1999–2000 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup – Zakopane

1999–2000 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup – Zakopane was a series of ski jumping competitions held as part of the 1999–2000 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup from 17 to 19 December 1999 at the Wielka Krokiew in Zakopane, Poland.

Zakopane is located in Europe
Zakopane
Zakopane
Location in Europe

Two individual competitions were contested on the large hill, marking the sixth time Zakopane hosted World Cup ski jumping events. These were the sixth and seventh competitions of the 1999–2000 World Cup season.

Both events were won by German skier Martin Schmitt. Janne Ahonen of Finland finished second in both competitions. The third-place finishers were Lasse Ottesen of Norway in the first event and Andreas Widhölzl of Austria in the second.

This was the fourth time Zakopane hosted two individual large hill competitions in a single World Cup event, following 1996, 1998, and January 1999. In 1980, one competition was held on the normal hill and one on the large hill, while in 1990, a single large hill competition took place.

A total of 86 athletes from 17 nations participated,[1][2] with the oldest competitor being Norway's Espen Bredesen (31 years, 318 days) and the youngest being Poland's Tomisław Tajner (16 years, 217 days).

Pre-competition

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Andreas Goldberger, third in the World Cup standings before the Zakopane events

Prior to the Zakopane events, five individual competitions had been held in the 1999–2000 World Cup season.[3] The overall World Cup leader was Martin Schmitt of Germany, with 360 points, 100 points ahead of Austria's Andreas Widhölzl. Andreas Goldberger, also from Austria, held third place with 213 points. In the Nations Cup, Finland led, followed by Austria and Germany.[4]

Previous World Cup events in the season saw victories by Andreas Widhölzl (twice), Janne Ahonen, Martin Schmitt, and Ville Kantee (once each).[3]

The most recent competition before Zakopane, held on 12 December in Villach, was won by Janne Ahonen, ahead of Martin Schmitt and Andreas Widhölzl. Five Finnish and three Japanese skiers placed in the top ten.[5]

World Cup standings before Zakopane

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World Cup standings before Zakopane events[4]
Rank Athlete Country Points Deficit to leader
1 Martin Schmitt Germany 360
2 Andreas Widhölzl Austria 260 100
3 Andreas Goldberger Austria 213 147
4 Risto Jussilainen Finland 202 158
5 Ville Kantee Finland 196 164
6 Matti Hautamäki Finland 178 182
7 Jani Soininen Finland 159 201
7 Hideharu Miyahira Japan 159 201
9 Noriaki Kasai Japan 139 221
10 Stefan Horngacher Austria 130 230
11 Janne Ahonen Finland 126 234
12 Masahiko Harada Japan 107 253
13 Jussi Hautamäki Finland 98 262
14 Peter Žonta Slovenia 92 268
15 Mika Laitinen Finland 83 277
16 Kazuyoshi Funaki Japan 81 279
17 Nicolas Dessum France 76 284
18 Roberto Cecon Italy 72 288
19 Wolfgang Loitzl Austria 71 289
20 Hansjörg Jäkle Germany 60 300
21 Sven Hannawald Germany 56 304
22 Marco Steinauer Switzerland 47 313
23 Jérôme Gay France 45 315
24 Michael Uhrmann Germany 44 316
25 Robert Mateja Poland 43 317
26 Roar Ljøkelsøy Norway 42 318
27 Simon Ammann Switzerland 41 319
28 Morten Ågheim Norway 29 331
29 Ivan Lunardi Italy 24 336
29 Pekka Salminen Finland 24 336
29 Christof Duffner Germany 24 336
32 Martin Höllwarth Austria 22 338
32 Sylvain Freiholz Switzerland 22 338
34 Alexander Herr Germany 20 340
34 Bruno Reuteler Switzerland 20 340
36 Hiroya Saitō Japan 18 342
36 Łukasz Kruczek Poland 18 342
38 Damjan Fras Slovenia 17 343
38 Choi Heung-chul South Korea 17 343
40 Yuta Watase Japan 16 344
40 Adam Małysz Poland 16 344
42 Alan Alborn United States 14 346
43 Primož Peterka Slovenia 13 347
43 Dmitriy Vassiliev Russia 13 347
45 Michal Doležal Czech Republic 12 348
46 Kazuya Yoshioka Japan 11 349
46 Gerd Siegmund Germany 11 349
46 Martin Koch Austria 11 349
49 Bernhard Metzler [pl] Austria 9 351
50 Bine Norčič [pl] Slovenia 8 352
50 Tommy Ingebrigtsen Norway 8 352
50 Primož Urh-Zupan Slovenia 8 352
53 Henning Stensrud Norway 7 353
54 Jakub Sucháček Czech Republic 6 354
55 Lasse Ottesen Norway 1 359
55 Jakub Janda Czech Republic 1 359

