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Klemens Murańka (born 31 August 1994) is a retired Polish ski jumper, a member of the national team, a 2014 Junior World Champion in team, a bronze medalist of 2015 World Championship in team.

Klemens Murańka
CountryPoland Poland
Full nameKlemens Murańka
Born (1994-08-31) 31 August 1994 (age 30)
Zakopane, Poland
Height182 cm (6 ft 0 in)
Ski clubTS Wisła Zakopane
Personal best221.5 m (727 ft)
Planica, 20 March 2015
World Cup career
Seasons2008–present
Indiv. starts92
Team podiums2
Medal record
Men's ski jumping
World Championships
Bronze medal – third place 2015 Falun Team LH
World Junior Championship
Gold medal – first place 2014 Val di Fiemme Team NH
Silver medal – second place 2012 Erzurum Team NH
Silver medal – second place 2013 Liberec Individual NH
Silver medal – second place 2013 Liberec Team NH
Updated on 29 January 2021.

Personal life

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On 28 August 2014 his fiancée gave birth to their son named Klemens Jr.[1] On 25 April 2015 he married Agnieszka Rzadkosz.[2] On 4 January 2021 their second son was born.[3]

Career

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On 31 August 2004, his 10th birthday, he jumped 135.5 m at Wielka Krokiew in Zakopane (only 4.5 m shorter than the then-official record). On 14 October 2007 he took third place in Summer Polish Championship. In December 2006, 2007 he achieved bronze in Winter Polish Championship.[4]

Murańka debuted in World Cup during qualification to competition in Zakopane in season 2007/08 at age 13. He is the youngest competitor in history who was allowed to take part in World Cup.[4] He took 65th place in qualification.

On 1 February 2014 he won a gold medal with Polish team in squad Jakub Wolny, Krzysztof Biegun and Aleksander Zniszczoł at 2014 Junior World Championship held in Val di Fiemme.[5]

Murańka debuted in the World Championships 2015 in Falun, Sweden. He was 17th on normal hill (K-90) and 20th in the competition on the large hill Lugnet (K-120). On 28 February 2015 Polish team in squad: Murańka, Piotr Żyła, Kamil Stoch and Jan Ziobro achieved bronze medal of World Championships 2015 in team.[6]

On 29 January 2021 he jumped 153 meters during the qualification round of the Willingen Six tournament on the Mühlenkopfschanze in Willingen and beat by one meter the previous hill record which belonged to Janne Ahonen (2005) and Jurij Tepes (2014). He became third Polish ski jumper who jumped 150 or more meters on this hill. It was the first hill record in his career.[7]

World Championships

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Individual

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2015 Sweden  Falun 17th place (K-90), 20th place (K-120)

Team

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2015 Sweden  Falun bronze medal (K-120)

Klemens Murańka's starts at World Championships

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Place Day Year Locality Hill Point K HS Competition Jump 1 Jump 2 Note (points) Loss (points) Winner
17. 21 February 2015 Sweden  Falun Lugnet K-90 HS-100 individual 92.0 m 88.0 m 220.2 32.5 Rune Velta
20. 26 February 2015 Sweden  Falun Lugnet K-120 HS-134 individual 123.0 m 113.5 m 205.6 63.1 Severin Freund
3.   28 February 2015 Sweden  Falun Lugnet K-120 HS-134 team 120.5 128.0 848.1 (212.5) 44.5 Norway

World Cup

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Season standings

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Season Overall Ski-Flying Four Hills
Tournament
Raw Air Willingen Five
2010–11
2011–12 55 40
2012–13 75 51
2013–14 38 33 21
2014–15 42 39 61
2015–16 50
2016–17 65 50 64
2019–20 61 37
2020–21

