
Partenkirchen
InnsbruckBischofshofenTotal Points
1st place, gold medalist(s)Kamil Stoch Poland279.7 (1)283.4 (1)270.1 (1)275.6 (1)1,108.8
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Andreas Wellinger Germany254.0 (10)261.2 (11)253.5 (3)270.5 (3)1,039.2
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Anders Fannemel Norway255.3 (7)270.2 (3)223.4 (16)272.4 (2)1,021.3
4Junshirō Kobayashi Japan257.1 (6)269.2 (4)239.4 (6)255.4 (7)1,021.1
5Robert Johansson Norway253.4 (11)250.5 (17)237.3 (7)268.2 (5)1,009.4
6Dawid Kubacki Poland270.1 (3)260.7 (12)218.9 (20)253.3 (9)1,003.0
7Markus Eisenbichler Germany255.1 (9)258.1 (14)236.1 (8)244.5 (10)993.8
8Daniel-André Tande Norway237.7 (20)256.4 (15)255.6 (2)242.6 (12)992.3
9Johann André Forfang Norway255.3 (7)263.4 (9)219.3 (19)239.4 (13)977.4
10Jernej Damjan Slovenia245.0 (14)259.3 (13)239.9 (5)229.9 (17)974.1

References

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