1966–67 Four Hills Tournament
The 15th annual Four Hills Tournament was won by Norwegian athlete Bjørn Wirkola who secured three dominating victories after a surprising double victory for the East German team in Oberstdorf.
Four Hills Tournament | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Venues | Schattenbergschanze, Bergiselschanze, Große Olympiaschanze, Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze | ||||||
Location | Germany, Austria | ||||||
Dates | 30 December 1966 (1966-12-30) – 8 January 1967 (1967-01-08) | ||||||
Competitors | 81 from 16 nations | ||||||
Medalists | |||||||
| |||||||
← 1965–66 1967–68 → |
Participating nations and athletes
The national groups of Germany and Austria only competed at the two events in their respective countries.
Nation | Number of Athletes | Athletes |
---|---|---|
Germany | 5 (+2) | Günther Göllner, Wolfgang Happle, Heini Ihle, Franz Keller, Henrik Ohlmayr National Group: Oswald Schinze, Alfred Winkler |
Austria | 7 (+7) | Reinhold Bachler, Max Golser, Albert Haim, Sepp Lichtenegger, Baldur Preiml, Willi Schuster, Walter Schwabl National Group: Willi Egger, Fritz Gamweger, Heinz Jölly, Franz Kuchlbacher, Erich Schwabl, Heinz Themesl, Janko Zwitter |
Canada | 2 | Ulf Kvendbo, Patrick Morris |
Czechoslovakia | 7 | Ladislav Divila, Rudolf Höhnl, Zbyněk Hubač, Jozef Metelka, Dalibor Motejlek, Jiří Raška, František Rydval |
East Germany | 7 | Veit Kührt, Peter Lesser, Karl-Heinz Munk, Dietmar Neuendorf, Manfred Queck, Heinz Schmidt, Wolfgang Stöhr |
Finland | 6 | Niilo Halonen, Veikko Kankkonen, Olli Korhonen, Paavo Maunu, Erkki Pukka, Heikki Väisänen |
France | 5 | Maurice Arbez, Alain Macle, Jean-Marie Poirot, Gilbert Poirot, James Yerrly |
Italy | 3 | Giacomo Aimoni, Mario Ceccon, Ezio Damolin |
Japan | 3 | Takashi Fujisawa, Yoshihiko Itō, Kimio Saitō |
Norway | 3 | Ronald Jensen, Christoffer Selbekk, Bjørn Wirkola |
Poland | 5 | Sławomir Kardas, Józef Kocyan, Józef Przybyla, Piotr Wala, Ryszard Witke |
Soviet Union | 4 | Waleri Jemeljanow, Pyotr Kovalenko, Mikhail Veretennikov, Koba Zakadze |
Sweden | 3 | Thord Karlsson, Tommy Karlsson, Mats Östman |
Switzerland | 5 | Richard Pfiffner, Hans Schmid, Heribert Schmid, Max Walter, Sepp Zehnder |
United States | 3 | Dave Lundmark, Jay Martin, Adrian Watt |
Yugoslavia | 4 | Peter Eržen, Marjan Pecar, Stanko Smolej, Ludvik Zajc |
Results
Oberstdorf
Schattenbergschanze, Oberstdorf
30 December 1966[1]
Rank | Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Dieter Neuendorf | 202.2 |
2 | Peter Lesser | 201.5 |
3 | Veikko Kankkonen | 200.6 |
Bjørn Wirkola | 200.6 | |
5 | Sepp Lichtenegger | 198.9 |
6 | Józef Przybyla | 198.3 |
7 | Waleri Jemeljanow | 194.5 |
Mikhail Veretennikov | 194.5 | |
9 | Wolfgang Stöhr | 192.6 |
