2024 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix

Ski Jumping Grand Prix
2024 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix
Discipline Men Women
Overall Austria Stefan Kraft Japan Sara Takanashi
Nations Cup  Austria  Japan
Competition
Edition 31st 13th
Locations 5 4
Individual 9 7
Mixed 1 1
Rescheduled 2 2
2023
2025→

The 2024 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix, organized by the International Ski Federation (FIS), is the 31st Summer Grand Prix season for men and the 13th for women as the most important series of ski jumping competitions in the summer and autumn of 2024.[1]

The season started on 13 August in Courchevel, France and will conclude on 6 October in Klingenthal, Germany.[2]

Vladimir Zografski from Bulgaria (men's) and Nika Vodan from Slovenia (women's) are the reigning champions from the previous season.

Season overview

The provisional calendar of events was presented in October 2023.[3] In April 2024 subcommittee for calendar planning in Prague published the proposed schedule of the Summer Grand Prix for the 2024 season.[4] The competition programs were approved at meeting in Portorož on 8 May.[5]

Unlike the autumn version of the schedule, it was decided not to hold hybrid competitions at the turn of October and November, in which the inrun track is covered with ice and the landing field is entirely covered with plastic mattings.

On 8 August, a storm damaged the counter slope on the Wisła ski jump. For this reason, the competition scheduled for 17–18 August was cancelled and moved to 14–15 September.[6]

Map of Grand Prix hosts

France Courchevel Poland Wisła Romania Râșnov Austria Hinzenbach Germany Klingenthal
Tremplin du Praz Malinka Trambulină Valea Cărbunării Aigner-Schanze Vogtland Arena

Europe

class=notpageimage|
Location of all 5 Summer Grand Prix hosts of the season

Men

The number of events in the Grand Prix history
Total Large Normal Winners
230 174 56 79

after L event in Courchevel (14 August 2024)

Calendar

N – normal hill / L – large hill
All No. Date Place (Hill) Size Winner Second Third R.
229 1 13 August 2024 France Courchevel
(Tremplin du Praz HS132)
L 173 Austria Stefan Kraft France Valentin Foubert Italy Alex Insam [7]
230 2 14 August 2024 L 174 Austria Stefan Kraft Norway Fredrik Villumstad France Valentin Foubert [8]
231 3 14 September 2024 Poland Wisła[a]
(Malinka HS134)
L 175
232 4 15 September 2024 L 176
233 5 21 September 2024 Romania Râșnov
(Trambulina HS97)
N 057
234 6 22 September 2024 N 058
235 7 28 September 2024 Austria Hinzenbach
(Aigner-Schanze HS90)
N 059
236 8 29 September 2024 N 060
237 9 5 October 2024 Germany Klingenthal
(Vogtland Arena HS140)
L 177
31st FIS Grand Prix Overall
(13 August – 5 October 2024)

Overall leaders

Individual

No.[b] Holder Date gained Place Date forfeited Place Number of competitions
1. Austria Stefan Kraft 13 August 2024 France Courchevel 2

Nations Cup

No.[c] Holder Date gained Place Date forfeited Place Number of competitions
1.  Austria 13 August 2024 France Courchevel 2

Standings

Overall

Rank after 2 of 9 events[9] Points
Austria Stefan Kraft 200
2 France Valentin Foubert 140
3 Italy Alex Insam 110
4 Norway Fredrik Villumstad 104
5 Austria Manuel Fettner 90
6 Austria Jan Hörl 85
7  Switzerland  Killian Peier 74
8 Poland Dawid Kubacki
Japan Keiichi Satō
56
10 Japan Junshirō Kobayashi 52

Nations Cup

Rank after 2 of 10 events[10] Points
 Austria 450
2  Japan 203
3  Poland 165
4  France 153
5  Norway 146
6   Switzerland  121
7  Italy 111
8  Germany 33
9  Finland 19
10  Slovenia 18

Prize money

Rank after 2 of 10 payouts[11] CHF
1 Austria Stefan Kraft 10 000
2 France Valentin Foubert 5 000
3 Italy Alex Insam
Norway Fredrik Villumstad
3 000
5 Austria Manuel Fettner 1 500
6 Austria Jan Hörl 1 000
7  Switzerland  Killian Peier 500

Women

The number of events in the Grand Prix history
Total Large Normal Winners
55 19 36 11

after L event in Courchevel (14 August 2024)

Calendar

N – normal hill / L – large hill
All No. Date Place (Hill) Size Winner Second Third R.
54 1 13 August 2024 France Courchevel
(Tremplin du Praz HS132)
L 018 Slovenia Ema Klinec Japan Sara Takanashi Austria Jacqueline Seifriedsberger [12]
55 2 14 August 2024 L 019 Japan Sara Takanashi Austria Jacqueline Seifriedsberger France Joséphine Pagnier [13]
56 3 14 September 2024 Poland Wisła[a]
(Malinka HS134)
L 020
57 4 15 September 2024 L 021
58 5 21 September 2024 Romania Râșnov
(Trambulina HS97)
N 037
59 6 22 September 2024 N 038
60 7 5 October 2024 Germany Klingenthal
(Vogtland Arena HS140)
L 022
13th FIS Grand Prix Overall
(13 August – 5 October 2024)

