Maren Lundby

Maren Lundby (born 7 September 1994) is a Norwegian ski jumper. She is one of the most successful contemporary ski jumpers, male or female, having won three consecutive World Cup overall titles (an all-time record shared with Adam Małysz), thirty individual World Cup wins, and gold medals at the 2018 Winter Olympics and 2019 World Championships.

Maren Lundby
Lundby in Hinzenbach, 2017
Country Norway
Born (1994-09-07) 7 September 1994
Gjøvik, Norway
Height1.71 m (5 ft 7 in)
Ski clubKolbukameratene IL
Personal best141.5 m (464 ft)
Lillehammer, 11 March 2019
World Cup career
Seasons2012–present
Individual wins30
Team wins1
Indiv. podiums62
Team podiums5
Indiv. starts140
Team starts6
Overall titles3 (2018, 2019, 2020)
Updated on 12 March 2020.

Ski jumping career

Lundby represents the Kolbukameratene IL ski club. She made her debut in the Continental Cup, the highest level in women's ski jumping at the time, on 12 August 2007 with a 56th place in Bischofsgruen. At age 14, she made history as the first female ski jumper in a World Championship, when she jumped with bib number 1 at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2009 in Liberec. On 6 September 2010, she made the first jump when the new Midtstubakken in Oslo was opened. She landed on 87 meters.[1] March 14 2019, Lundby won the first women's edition of Raw Air. March 12 2020, Lundby won the second women's edition of Raw Air, and also became the first woman to win the World Cup three years in a row, and the first ski jumper to do so since Adam Małysz in 2001–2003.

World Cup

Standings

Season Overall L3 RA BB
2011/12 26N/AN/AN/A
2012/13 23N/AN/AN/A
2013/14 7N/AN/AN/A
2014/15 14N/AN/AN/A
2015/16 6N/AN/AN/A
2016/17 N/AN/AN/A
2017/18 N/AN/A
2018/19 6
2019/20 N/AN/A

Individual wins

No. Season Date Location Hill Size
1 2016/1710 December 2016   Nizhny TagilTramplin Stork HS100 (night)NH
2 15 January 2017   SapporoMiyanomori HS100NH
3 28 January 2017   RâșnovTrambulina Valea Cărbunării HS100NH
4 11 February 2017   LjubnoSavina Ski Jumping Center HS95NH
5 2017/181 December 2017   LillehammerLysgårdsbakken HS98 (night)NH
6 17 December 2017   HinterzartenRothaus-Schanze HS108NH
7 13 January 2018   SapporoMiyanomori HS100NH
8 14 January 2018   SapporoMiyanomori HS100NH
9 19 January 2018   ZaōYamagata HS102 (night)NH
10 20 January 2018   ZaōYamagata HS102 (night)NH
11 27 January 2018   LjubnoSavina Ski Jumping Center HS94NH
12 4 March 2018   RâșnovTrambulina Valea Cărbunării HS97NH
13 11 March 2018   OsloHolmenkollbakken HS134LH
14 2018/1913 January 2019   SapporoŌkurayama HS137LH
15 20 January 2019   ZaōYamagata HS102 (night)NH
16 26 January 2019   RâșnovTrambulina Valea Cărbunării HS97NH
17 27 January 2019   RâșnovTrambulina Valea Cărbunării HS97NH
18 2 February 2019   HinzenbachAigner-Schanze HS90NH
19 3 February 2019   HinzenbachAigner-Schanze HS90NH
20 8 February 2019   LjubnoSavina Ski Jumping Center HS94NH
21 16 February 2019   OberstdorfSchattenbergschanze HS137LH
22 17 February 2019   OberstdorfSchattenbergschanze HS137LH
23 12 March 2019   LillehammerLysgårdsbakken HS140LH
24 14 March 2019   TrondheimGranåsen HS138LH
25 24 March 2019   ChaykovskySnezhinka HS140LH
26 2019/207 December 2019   LillehammerLysgårdsbakken HS140LH
27 8 December 2019   LillehammerLysgårdsbakken HS140LH
28 26 January 2020   RâșnovTrambulina Valea Cărbunării HS97NH
29 23 February 2020   LjubnoSavina Ski Jumping Center HS94NH
30 11 March 2020   LillehammerLysgårdsbakken HS140LH

References

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