FIS Ski Flying World Championships 1979


The FIS Ski Flying World Ski Championships 1979 was held between 17–18 March in Planica, Yugoslavia for the second time in front of total 115,000 people in four days.

Schedule

Rules

Scoring system rules were changed in the last moment, just two days before official competition. Originally total 3 of 9 jumps, the best one of each three days was supposed to go into final score. But technical delegate of competition, Norwegian Torbjørn Yggeseth who is known as the founder of the World Cup, proposed the change of rules: total 6 of 9 jumps, the best two of each three days were incorporated. Although only 4 of 6 rounds counted at the end as first day of competition was canceled.
To perform on Saturday and Sunday competition, competitor had to reach 75% average of top 10 jumps in at least one round on official training on Thursday or at first day of competition on Friday.

Competition

On 14 March 1979 hill test in three rounds was on schedule. Križaj opened the hill with 142 metres, Bizjak's binds got off in the inrun and he managed to stop. Loštrek set the longest distance of the day at 158 metres.
On 15 March 1979 official training infront of 10,000 people was on schedule with two rounds in rain. František Novák set the distance of the day at 169 metres.
On 16 March 1979 first day of competition with three rounds was on schedule. Everything was over only after 8 testjumpers on a disappointment of 15,000 people due to heavy rain. Test jumper Ivo Zupan set the distance of the day at 159 metres.
On 17 March 1979 second day of competition with three rounds was on schedule infront of 40,000 people. Test jumper Ivo Zupan was first that day who set Yugoslavian record at 171 metres. In the second round East German Axel Zitzmann crashed at world record distance at 179 metres, second round was canceled and repeated right after. Zitzmann was leading after first 2 best of 3 jumps of second day of competition.
On 18 March 1979 the last day of competition with three rounds was on schedule infront of 50,000 people. A lot of inrun speed/gate testing were made before the first round. Kogler set the best distance of the second round at 156 metres. Just before the third round, East German test jumper Klaus Ostwald set the world record at 176 metres. Armin Kogler became the world champion after 4 of 6 best flights in two days of competition.

Hill test

10:00 AM — 14 March 1979 — Three rounds — test jumpers — chronological order

Official training

15 March 1979 — 2 rounds — test — chronological order incomplete
15 March 1979 — 2 rounds — competitors — chronological order

Competition: Day 1

9:30 AM — 16 March 1979 — 3 rounds — test — chronological order

Competition: Day 2

17 March 1979 — 2 best of 3 rounds — second round was canceled and repeated — chronological order
RankBibName1RD2RD 2RD 3RDPoints
110 Axel Zitzmann156.0 m179.0 m170.0 m168.0 m380.0
241 Armin Kogler160.0 m156.0 m160.0 m361.0
334 Piotr Fijas149.0 m131.0 m166.0 m350.0
38 Andreas Hille161.0 m155.0 m141.0 m350.0
515 Josef Samek152.0 m154.0 m155.0 m346.0
621 Yury Kalinin151.0 m156.0 m144.0 m344.0
722 Harald Duschek151.0 m156.0 m145.0 m342.5
87 Leoš Škoda144.0 m163.0 m151.0 m154.0 m339.0
42 Pentti Kokkonen156.0 m141.0 m146.0 m339.0
1028 Kari Ylianttila149.0 m155.0 m136.0 m337.0
1123 Aleksey Borovitin146.0 m149.0 m151.0 m336.5
1247 František Novák154.0 m144.0 m141.0 m329.0
1333 Ján Tánczos155.0 m138.0 m139.0 m327.5
1446 Stanisław Bobak144.0 m137.0 m149.0 m326.5
1514 Hans Wallner150.0 m144.0 m147.0 m324.0
1627 Jochen Danneberg147.0 m130.0 m145.0 m323.5
1744 Peter Leitner130.0 m140.0 m149.0 m323.0
1832 Hubert Neuper140.0 m152.0 m321.5
199 Alois Lipburger150.0 m116.0 m120.0 m139.0 m319.5
2024 Per Steinar Nordlien140.0 m146.0 m142.0 m318.5
2143 Yuri Ivanov134.0 m138.0 m147.0 m316.5
2211 Jari Puikkonen139.0 m146.0 m141.0 m312.5
2330 Sakaye Tsuruga144.0 m136.0 m118.0 m310.5
2439 Hirokazu Yagi136.0 m136.0 m143.0 m309.0
253 Esko Rautionaho130.0 m148.0 m141.0 m307.5
266 Bogdan Norčič138.0 m148.0 m137.0 m134.0 m301.5
2729 Primož Ulaga138.0 m139.0 m133.0 m300.0
2819 Takafumi Kawabata124.0 m149.0 m123.0 m297.5
295 Valery Savin147.0 m148.0 m132.0 m135.0 m295.5
3036 Hansjörg Sumi126.0 m135.0 m133.0 m293.5
318 Yūji Kawamura132.0 m144.0 m123.0 m133.0 m292.5
3245 Vasja Bajc132.0 m134.0 m131.0 m291.5
3331 Kip Sundgaard118.0 m133.0 m129.0 m289.5
3425 Roland Glas136.0 m123.0 m129.0 m286.5
3518 Finn Halvorsen130.0 m125.0 m131.0 m283.5
3620 Terry Kern122.0 m132.0 m127.0 m280.5
3740 Per Bergerud127.0 m122.0 m132.0 m278.5
3837 John Broman132.0 m127.0 m278.0
3913 Hans-Jürgen Eschrisch130.0 m127.0 m126.0 m277.0
16 Olivier Favre120.0 m127.0 m127.0 m277.0
411 Bjarne Næs129.0 m147.0 m106.0 m119.0 m263.5
4235 Thomas Prosser124.0 m101.0 m114.0 m258.5
4312 Zdravko Bogataj109.0 m117.0 m119.0 m255.0
4417 Ivano Wegher114.0 m116.0 m115.0 m249.0
454 Chris McNeill119.0 m132.0 m116.0 m112.0 m248.0
4626 Lido Tomasi111.0 m118.0 m96.0 m234.5
472 Thierry Sauvanet105.0 m117.0 m94.0 m96.0 m202.0

Competition: Day 3

18 March 1979 — incomplete — test
18 March 1979 — 2 best of 3 rounds — competitors
Not recognized. Crash at WR! Didn't count into final results!
Didn't count into final result!
World record!
Crash, touch!

Official results

17 to 18 March 1979 — 4 best of 6 rounds — first day canceled — originally 6 best of 9 rounds scheduled

Ski flying world records

Not recognized! Crash at world record distance.

Medal table