In 1969, Norwegian Bjørn Wirkola became the first person to win the Four Hills Tournament three times in a row. He was the fifth athlete to win the first three events, but yet again the 'Grand Slam' was denied, this time by Wirkola's closest rival Jiří Raška. It was a disappointing tournament for the two host nations with the best athlete from either being Reinhold Bachler, finishing 11th overall.

Four Hills Tournament
VenuesSchattenbergschanze, Bergiselschanze, Große Olympiaschanze, Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze
LocationGermany, Austria
Dates29 December 1968 (1968-12-29) – 5 January 1969 (1969-01-05)
Competitors76 from 14 nations
Medalists
gold medal 
silver medal 
bronze medal 

Participating nations and athletes

For the first time in seven years, no non-European nations participated. The national groups of Germany and Austria only competed at the two events in their respective countries.

NationNumber of AthletesAthletes
 Germany5 (+5)Franz Bisle, Günther Göllner, Walter Lampe, Henrik Ohlmayr, Oswald Schinze
National Group: Alfred Grosche, Friedhelm Klapproth, Ralph Pöhland, Sepp Schwinghammer, Alfred Winkler
 Austria11 (+3)Reinhold Bachler, Helmut Diess, Max Golser, Albert Haim, Ernst Kröll, Sepp Lichtenegger, Franz Salhofer, Willi Schuster, Erich Schwabl, Walter Schwabl, Janko Zwitter
National Group: Heinz Jölly, Franz Kuchlbacher, Ernst Wimmer
Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia7Ladislav Divila, Rudolf Höhnl, Zbyněk Hubač, Karel Kodejška, Jan Matouš, Jiří Raška, František Rydval
 East Germany7Bernd Karwofski, Horst Queck, Manfred Queck, Heinz Schmidt, Rainer Schmidt, Wilfried Schüller, Clemens Walter
 Finland3Keijo Leiho, Topi Mattila, Juhani Ruotsalainen
 France4Jannie Arnould, Nicolas Gaide, Alain Macle, Gilbert Poirot
 Hungary3László Gellér, Mihály Gellér, János Taffener
 Italy3Giacomo Aimoni, Albino Bazana, Mario Ceccon
 Norway3Lars Grini, Knut Kongsgård, Jan Olaf Roaldset, Bent Tomtum, Bjørn Wirkola
 Poland2Andrej Sztolf, Ryszard Witke
Soviet Union Soviet Union5Vladimir Belousov, Aleksandr Ivannikov, Gariy Napalkov, Wiezeslav Zerbakov, Anatoliy Zheglanov
 Sweden3Torbjörn Hedberg, Thord Karlsson, Olle Martinsson
  Switzerland4Richard Pfiffner, Hans Schmid, Heribert Schmid, Urs Schönl, Sepp Zehnder
 Yugoslavia6Vinko Bogataj, Branko Dolhar, Janez Jurman, Marjan Mesec, Peter Štefančič, Ludvik Zajc

Results

Oberstdorf

Germany Schattenbergschanze, Oberstdorf
29 December 1968[1]

RankNamePoints
1Norway Bjørn Wirkola218.7
2Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška215.7
3Czechoslovakia Josef Matouš210.5
4East Germany Heinz Schmidt210.1
5East Germany Manfred Queck209.9
6Czechoslovakia Rudolf Höhnl205.4
7Czechoslovakia Ladislav Divila199.9
8Soviet Union Vladimir Belousov199.7
9Austria Reinhold Bachler199.3
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Ludvik Zajc199.3

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Germany Große Olympiaschanze, Garmisch-Partenkirchen
1 January 1969[2]

RankNamePoints
1Norway Bjørn Wirkola241.2
2Soviet Union Anatoliy Zheglanov235.4
3Czechoslovakia František Rydval233.8
4Soviet Union Vladimir Belousov233.6
5East Germany Heinz Schmidt232.3
6Czechoslovakia Zbyněk Hubač228.4
7Czechoslovakia Ladislav Divila226.5
8Soviet Union Gariy Napalkov222.1
9East Germany Horst Queck221.8
10Norway Lars Grini221.2

Innsbruck

Austria Bergiselschanze, Innsbruck
4 December 1969[3]

RankNamePoints
1Norway Bjørn Wirkola236.3
2Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška235.5
3Soviet Union Anatoliy Zheglanov225.9
4Norway Lars Grini222.6
5Czechoslovakia Zbyněk Hubač219.9
6Czechoslovakia Rudolf Höhnl214.1
7Czechoslovakia František Rydval212.4
8East Germany Horst Queck212.2
9Soviet Union Gariy Napalkov210.8
10East Germany Heinz Schmidt209.7

Bischofshofen

Austria Paul-Ausserleitner-Schanze, Bischofshofen
5 January 1969[4]

RankNamePoints
1Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška234.7
2Norway Bjørn Wirkola228.3
3Norway Lars Grini222.6
4Soviet Union Anatoliy Zheglanov219.2
5Czechoslovakia Zbyněk Hubač218.8
6Soviet Union Wiezeslav Zerbakov211.4
7Czechoslovakia Ladislav Divila211.0
8Czechoslovakia František Rydval209.9
9Soviet Union Vladimir Belousov208.1
10Norway Bent Tomtum207.0

Final ranking

RankNameOberstdorfGarmisch-PartenkirchenInnsbruckBischofshofenPoints
1Norway Bjørn Wirkola1st1st1st2nd924.5
2Czechoslovakia Jiří Raška2nd21st2nd1st900.5
3Czechoslovakia Zbyněk Hubač11th6th5th5th866.0
4Soviet Union Anatoliy Zheglanov23rd2nd3rd4th862.0
5Czechoslovakia František Rydval14th3rd7th8th848.2
6Soviet Union Vladimir Belousov8th4th19th9th839.3
7Czechoslovakia Rudolf Höhnl6th15th6th14th838.3
8East Germany Heinz Schmidt4th5th10th30th830.8
9Norway Lars Grini59th10th4th3rd812.5
10Czechoslovakia Ladislav Divila7th7th41st7th810.8

References

  1. "Oberstdorf (GER)". FIS.
  2. "Garmisch-Partenkirchen (GER)". FIS.
  3. "Innsbruck (AUT)". FIS.
  4. "Bischofshofen (AUT)". FIS.
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