Espen Bredesen

Espen Bredesen
Country  Norway
Born (1968-02-02) 2 February 1968
Oslo, Norway
Height 1.76 m (5 ft 9 in)
Personal best 210 m (689 ft)
Planica, 22 March 1997
World Cup career
Seasons 19891999
Individual wins 8
Indiv. podiums 21
Team podiums 5
Yellow bibs 12
Indiv. starts 156
Team starts 8
Overall titles 1 (1994)
Four Hills titles 1 (1994)
Updated on 10 February 2016.

Espen Bredesen (born 2 February 1968) is a Norwegian former ski jumper.

Career

At World Cup level he won gold and silver medals at the 1994 Winter Olympics at Lillehammer.

At the 1992 Winter Olympics, he performed badly, coming last in the normal hill and 57th out of 59 on the large hill. He had converted from the parallel technique to the V-style just a month previously. His poor performance gave him the nickname "Espen the Eagle", based on British ski jumper Eddie 'the Eagle' Edwards.[1]

At the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 1993 in Falun, he won gold medals both in the team large hill and the individual large hill events. In the 1993/94 season, he won the Four Hills Tournament. He won gold and silver medals at the 1994 Winter Olympics at Lillehammer, and won a silver medal at the FIS Ski-Flying World Championships 1994 in Planica. Bredesen twice beat the world ski flying record with jumps of 209 meters (1994) and 210 meters (1997).

Bredesen also won the ski jumping competition at the Holmenkollen ski festival in 1993. He was awarded the Holmenkollen medal in 1994 (shared with Ljubov Egorova and Vladimir Smirnov).

World Cup

Standings

Season Overall 4H SF NT JP
1989/90 N/AN/A
1990/91 342123N/AN/A
1991/92 342618N/AN/A
1992/93 5335N/AN/A
1993/94 1st, gold medalist(s)1st, gold medalist(s)2nd, silver medalist(s)N/AN/A
1994/95 152113N/AN/A
1995/96 132110N/A13
1996/97 1620113119
1997/98 43452655
1998/99 1015599
1999/00 7976

Wins

No. Season Date Location Hill Size
1 1992/9311 March 1993  Norway LillehammerLysgårdsbakken K120LH
2 14 March 1993  Norway OsloHolmenkollbakken K110LH
3 28 March 1993  Slovenia PlanicaBloudkova velikanka K120LH
4 1993/9411 December 1993  Slovenia PlanicaSrednja Bloudkova K90NH
5 1 January 1994  West Germany Garmisch-PartenkirchenGroße Olympiaschanze K107LH
6 6 January 1994  Austria BischofshofenPaul-Ausserleitner-Schanze K120LH
7 15 January 1994  Czech Republic LiberecJeštěd B K120LH
8 1994/955 February 1995  Sweden FalunLugnet K90 (night)NH

WR statement

Bredesen's statement after his first world record in Planica 1994 when he jumped 209m:

References

Records
Preceded by
Toni Nieminen
World's longest ski jump
18 March 1994 – 22 March 1997
Succeeded by
Lasse Ottesen
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