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1961–62 Four Hills Tournament

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Four Hills Tournament
VenuesSchattenbergschanze, Bergiselschanze, Große Olympiaschanze, Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze
LocationWest Germany, Austria
Dates28 December 1960 (1960-12-28) – 6 January 1961 (1961-01-06)
Competitors85 from 14 nations
Medalists
gold medal 
silver medal 
bronze medal 
← 1960-61
1962-63 →

Eino Kirjonen became the third Finnish tournament winner at the tenth annual Four Hills Tournament. Against tradition, Innsbruck was the second single event, switching with Garmisch-Partenkirchen, which was held third.

Participating nations and athletes

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The teams from Czechoslovakia and East Germany did not participate in Oberstdorf and Garmisch-Partenkirchen for political reasons.

Nation Number of Athletes Athletes
 West Germany 14 Hermann Anwander, Max Bolkart, Alois Haberstock, Wolfgang Happle, Edi Heilingbrunner, Lothar Heyer, Heini Ihle, Helmut Kurz, Sepp Schiffner, Wolfgang Schüller, Georg Thoma, Helmut Wegscheider, Hias Winkler, Axel Zerlaut
 Austria 11 Willi Egger, Walter Habersatter, Willi Köstinger, Otto Leodolter, Sepp Lichtenegger, Horst Moser, Peter Müller, Georg Niederhammer, Baldur Preiml, Walter Steinegger, Ferdl Wallner
Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 3 Zbyněk Hubač, Drahomír Jebavý, Jaromír Novlud
 East Germany 7 Dieter Bockeloh, Peter Lesser, Siegbert Münch, Helmut Recknagel, Johannes Riedel, Kurt Schramm, Willi Wirth
 Finland 5 Niilo Halonen, Antero Immonen, Veiko Kankkonen, Eino Kirjonen, Hemmo Silvennoinen
 France 2 Claude Jean-Prost, Guy Mollier
 Hungary 4 László Gellér, János Horváth, Endre Kiss, Tamás Sudár
 Italy 5 Giacomo Aimoni, Agosto De Zordo, Bruno De Zordo, Dino De Zordo, Nilo Zandanel
 Norway 3 Guttorm Heldahl, Asbjørn Osnes, Oddvar Saga
 Poland 9 Stanisław Bobak, Gustaw Bujok, Andrzej Kocyan, Antoni Łaciak, Stanisław Polok, Władysław Tajner, Piotr Wala, Antoni Wieczorek, Ryszard Witke
Soviet Union Soviet Union 6 Rudolf Bykov, Wladimir Bykov, Nikolay Kamenskiy, Yuri Samsonov, Nikolai Schamov, Koba Zakadze
 Sweden 6 Bert Andersson, Harry Bergquist, Bengt Eriksson, Holger Karlsson, Inger Lindquist, Kjell Sjöberg
 Switzerland 3 Toni Cecchinato, Francis Perret, Ueli Scheidegger
 Yugoslavia 7 Peter Eržen, Božo Jemc, Miro Oman, Marjan Pečar, Milan Rojina, Jože Šlibar, Ludvik Zajc

Results

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Oberstdorf

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West Germany Schattenbergschanze, Oberstdorf
28 December 1961[1]

Rank Name Points
1 Finland Eino Kirjonen 226.5
2 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Božo Jemc 219.5
3 Norway Oddvar Saga 219.0
4 Finland Hemmo Silvennoinen 218.0
5 Sweden Holger Karlsson 216.0
6 West Germany Wolfgang Happle 215.5
7 Sweden Kjell Sjöberg 215.0
Soviet Union Koba Zakadze 215.0
9 Soviet Union Nikolai Schamov 214.0
10 Soviet Union Nikolay Kamenskiy 213.0
Sweden Inger Lindquist 213.0
West Germany Georg Thoma 213.0

Innsbruck

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Austria Bergiselschanze, Innsbruck
30 December 1961[2]

Rank Name Points
1 Austria Willi Egger 225.0
2 Soviet Union Koba Zakadze 219.7
3 Austria Walter Habersatter 219.4
4 Finland Eino Kirjonen 218.5
5 Poland Antoni Wieczorek 214.4
6 West Germany Max Bolkart 213.4
7 Soviet Union Nikolai Schamov 212.6
8 Sweden Kjell Sjöberg 212.5
9 Finland Hemmo Silvennoinen 212.2
10 Soviet Union Yuri Samsonov 210.1

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

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West Germany Große Olympiaschanze, Garmisch-Partenkirchen
01 January 1962[3]

Rank Name Points
1 West Germany Georg Thoma 225.5
2 Austria Willi Egger 221.7
3 West Germany Wolfgang Happle 220.0
4 West Germany Max Bolkart 216.4
5 Finland Eino Kirjonen 216.2
6 Soviet Union Nikolay Kamenskiy 215.5
7 Finland Niilo Halonen 214.2
Sweden Inger Lindquist 214.2
9 Finland Veiko Kankkonen 213.9
10 Sweden Holger Karlsson 212.4

Bischofshofen

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Austria Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze, Bischofshofen
06 January 1962[4]

In the overall lead ever since his dominating victory at the tournament's first event in Oberstdorf, Eino Kirjonen was 19.8 points in the lead before the final. In Bischofshofen, Kirjonen finished 12th. None of his closest pursuers, however, achieved a top result either (Silvennoinen 14th, Lindquist 24th, Schamov 10th). This allowed Bischofshofen victor Willi Egger to jump up from 9th to 2nd place in the overall ranking.

Rank Name Points
1 Austria Willi Egger 222.7
2 East Germany Helmut Recknagel 220.3
3 West Germany Wolfgang Happle 215.0
4 East Germany Dieter Bockeloh 213.6
5 East Germany Peter Lesser 212.8
6 West Germany Heini Ihle 210.5
7 Soviet Union Koba Zakadze 210.0
8 Norway Oddvar Saga 208.8
9 Poland Antoni Wieczorek 208.5
10 Soviet Union Nikolai Schamov 206.1

Final ranking

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Rank Name Oberstdorf Innsbruck Garmisch-Partenkirchen Bischofshofen Points
1 Finland Eino Kirjonen 1st 4th 5th 12th 865.1
2 Austria Willi Egger 52nd 1st 2nd 1st 853.4
3 Finland Hemmo Silvennoinen 4th 9th 12th 14th 843.2
4 Soviet Union Nikolai Schamov 9th 7th 9th 4th 840.7
5 Poland Antoni Wieczorek 13th 5th 26th 9th 839.4
6 Austria Walter Habersatter 23rd 3rd 17th 18th 833.4
7 Soviet Union Koba Zakadze 7th 2nd 43rd 7th 833.0
8 Sweden Inger Lindquist 10th 13th 7th 24th 832.5
9 Norway Oddvar Saga 3rd 27th 21st 8th 830.4
10 West Germany Max Bolkart 42nd 6th 4th 11th 828.7

References

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  1. ^ "Oberstdorf (GER)". FIS.
  2. ^ "Innsbruck (AUT)". FIS.
  3. ^ "Garmisch-Partenkirchen (GER)". FIS.
  4. ^ "Bischofshofen (AUT)". FIS.
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