1975–76 Four Hills Tournament

From WikiProjectMed
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The 24th edition of the annual Four Hills Tournament was won by East German Jochen Danneberg.

For the tenth time, three out of the four events were won by the same athlete. However, for the fourth time within six years, it was not enough to win the Tournament: Toni Innauer only placed 24th in Innsbruck and lost too much ground to his competitors.

Four Hills Tournament
VenuesSchattenbergschanze, Bergiselschanze, Große Olympiaschanze, Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze
LocationWest Germany, Austria
Dates30 December 1975 (1975-12-30) – 6 January 1976 (1976-01-06)
Competitors96 from 15 nations
Medalists
gold medal 
silver medal 
bronze medal 

Participating nations and athletes

Nation Number of Athletes Athletes
 West Germany 6 Alfred Grosche, Peter Leitner, Frank Rombach, Sepp Schwinghammer, Rudi Tusch, Albert Wursthorn
 Austria 10 Reinhold Bachler, Rupert Gürtler, Walter Habersatter jr., Toni Innauer, Hans Millonig, Willi Pürstl, Karl Schnabl, Walter Schwabl, Hans Wallner, Rudolf Wanner
Bulgaria Bulgaria 4 Valentin Bozhkov, Peter Dimitrov, Ivan Iankov, Zdravko Idravkov
 Canada 6 Kim Fripp, Donald Grady, Richard Grady, Richard Graves, Paul Martin, Peter Wilson
Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 6 Jaroslav Balcar, Jindřich Balcar, Ivo Felix, Rudolf Höhnl, Zdeněk Janouch, Karel Kodejška, Leoš Škoda
 East Germany 8 Dietmar Aschenbach, Hans-Georg Aschenbach, Jochen Danneberg, Bernd Eckstein, Henry Glaß, Dietrich Kampf, Rainer Schmidt, Martin Weber
 Finland 6 Harri Blumen, P. Hyvävinen, Tauno Käyhkö, Tapio Räisänen, Esko Rautionaho, Jouko Törmänen
 France 4 Jacques Gaillard, Philippe Jacoberger, Gilbert Poirot, Michel Roche
 Norway 7 Per Bergerud, Odd Grette, Finn Halvorsen, Bjarne Næs, Johan Sætre, Kai Solbustad
 Poland 5 Stanisław Bobak, Adam Krzysztofiak, Tadeusz Pawlusiak, Aleksander Stołowski, Janusz Waluś
Soviet Union Soviet Union 7 Aleksey Borovitin, Yury Ivanov, Yury Kalinin, Aleksandr Karapuzov, Gariy Napalkov, Sergey Saychik, Sergey Suslikov
 Sweden 9 Odd Brandsegg, Lennart Elimä, Christer Karlsson, Håkon Lindbäck, Thomas Lundgren, Anders Lundqvist, Esa Mattila, Rolf Nordgren, N.O. Westberg
 Switzerland 6 Josef Bonetti, Ernst Egloff, Robert Mösching, Hans Schmid, Walter Steiner, Ernst von Grünigen
 United States 5 Jim Denney, Jerry Martin, Chris McNeill, Ron Steele, Greg Windsperger
 Yugoslavia 6 Janez Demšar, Branko Dolhar, Janez Loštrek, Marko Mlakar, Bogdan Norčič, Peter Štefančič

Results

Oberstdorf

West Germany Schattenbergschanze, Oberstdorf
30 December 1975[1]

Rank Name Points
1 Austria Toni Innauer 252.2
2 East Germany Jochen Danneberg 249.8
3 Austria Reinhold Bachler 247.1
4 East Germany Hans-Georg Aschenbach 242.8
5 Poland Stanisław Bobak 239.2
6 Austria Rudolf Wanner 239.0
7 Austria Karl Schnabl 238.2
8 East Germany Bernd Eckstein 237.0
9 Switzerland Walter Steiner 236.1
10 West Germany Sepp Schwinghammer 229.8

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

West Germany Große Olympiaschanze, Garmisch-Partenkirchen
1 January 1976[2]

Rank Name Points
1 Austria Toni Innauer 231.3
2 Austria Karl Schnabl 229.6
3 East Germany Jochen Danneberg 227.5
4 Austria Reinhold Bachler 214.7
5 Soviet Union Aleksey Borovitin 213.0
6 Switzerland Ernst von Grünigen 212.9
7 Poland Tadeusz Pawlusiak 212.5
8 East Germany Hans-Georg Aschenbach 212.2
9 East Germany Dietmar Aschenbach 208.6
10 Soviet Union Aleksandr Karapuzov 207.7

Innsbruck

Austria Bergiselschanze, Innsbruck
4 January 1976[3]

After his two victories, Toni Innauer only placed 24th (181.5 pts), losing over 30 points to his closest competitors and falling back to 4th place in the overall ranking.

Rank Name Points
1 East Germany Jochen Danneberg 220.9
2 Austria Karl Schnabl 219.6
3 Austria Reinhold Bachler 217.7
4 Switzerland Walter Steiner 208.3
5 Austria Rudolf Wanner 205.4
6 Czechoslovakia Rudolf Höhnl 203.0
7 Austria Hans Wallner 198.1
8 Austria Walter Schwabl 196.5
Norway Johan Sætre 196.5
10 West Germany Sepp Schwinghammer 195.7

Bischofshofen

Austria Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze, Bischofshofen
6 January 1976[4]

Rank Name Points
1 Austria Toni Innauer 236.2
2 Poland Stanisław Bobak 225.5
3 Norway Johan Sætre 225.0
4 Austria Karl Schnabl 223.5
5 Austria Reinhold Bachler 222.4
6 East Germany Jochen Danneberg 222.0
7 Austria Rudolf Wanner 218.0
8 East Germany Bernd Eckstein 216.9
9 Czechoslovakia Rudolf Höhnl 212.2
10 Soviet Union Aleksey Borovitin 211.2

Final ranking

Rank Name Oberstdorf Garmisch-Partenkirchen Innsbruck Bischofshofen Points
1 East Germany Jochen Danneberg 2nd 3rd 1st 6th 920.2
2 Austria Karl Schnabl 7th 2nd 2nd 4th 910.9
3 Austria Reinhold Bachler 3rd 4th 3rd 5th 901.9
4 Austria Toni Innauer 1st 1st 24th 1st 901.2
5 Austria Rudolf Wanner 6th 13th 5th 7th 868.9
6 Poland Stanisław Bobak 5th 22nd 15th 2nd 851.4
7 Switzerland Walter Steiner 9th 24th 4th 14th 848.6
8 Czechoslovakia Rudolf Höhnl 11th 15th 6th 9th 847.8
9 East Germany Bernd Eckstein 8th 27th 16th 8th 834.8
10 West Germany Sepp Schwinghammer 10th 26th 10th 11th 831.6

References

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

External links