Individual starts

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Season 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 31 Points
2007/08 Kuusamo  Trondheim  Trondheim  Villach  Villach  Engelberg  Engelberg  Oberstdorf  Garmisch-Partenkirchen  Bischofshofen  Bischofshofen  Predazzo  Predazzo  Harrachov  Zakopane  Zakopane  Sapporo  Sapporo  Liberec  Liberec  Willingen  Kuopio  Kuopio  Lillehammer  Oslo  Planica  Planica  0
q
2009/10 Kuusamo  Lillehammer  Lillehammer  Engelberg  Engelberg  Engelberg  Oberstdorf  Garmisch-Partenkirchen  Innsbruck  Bischofshofen  Bad Mitterndorf  Bad Mitterndorf  Sapporo  Sapporo  Zakopane  Zakopane  Oberstdorf  Klingenthal  Willingen  Lahti  Kuopio  Lillehammer  Oslo  0
q q
2010/11 Kuusamo  Kuopio  Lillehammer  Lillehammer  Engelberg  Engelberg  Engelberg  Oberstdorf  Garmisch-Partenkirchen  Innsbruck  Bischofshofen  Harrachov  Harrachov  Sapporo  Sapporo  Zakopane  Zakopane  Zakopane  Willingen  Klingenthal  Oberstdorf  Vikersund  Vikersund  Lahti  Planica  Planica  0
q q q q 37 51
2011/12 Kuusamo  Lillehammer  Lillehammer  Harrachov  Harrachov  Engelberg  Engelberg  Oberstdorf  Garmisch-Partenkirchen  Innsbruck  Bischofshofen  Bad Mitterndorf  Bad Mitterndorf  Zakopane  Zakopane  Sapporo  Sapporo  Predazzo  Predazzo  Willingen  Oberstdorf  Lahti  Trondheim  Oslo  Planica  Planica  26
39 40 21 33 24 22
2012/13 Lillehammer  Lillehammer  Kuusamo  Krasnaja Polana  Krasnaja Polana  Engelberg  Engelberg  Oberstdorf  Garmisch-Partenkirchen  Innsbruck  Bischofshofen  Wisła  Zakopane  Sapporo  Sapporo  Vikersund  Vikersund  Harrachov  Harrachov  Klingenthal  Oberstdorf  Lahti  Kuopio  Trondheim  Oslo  Planica  Planica  6
28 40 28 q q q 33
2013/14 Klingenthal  Kuusamo  Lillehammer  Lillehammer  Titisee-Neustadt  Titisee-Neustadt  Engelberg  Engelberg  Oberstdorf  Garmisch-Partenkirchen  Innsbruck  Bischofshofen  Tauplitz  Tauplitz  Wisła  Zakopane  Sapporo  Sapporo  Willingen  Willingen  Falun  Lahti  Lahti  Kuopio  Trondheim  Oslo  Planica  Planica  132
24 39 7 24 14 17 20 37 27 18 13 29 q q 31 39 q 35 45
2014/15 Klingenthal  Kuusamo  Kuusamo  Lillehammer  Lillehammer  Nizhny Tagil  Nizhny Tagil  Engelberg  Engelberg  Oberstdorf  Garmisch-Partenkirchen  Innsbruck  Bischofshofen  Tauplitz  Wisła  Zakopane  Sapporo  Sapporo  Willingen  Willingen  Titisee-Neustadt  Titisee-Neustadt  Vikersund  Vikersund  Lahti  Kuopio  Trondheim  Oslo  Oslo  Planica  Planica  102
21 q 35 45 38 40 q 47 22 26 30 34 21 38 46 17 18 10 17
2015/16 Klingenthal  Lillehammer  Lillehammer  Nizhny Tagil  Nizhny Tagil  Engelberg  Engelberg  Oberstdorf  Garmisch-Partenkirchen  Innsbruck  Bischofshofen  Willingen  Zakopane  Sapporo  Sapporo  Trondheim  Vikersund  Vikersund  Vikersund  Lahti  Lahti  Kuopio  Almaty  Almaty  Wisła  Titisee-Neustadt  Planica  Planica  Planica  36
49 23 q 44 19 41 28 q q q 30 22 28 32 44
2016/17 Kuusamo  Kuusamo  Klingenthal  Lillehammer  Lillehammer  Engelberg  Engelberg  Oberstdorf  Garmisch-Partenkirchen  Innsbruck  Bischofshofen  Wisła  Wisła  Zakopane  Willingen  Oberstdorf  Oberstdorf  Sapporo  Sapporo  Pyeongchang  Pyeongchang  Oslo  Trondheim  Vikersund  Planica  Planica  4