10 | Zbyněk Hubač | 190.3 |
Garmisch-Partenkirchen
Große Olympiaschanze, Garmisch-Partenkirchen
1 January 1967[2]
Rank | Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Bjørn Wirkola | 229.0 |
2 | Reinhold Bachler | 222.8 |
3 | Veikko Kankkonen | 222.4 |
4 | Dieter Neuendorf | 220.5 |
5 | Manfred Queck | 215.8 |
6 | Waleri Jemeljanow | 214.1 |
7 | Peter Lesser | 213.0 |
8 | Ronald Jensen | 209.4 |
9 | Jiří Raška | 208.8 |
10 | Max Golser | 208.4 |
Innsbruck
Bergiselschanze, Innsbruck
6 December 1967[3]
Rank | Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Bjørn Wirkola | 237.7 |
2 | Franz Keller | 228.3 |
3 | Sepp Lichtenegger | 223.2 |
4 | Christoffer Selbekk | 222.0 |
5 | Jiří Raška | 215.9 |
6 | Peter Lesser | 215.2 |
7 | Dieter Neuendorf | 214.4 |
8 | Jay Martin | 214.0 |
9 | Peter Eržen | 213.7 |
10 | Józef Kocyan | 213.2 |
Bischofshofen
Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze, Bischofshofen
8 January 1967[4]
Rank | Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Bjørn Wirkola | 242.7 |
2 | Jiří Raška | 233.4 |
3 | Sepp Lichtenegger | 219.4 |
4 | Ronald Jensen | 219.1 |
5 | Veikko Kankkonen | 214.8 |
6 | Dieter Neuendorf | 209.4 |
Zbyněk Hubač | 209.4 | |
8 | Franz Keller | 208.9 |
9 | Adrian Watt | 206.8 |
10 | Manfred Queck | 205.3 |
Final ranking
Rank | Name | Oberstdorf | Garmisch-Partenkirchen | Innsbruck | Bischofshofen | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Bjørn Wirkola | 3rd | 1st | 1st | 1st | 910.0 |
2 | Sepp Lichtenegger | 2nd | 6th | 1st | 3rd | 847.6 |
3 | Dieter Neuendorf | 1st | 4th | 7th | 6th | 846.5 |
4 | Veikko Kankkonen | 3rd | 3rd | 27th | 5th | 834.8 |
5 | Peter Lesser | 2nd | 7th | 6th | 14th | 833.0 |
6 | Franz Keller | 23rd | 21st | 2nd | 8th | 820.8 |
7 | Jiří Raška | 42nd | 9th | 5th | 2nd | 820.1 |
8 | Zbyněk Hubač | 10th | 15th | 16th | 7th | 812.6 |
9 | Józef Przybyla | 6th | 22nd | 15th | 12th | 811.9 |
10 | Mikhail Veretennikov | 7th | 12th | 18th | 15th | 810.2 |
References
External links
- FIS website
- Four Hills Tournament web site
- v
- t
- e
- 1953
- 1953–54
- 1954–55
- 1955–56
- 1956–57
- 1957–58
- 1958–59
- 1959–60
- 1960–61
- 1961–62
- 1962–63
- 1963–64
- 1964–65
- 1965–66
- 1966–67
- 1967–68
- 1968–69
- 1969–70
- 1970–71
- 1971–72
- 1972–73
- 1973–74
- 1974–75
- 1975–76
- 1976–77
- 1977–78
- 1978–79
- 1979–80
- 1980–81
- 1981–82
- 1982–83
- 1983–84
- 1984–85
- 1985–86
- 1986–87
- 1987–88
- 1988–89
- 1989–90
- 1990–91
- 1991–92
- 1992–93
- 1993–94
- 1994–95
- 1995–96
- 1996–97
- 1997–98
- 1998–99
- 1999–00
- 2000–01
- 2001–02
- 2002–03
- 2003–04
- 2004–05
- 2005–06
- 2006–07
- 2007–08
- 2008–09
- 2009–10
- 2010–11
- 2011–12
- 2012–13
- 2013–14
- 2014–15
- 2015–16
- 2016–17
- 2017–18
- 2018–19
- 2019–20
- 2020–21
- 2021–22
- 2022–23
- 2023–24