1991–92 FIS Ski Flying World Cup
Winners | |
---|---|
Individual | Werner Rathmayr |
Nations Cup unofficial | Austria |
Competitions | |
Venues | 2 |
Individual | 3 |
Cancelled | 1 |
← 1990/91 1992/93 → |
The 1991/92 FIS Ski Flying World Cup was the 2nd official World Cup season in ski flying awarded with small crystal globe as the subdiscipline of FIS Ski Jumping World Cup.
Calendar
Men
No. | Season | Date | Place | Hill | Size | Winner | Second | Third | Yellow bib | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
22 | 1 | 25 January 1992 | Oberstdorf | Heini-Klopfer-Skiflugschanze K182 | FH | Werner Rathmayr | Andreas Felder | Mikael Martinsson | Werner Rathmayr | [1] |
23 | 2 | 26 January 1992 | Oberstdorf | Heini-Klopfer-Skiflugschanze K182 | FH | Werner Rathmayr | Andreas Felder | Andreas Goldberger | [2] | |
24 | 3 | 21 March 1992 | Harrachov | Čerťák K180 | FH | Noriaki Kasai | Andreas Goldberger | Roberto Cecon | Werner Rathmayr | [3] |
22 March 1992 | Harrachov | Čerťák K180 | FH | strong wind |
Standings
Points were still distributed by original old scoring system.[4]
Ski Flying
| Nations Cup unofficial
|
|
References
- ^ "Oberstdorf". International Ski Federation. 25 Jan 1992.
- ^ "Oberstdorf". International Ski Federation. 26 Jan 1992.
- ^ "Harrachov". International Ski Federation. 21 March 1992.
- ^ "1991/92 FIS Ski Flying World Cup final standings". skijumping.pl. 6 May 2016. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
- v
- t
- e
FIS Ski Flying World Cup seasons
- Stephan Zünd (1991)
- Werner Rathmayr (1992)
- Jaroslav Sakala (1993)
- Jaroslav Sakala (1994)
- Andreas Goldberger (1995)
- Andreas Goldberger (1996)
- Primož Peterka (1997)
- Sven Hannawald (1998)
- Martin Schmitt (1999)
- Sven Hannawald (2000)
- Martin Schmitt (2001)
- Gregor Schlierenzauer (2009)
- Robert Kranjec (2010)
- Gregor Schlierenzauer (2011)
- Robert Kranjec (2012)
- Gregor Schlierenzauer (2013)
- Peter Prevc (2014)
- Peter Prevc (2015)
- Peter Prevc (2016)
- Stefan Kraft (2017)
- Andreas Stjernen (2018)
- Ryōyū Kobayashi (2019)
- Stefan Kraft (2020)
- Karl Geiger (2021)
- Žiga Jelar (2022)
- Stefan Kraft (2023)
- Daniel Huber (2024)