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
Venue Park City
Dates February 10
Competitors 60 from 21 nations
winning score 269.0
Medalists
1st, gold medalist(s) Simon Ammann  Switzerland
2nd, silver medalist(s) Sven Hannawald  Germany
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Adam Małysz  Poland

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.

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.[1]

RankNameCountryScoreNotes
1Janne Ahonen Finland125.0
2Robert Kranjec Slovenia122.0
2Primož Peterka Slovenia122.0
4Toni Nieminen Finland119.0
5Valery Kobelev Russia118.0
5Michael Uhrmann Germany118.0
7Christof Duffner Germany117.5
7Nicolas Dessum France117.5
9Anders Bardal Norway116.0
10Robert Mateja Poland115.5
11Alan Alborn United States114.5
11Masahiko Harada Japan114.5
13Veli-Matti Lindström Finland114.0
13Andreas Küttel Switzerland114.0
15Sylvain Freiholz Switzerland112.0
16Stanislav Filimonov Kazakhstan111.5
17Choi Yong-Jik South Korea111.0
18Tommy Ingebrigtsen Norway110.5
19Jan Mazoch Czech Republic110.0
20Lars Bystøl Norway109.5
21Roar Ljøkelsøy Norway109.0
22Tomasz Pochwała Poland108.5
23Damjan Fras Slovenia108.0
24Maxim Polunin Kazakhstan106.5
24Kim Hyun-Ki South Korea106.5
26Choi Heung-Chul South Korea105.5
27Dmitry Chvykov Kyrgyzstan104.0
28Hiroki Yamada Japan103.0
29Noriaki Kasai Japan101.5
29Kang Chil-Gu South Korea101.5
31Wojciech Skupień Poland97.0
32Jan Matura Czech Republic95.5
33Andrey Lyskovets Belarus95.0
33Jakub Janda Czech Republic92.5
35Pavel Gayduk Kazakhstan92.0
36Michal Doležal Czech Republic91.5
36Brendan Doran United States91.5
38Aleksandr Korobov Kazakhstan90.5
39Clint Jones United States89.5
39Brian Welch United States89.5
41Ildar Fatkullin Russia89.0
42Aleksandr Belov Russia88.5
43Glynn Pedersen Great Britain88.0
44Jaan Jüris Estonia79.0
45Georgi Zharkov Bulgaria76.5
46Kakha Tsakadze Georgia75.0
47Volodymyr Hlyvka Ukraine72.0
48Aleksey Silayev Russia56.0
*Sven Hannawald Germany133.01[]
*Simon Ammann Switzerland132.01[]
*Adam Małysz Poland128.01[]
*Kazuyoshi Funaki Japan124.51[]
*Matti Hautamäki Finland118.51[]
*Andreas Widhölzl Austria118.01[]
*Martin Schmitt Germany117.51[]
*Peter Žonta Slovenia116.51[]
*Martin Koch Austria114.51[]
*Martin Höllwarth Austria112.51[]
*Roberto Cecon Italy103.51[]
*Stefan Horngacher Austria102.01[]

^ 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.

RankNameCountryJump 1RankJump 2RankTotal
1Simon Ammann Switzerland 133.5 1 135.5 2 269.0
2 Sven Hannawald Germany 131.0 2 136.5 1 267.5
3 Adam Małysz Poland 129.5 3 133.5 3 263.0
4 Janne Ahonen Finland 128.0 4 133.5 3 261.5
5 Veli-Matti Lindström Finland 126.5 5 126.5 7 253.0
6 Matti Hautamäki Finland 121.5 7 131.0 5 252.5
7 Martin Schmitt Germany 125.5 6 124.5 9 250.0
8 Michael Uhrmann Germany 118.0 12 127.0 6 245.0
9 Kazuyoshi Funaki Japan 119.5 10 123.5 10 243.0
10 Primož Peterka Slovenia 121.5 7 119.0 13 240.5
11 Alan Alborn United States 118.0 12 122.0 12 240.0
11 Stefan Horngacher Austria 117.5 14 122.5 11 240.0
13 Peter Žonta Slovenia 114.0 24 125.5 8 239.5
14 Martin Koch Austria 120.5 9 116.5 19 237.0
15 Robert Kranjec Slovenia 117.5 14 118.5 14 236.0
16 Toni Nieminen Finland 117.0 18 118.5 14 235.5
17 Christof Duffner Germany 117.5 14 117.5 16 235.0
18 Roar Ljøkelsøy Norway 119.0 11 114.5 24 233.5
19 Roberto Cecon Italy 117.0 18 116.0 20 233.0
20 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 Andreas Widhölzl Austria 115.0 22 115.5 21 230.5
25 Sylvain Freiholz Switzerland 113.0 27 115.0 23 228.0
25 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 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 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 Noriaki Kasai Japan 83.0 49
50 Michal Doležal Czech Republic 82.5 50

References

  1. "Results Part 3" (PDF). Salt Lake City Winter Olympics Official Report. LA84 Foundation. Retrieved 21 December 2010.
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