Men's large hill individualat the XXI Olympic Winter Games
Gold medallist Simon Ammann
Venue Whistler Olympic Park Dates 19–20 February 2010 Competitors 61 from 18 nations Winning Score 283.6
The Men's large hill individual ski jumping competition for the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver , Canada was held at Whistler Olympic Park in Whistler, British Columbia . It started on 19 February and ended on 20 February.[ 1] Austria 's Thomas Morgenstern was the defending Olympic champion in this event.[ 2] Andreas Küttel of Switzerland was the defending world champion in this event.[ 3] Two test events took place at the Olympic venue on 24–25 January 2009, both won by Austria's Gregor Schlierenzauer .[ 4] [ 5] On the 25th, Schlierenzauer set the hill jumping record with a jump of 149.0 metres (488.8 ft) which was also tied by Finland 's Ville Larinto .[ 5] The last World Cup event in this format prior to the 2010 Games took place on 6 February 2010 in Willingen , Germany and was won by Schlierenzauer.[ 6]
Results
Qualifying
A qualifying round for this event took place on 19 February with a trial qualification at 08:30 PST and a qualification round at 10:00 PST the same day.[ 1] [ 7]
Rank
Bib
Name
Country
Distance (m)
Distance Points
Judges Points
Total
Notes
1
47
Noriaki Kasai
Japan
142.5
91.5
52.0
143.5
Q
2
51
Daiki Ito
Japan
139.5
86.1
56.5
142.6
Q
3
36
Matti Hautamäki
Finland
137.5
82.5
55.5
138.0
Q
3
43
Antonin Hajek
Czech Republic
137.5
82.5
55.5
138.0
Q
3
46
Andreas Wank
Germany
137.5
82.5
55.5
138.0
Q
6
50
Johan Remen Evensen
Norway
137.0
81.6
55.5
137.1
Q
7
33
Anders Bardal
Norway
136.5
80.7
56.0
136.7
Q
8
41
Tom Hilde
Norway
136.5
80.7
55.0
135.7
Q
9
49
Harri Olli
Finland
137.0
81.6
54.0
135.6
Q
10
48
Emmanuel Chedal
France
137.0
81.6
53.5
135.1
Q
11
44
Jakub Janda
Czech Republic
134.5
77.1
54.5
131.6
Q
12
45
Michael Neumayer
Germany
136.0
79.8
49.5
129.3
Q
13
24
Janne Happonen
Finland
133.0
74.4
54.0
128.4
Q
14
22
Stefan Hula
Poland
132.0
72.6
55.0
127.6
Q
14
27
Denis Kornilov
Russia
132.0
72.6
55.0
127.6
Q
16
34
Krzysztof Miętus
Poland
132.5
73.5
53.5
127.0
Q
17
42
Kamil Stoch
Poland
131.0
70.8
54.5
125.3
Q
18
35
Sebastian Colloredo
Italy
131.5
71.7
53.5
125.2
Q
19
39
Shōhei Tochimoto
Japan
130.5
69.9
53.5
123.4
Q
20
37
Andreas Küttel
Switzerland
130.0
69.0
53.5
122.5
Q
21
29
Peter Prevc
Slovenia
129.5
68.1
54.0
122.1
Q
22
32
Taku Takeuchi
Japan
129.5
68.1
53.5
121.6
Q
23
38
Jernej Damjan
Slovenia
129.5
68.1
53.0
121.1
Q
24
28
Pavel Karelin
Russia
128.5
66.3
53.0
119.3
Q
25
40
Martin Schmitt
Germany
128.0
65.4
53.5
118.9
Q
26
23
Vincent Descombes Sevoie
France
128.0
65.4
52.5
117.9
Q
27
25
Roman Koudelka
Czech Republic
127.5
64.5
52.5
117.0
Q
28
13
Nicholas Alexander
United States
127.5
64.5
52.0
116.5
Q
29
26
Martin Cikl
Czech Republic
126.0
61.8
52.5
114.3
Q
30
7
Peter Frenette
United States
126.0
61.8
52.0
113.8
Q
31
30
Andrea Morassi
Italy
124.0
58.2
51.5
109.7
Q
32
15
Alexey Korolev
Kazakhstan
123.5
57.3
52.0
109.3
Q
33
17
Kim Hyun-Ki
South Korea
123.0
56.4
52.5
108.9
Q
34
14
Choi Heung-Chul
South Korea
122.5
55.5
51.5
107.0
Q
35
8
David Lazzaroni
France
122.5
55.5
49.5
105.0
Q
36
3
Stefan Read
Canada
120.5
51.9
51.0
102.9
Q
37
20
Dimitry Ipatov
Russia
120.0
51.0
51.0
102.0
Q
38
19
Ilya Rosliakov
Russia
119.5
50.1
51.0
101.1
Q
39
31
Mitja Mežnar
Slovenia
120.0
51.0
50.0
101.0
Q
40
4
Tomáš Zmoray
Slovakia
119.5
50.1
50.5
100.6
Q
41
18
Nikolay Karpenko
Kazakhstan
119.0
49.2
51.0
100.2
42
2
Anders Johnson
United States
117.0
45.6
50.0
95.6
43
12
Oleksandr Lazarovych
Ukraine
116.5
44.7
49.5
94.2
44
16
Roberto Dellasega
Italy
113.5
39.3
48.5
87.8
45
9
Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes
Canada
111.0
34.8
49.0
83.8
46
10
Choi Yong-Jik
South Korea
110.5
33.9
49.5
83.4
47
5
Volodymyr Boshchuk
Ukraine
109.5
32.1
49.0
81.1
48
11
Alexandre Mabboux
France
107.0
27.6
48.5
76.1
49
6
Trevor Morrice
Canada
106.0
25.8
48.0
73.8
50
21
Vitaliy Shumbarets
Ukraine
102.0
18.6
47.0
65.6
51
1
Eric Mitchell
Canada
93.0
2.4
45.0
47.4
*
52
Michael Uhrmann
Germany
134.5
Q , [1]
*
53
Robert Kranjec
Slovenia
134.5
Q , [1]
*
54
Anders Jacobsen
Norway
142.5
Q , [1]
*
55
Janne Ahonen
Finland
126.5
Q , [1]
*
56
Adam Małysz
Poland
133.5
Q , [1]
*
57
Wolfgang Loitzl
Austria
125.5
Q , [1]
*
58
Andreas Kofler
Austria
125.5
Q , [1]
*
59
Thomas Morgenstern
Austria
129.5
Q , [1]
*
60
Gregor Schlierenzauer
Austria
134.5
Q , [1]
*
61
Simon Ammann
Switzerland
140.0
Q , [1]
^ 1: These skiers were pre-qualified; they did perform jumps in the qualification round, but were not ranked with the non-pre-qualified jumpers.
Final
The final took place on 20 February. Consisting of two jumps, the top thirty jumpers after the first jump qualify for the second jump. The combined total of the two jumps was used to determine the final ranking. A practice round for competition took place at 08:30 PST with the first and second rounds of the event taking place at 11:30 PST and 12:30 PST, respectively.[ 1]
Defending Olympic champion Morgenstern finished fifth, test event winner Schlierenzauer earned bronze, and defending world champion Küttel finished a disappointing 24th. Ammann's first jump was the longest in Olympic history though it was eclipsed by Schlierenzauer in the team event two days later.
References
External links