Overall leaders

Individual

No.[b] Holder Date gained Place Date forfeited Place Number of competitions
1. Slovenia Ema Klinec 13 August 2024 France Courchevel 14 August 2024 France Courchevel 1
2. Japan Sara Takanashi 14 August 2024 France Courchevel 1

Nations Cup

No.[c] Holder Date gained Place Date forfeited Place Number of competitions
1.  Slovenia 13 August 2024 France Courchevel 14 August 2024 France Courchevel 1
2.  Japan 14 August 2024 France Courchevel 1

Standings

Overall

Rank after 2 of 7 events[14] Points
Japan Sara Takanashi 180
2 Austria Jacqueline Seifriedsberger 140
3 Slovenia Ema Klinec 126
4 France Joséphine Pagnier 105
5 Austria Lisa Eder 95
6 Canada Alexandria Loutitt 76
7 Slovenia Nika Prevc 69
8 Japan Haruka Iwasa 64
9 China Liu Qi
Italy Annika Sieff
56

Nations Cup

Rank after 2 of 8 events[15] Points
 Japan 324
2  Austria 295
3  Slovenia 212
4  France 140
5  Canada 137
6  Czech Republic 119
7  Italy 96
8  China 58
9  Norway 22
10  United States 21

Prize money

Rank after 2 of 8 payouts[16] CHF
1 Japan Sara Takanashi 4 000
2 Slovenia Ema Klinec
Austria Jacqueline Seifriedsberger
2 500
4 France Joséphine Pagnier 1 250
5 Austria Lisa Eder 750
6 Canada Alexandria Loutitt 500
7 Japan Haruka Iwasa
Slovenia Nika Prevc
250

Mixed team

The number of events in the Grand Prix history
Total Large Normal Winners
10 5 5 4

after L event in Klingenthal (8 October 2023)

L – large hill
All No. Date Place (Hill) Size Winner Second Third R.
11 1 6 October 2024 Germany Klingenthal
(Vogtland Arena HS140)
L 006

Podium table by nation

Table showing the Grand Prix podium places (gold–1st place, silver–2nd place, bronze–3rd place) by the countries represented by the athletes.

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Austria2114
2 Japan1102
3 Slovenia1001
4 France0123
5 Norway0101
6 Italy0011
Totals (6 entries)44412

Points distribution

The table shows the number of points won in the 2024 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix for men and women.

Place 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
Individual 100 80 60 50 45 40 36 32 29 26 24 22 20 18 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Mixed 200 175 150 125 100 75 50 25

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Rescheduled from 17–18 August.
  2. ^ a b The leading position in the World Cup belongs to the competitor who has accumulated the most points in the general classification of the series in the competitions held so far. In the event of an equal number of points, the World Cup leader is the competitor who has won more competitions.
  3. ^ a b The leading position in the Nations Cup belongs to the country that has accumulated the most points in the general classification of the series in the competitions held so far.

References

  1. ^ "FIS Ski Jumping". fis-ski.com.
  2. ^ "2024 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix Calendar" (PDF). FIS. Retrieved 8 May 2024.
  3. ^ "Hybrydowe zawody i finał w listopadzie - wstępny kalendarz Letniego Grand Prix 2024". skijumping.pl. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  4. ^ "Proponowane kalendarze LGP i PŚ na sezon 2024/2025". skijumping.pl. Retrieved 13 April 2024.
  5. ^ "Krótszy sezon Letniego Grand Prix. Dodatkowy konkurs w Pucharze Świata 2024/2025". skijumping.pl. Retrieved 8 May 2024.
  6. ^ "Storm damages ski jump in Wisla - Grand Prix competitions postponed". fis-ski.com. Retrieved 9 August 2024.
  7. ^ "Men's HS132: Courchevel (FRA)" (PDF). FIS. Retrieved 13 August 2024.
  8. ^ "Men's HS132: Courchevel (FRA)" (PDF). FIS. Retrieved 14 August 2024.
  9. ^ "Men's Overall standing". FIS Ski.
  10. ^ "Men's Nations Cup standing" (PDF). FIS Ski.
  11. ^ "Men's Prize Money standing" (PDF). FIS Ski.
  12. ^ "Women's HS132: Courchevel (FRA)" (PDF). FIS. Retrieved 13 August 2024.
  13. ^ "Women's HS132: Courchevel (FRA)" (PDF). FIS. Retrieved 14 August 2024.
  14. ^ "Women's Overall standing". FIS Ski.
  15. ^ "Women's Nations Cup standing" (PDF). FIS Ski.
  16. ^ "Women's Prize Money standing" (PDF). FIS Ski.
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