2008–09 Four Hills Tournament

The 2008–09 Four Hills Tournament was held at the four traditional venues of Oberstdorf, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Innsbruck and Bischofshofen, located in Germany and Austria.

The tournament was won by Austria's Wolfgang Loitzl, who previously had not won a single World Cup event in his career. Loitzl won the last three competitions at Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Innsbruck and Bischofshofen to claim the overall victory, and became the first Austrian to win the Four Hills since Andreas Widhölzl in 1999–2000. The opening event at Oberstdorf was won by Switzerland' s Simon Ammann, who was the overall World Cup leader at the time of the competition. Ammann also finished second overall in the Four Hills. Austria's Gregor Schlierenzauer finished third overall, while Martin Schmitt of Germany and Dimitry Vassiliev of Russia rounded out the top five.

Overall standings

[1]

RankNameNationalityTotal pointsOberstdorf (Rk)Garmisch (Rk)Innsbruck (Rk)Bis'hofen (Rk)
1 Wolfgang Loitzl  Austria 1123.7 285.2 (2) 276.3 (1) 261.0 (1) 301.2 (1)
2 Simon Ammann   Switzerland 1091.1 286.4 (1) 274.6 (2) 245.7 (8) 284.4 (2)
3 Gregor Schlierenzauer  Austria 1077.1 280.1 (4) 257.6 (4) 260.3 (2) 279.1 (4)
4 Martin Schmitt  Germany 1055.2 273.8 (5) 245.2 (8) 257.7 (3) 278.5 (5)
5 Dimitry Vassiliev  Russia 1048.1 284.4 (3) 239.6 (9) 244.9 (9) 279.2 (3)
6 Anders Jacobsen  Norway 1027.9 269.0 (6) 247.0 (7) 244.4 (10) 267.5 (7)
7 Harri Olli  Finland 1019.2 268.5 (7) 258.6 (3) 239.6 (11) 252.5 (10)
8 Thomas Morgenstern  Austria 1001.0 254.7 (11) 248.5 (6) 250.6 (5) 247.2 (16)
9 Matti Hautamäki  Finland 991.4 250.5 (13) 237.1 (10) 253.2 (4) 250.6 (12)
10 Michael Neumayer  Germany 986.3 259.8 (9) 211.2 (24) 246.5 (7) 268.8 (6)
11 Martin Koch  Austria 974.1 233.5 (23) 249.0 (5) 234.6 (14) 257.0 (9)
12 Michael Uhrmann  Germany 967.9 256.9 (10) 222.9 (14) 230.1 (16) 258.0 (8)
13 Noriaki Kasai  Japan 953.5 243.9 (17) 220.5 (16) 249.0 (6) 240.1 (19)
14 Ville Larinto  Finland 944.5 249.9 (14) 221.9 (15) 221.5 (24) 251.2 (11)
15 Stephan Hocke  Germany 937.1 247.3 (15) 214.6 (20) 226.1 (17) 249.1 (15)

Oberstdorf

HS137 Schattenbergschanze, Germany[2]
29 December 2008

RankNameNationality1st (m)2nd (m)PointsOverall FHT pointsOverall WC points (Rank)
1Simon Ammann  Switzerland136.5134.0286.4286.4 (1)685 (1)
2Wolfgang Loitzl Austria135.0134.0285.2285.2 (2)439 (3)
3Dimitry Vassiliev Russia134.5136.0284.4284.4 (3)185 (9)
4Gregor Schlierenzauer Austria133.0134.0280.1280.1 (4)560 (2)
5Martin Schmitt Germany134.5129.0273.8273.8 (5)248 (6)

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

HS140 Große Olympiaschanze, Germany[3]
1 January 2009

RankNameNationality1st (m)2nd (m)PointsOverall FHT pointsOverall WC points (Rank)
1Wolfgang Loitzl Austria134.5136.5276.3561.5 (1)539 (3)
2Simon Ammann  Switzerland140.0134.5274.6561.0 (2)765 (1)
3Harri Olli Finland133.0131.5258.6527.1 (4)284 (6)
4Gregor Schlierenzauer Austria134.0130.5257.6537.7 (3)610 (2)
5Martin Koch Austria134.5128.0249.0482.5 (11)230 (8)

Innsbruck

HS130 Bergiselschanze, Austria[4]
4 January 2009

RankNameNationality1st (m)2nd (m)PointsOverall FHT pointsOverall WC points (Rank)
1Wolfgang Loitzl Austria126.5128.5261.0822.5 (1)639 (3)
2Gregor Schlierenzauer Austria126.0127.5260.3798.0 (3)690 (2)
3Martin Schmitt Germany128.5125.5257.7776.7 (4)340 (5)
4Matti Hautamäki Finland123.5128.0253.2740.8 (9)241 (10)
5Thomas Morgenstern Austria124.5125.0250.6753.8 (8)359 (4)

Bischofshofen

HS140 Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze, Austria[5]
6 January 2009

RankNameNationality1st (m)2nd (m)PointsOverall FHT pointsOverall WC points (Rank)
1Wolfgang Loitzl Austria142.5141.5301.21123.7 (1)739 (3)
2Simon Ammann  Switzerland137.5140.5284.41091.1 (2)877 (1)
3Dimitry Vassiliev Russia138.0138.5279.21048.1 (5)303 (8)
4Gregor Schlierenzauer Austria138.5136.0279.11077.1 (3)740 (2)
5Martin Schmitt Germany138.5136.5278.51055.2 (4)385 (4)

See also

  • 2008–09 Ski Jumping World Cup

References

  1. Full standings Archived 2010-03-03 at the Wayback Machine International Ski Federation (FIS)
  2. Official results: Oberstdorf Archived 2010-02-25 at the Wayback Machine, International Ski Federation (FIS)
  3. Official results: Garmisch-Partenkirchen Archived 2010-02-25 at the Wayback Machine, International Ski Federation (FIS)
  4. Official results: Innsbruck Archived 2009-01-19 at the Wayback Machine, International Ski Federation (FIS)
  5. Official results: Bischofshofen Archived 2010-02-25 at the Wayback Machine, International Ski Federation (FIS)
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