37 44 35 27 q 43 44 40 q 41 q 39 q 34 q
2017/18 Wisła  Kuusamo  Nizhny Tagil  Nizhny Tagil  Titisee-Neustadt  Engelberg  Engelberg  Oberstdorf  Garmisch-Partenkirchen  Innsbruck  Bischofshofen  Tauplitz  Tauplitz  Zakopane  Willingen  Willingen  Lahti  Oslo  Lillehammer  Trondheim  Vikersund  Planica  Planica  0
q
2018/19 Wisła  Kuusamo  Kuusamo  Nizhny Tagil  Nizhny Tagil  Engelberg  Engelberg  Oberstdorf  Garmisch-Partenkirchen  Innsbruck  Bischofshofen  Predazzo  Predazzo  Zakopane  Sapporo  Sapporo  Oberstdorf  Oberstdorf  Oberstdorf  Lahti  Willingen  Willingen  Oslo  Lillehammer  Trondheim  Vikersund  Planica  Planica  0
q 49
2019/20 Wisła HS134  Kuusamo HS142  Nizhny Tagil HS134  Nizhny Tagil HS134  Klingenthal HS140  Engelberg HS140  Engelberg HS140  Oberstdorf HS137  Garmisch-Partenkirchen HS142  Innsbruck HS130  Bischofshofen HS142  Predazzo HS104  Predazzo HS104  Titisee-Neustadt HS142  Titisee-Neustadt HS142  Zakopane HS140  Sapporo HS137  Sapporo HS137  Willingen HS145  Tauplitz HS235  Tauplitz HS235  Râșnov HS97  Râșnov HS97  Lahti HS130  Lahti HS130  Lillehammer HS140  Lillehammer HS140  8
q 46 45 39 27 39 44 46 q 41 46 38 40 27 42 58
2020/21 Wisła HS134  Kuusamo HS142  Kuusamo HS142  Nizhny Tagil HS134  Nizhny Tagil HS134  Engelberg HS140  Engelberg HS140  Oberstdorf HS137  Garmisch-Partenkirchen HS142  Innsbruck HS130  Bischofshofen HS142  Titisee-Neustadt HS142  Titisee-Neustadt HS142  Zakopane HS140  Lahti HS130  Willingen HS147  Willingen HS147  Klingenthal HS140  Klingenthal HS140  Zakopane HS140  Zakopane HS140  Râșnov HS97  Oslo HS134  Lillehammer HS140  Trondheim HS138  Vikersund HS240  Planica HS240  Planica HS240  61
22 9 q 34 22 30 22 41 32 27

References

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  1. ^ "Klemens Murańka został ojcem. "Doczekałem się Klimka juniora"" (in Polish). wp.pl. 1 September 2014. Archived from the original on 27 January 2017. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  2. ^ "Góralski ślub Klemensa Murańki!" (in Polish). fakt.pl. 27 April 2015. Archived from the original on 27 January 2017. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  3. ^ "Klemens Murańka ma drugiego syna. Skoczek wrócił do domu, by pomóc żonie" (in Polish). 11 January 2021. Archived from the original on 29 January 2021. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  4. ^ a b "Klemens MURAŃKA - sylwetka" (in Polish). Archived from the original on 23 April 2020. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  5. ^ "JWSC: Gold for the team of Poland". fis-ski.com. 1 February 2014. Archived from the original on 6 March 2018. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  6. ^ Mateusz Leleń (28 February 2015). "Drużyna na medal! Polacy z brązem MŚ" (in Polish). sport.tvp.pl. Archived from the original on 29 October 2018. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  7. ^ "Ski jumping: Murańka sets hill record, Stękała leads Willingen Six". 29 January 2021. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
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