1988–89 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Nordic Combined World Cup 1988/89
Winners
OverallNorway Trond-Arne Bredesen
Nations Cup Norway
Competitions
Venues9
Individual9
← 1987/88
1989/90 →

The 1988/89 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup was the sixth World Cup season, a combination of ski jumping and cross-country skiing organized by International Ski Federation. It started on 17 Dec 1988 in Saalfelden, Austria and ended on 25 March 1989 in Thunder Bay, Canada.[1]

Calendar[edit]

Men[edit]

Num Season Date Place Hill Discipline Winner Second Third
38 1 17 December 1988 Austria Saalfelden Felix-Gottwald-Schisprungstadion K85 / 15 km Norway Trond-Arne Bredesen Norway Bård Jørgen Elden Norway Geir Andersen
39 2 29 December 1988 East Germany Oberwiesenthal Fichtelbergschanzen K90 / 15 km Norway Knut Tore Apeland Austria Klaus Ofner Czechoslovakia František Repka
40 3 7 January 1989 West Germany Schonach Langenwaldschanze K90 / 15 km Switzerland Hippolyt Kempf Soviet Union Andrey Dundukov Norway Trond Einar Elden
41 4 14 January 1989 West Germany Reit im Winkl Franz-Haslberger-Schanze K90 / 15 km Norway Trond-Arne Bredesen Switzerland Hippolyt Kempf Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher
42 5 21 January 1989 Austria Breitenwang Raimund-Ertl-Schanze K75 / 15 km Norway Bård Jørgen Elden Poland Stanisław Ustupski Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 1989
43 6 3 March 1989 Norway Oslo Holmenkollbakken K105 / 15 km Norway Trond Einar Elden Norway Trond-Arne Bredesen Norway Knut Tore Apeland
44 7 11 March 1989 Sweden Falun Lugnet K89 / 15 km Norway Trond Einar Elden East Germany Thomas Abratis Soviet Union Allar Levandi
45 8 18 March 1989 United States Lake Placid MacKenzie Intervale K86 / 15 km Norway Trond-Arne Bredesen Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher France Fabrice Guy
46 9 25 March 1989 Canada Thunder Bay Big Thunder K89 / 15 km Switzerland Hippolyt Kempf France Xavier Girard Norway Trond-Arne Bredesen

Standings[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "FIS Nordic Combined World Cup 1988/89 overall standings". FIS. Retrieved 28 Jul 2015.

External links[edit]