Event organization

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Wielka Krokiew in Zakopane

A week before the event, organizers faced challenges due to a thaw that caused snow to slide off the landing area of the Wielka Krokiew. They successfully restored the hill, and sub-zero temperatures prevented further snow displacement.[6]

Before the competitions, the president of the Polish Ski Association, Paweł Włodarczyk [pl], promised cash bonuses for any Polish skier finishing in the top ten of either event: 10,000 PLN for first place, 9,000 PLN for second, down to 1,000 PLN for tenth.[7]

The Zakopane World Cup events were rescheduled from January to December in the 1999–2000 season due to the expiration of the FIS homologation for the Wielka Krokiew on 31 December 1999.[8][9]

Event schedule

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The first official training session was scheduled for 17 December 1999, with the second individual competition concluding on 19 December. The program included two individual competitions, two qualifying rounds, and three official training sessions.[7]

Venue

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The competitions were held at the Wielka Krokiew, a ski jumping hill named after skier Stanisław Marusarz, located on the northern slope of Krokiew [pl] in the Western Tatras. Two individual competitions took place on the large hill.[7] The Wielka Krokiew previously hosted World Cup events in 1980, 1990, 1996, 1998, and January 1999. A planned event in 1981 was canceled.[10]

Jury

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The competitions were overseen by the International Ski Federation, with Walter Hofer [pl] as the event director and Miran Tepeš as his assistant. The local organizing committee was led by Polish official Lech Pochwała. The technical delegate for all events was Austria's Gert Aigmüller, assisted by American Bill Erickson.[1][2][11][12]

Judge Country Judging tower position
Qualification for first
individual competition
(18 December 1999)[1]
First individual
competition
(18 December 1999)[11]
Qualification for second
individual competition
(19 December 1999)[2]
Second individual
competition
(19 December 1999)[12]
Ryszard Guńka Poland C C B B
Erkki Mäntyniemi Finland B B E E
Ryou Nishikawa Japan A A C C
Josef Slavík Czech Republic E E D D
Fredi Zarucchi Switzerland D D A A

Competition

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Training sessions (17 December 1999)

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Janne Ahonen, two-time second-place finisher in Zakopane

The first of three training sessions began on Friday, 17 December, at 11:00 AM. Martin Schmitt won the session with a jump of 125 meters.[7]

The second training session ended with the longest jump performed by Janne Ahonen. The Finnish representative landed at the 123-meter mark. One meter shorter was the jump made by the winner of the first training round, Martin Schmitt. Ahonen did not take part in the third training round. In that round, Schmitt reached a distance of 113 meters.[7]

80 out of 84 registered athletes from 17 countries took part in the training sessions.[13]

Qualifications for the first individual competition (18 December 1999)

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Andreas Widhölzl, third-place finisher in the second competition in Zakopane

The qualification round for the first individual competition began on 18 December at 11:00 AM.[7] It ended with a victory for Andreas Widhölzl. The runner-up in the World Cup standings made a jump of 128 m. A metre shorter was Jaroslav Sakala, who took second place and was the best among those fighting for a spot in the first round of the competition. Third place went to German jumper Martin Schmitt, who achieved 126 m in his attempt. Competitors with guaranteed participation in the event started their jumps from the 11th and 9th starting gates, while those competing for a spot in the event started from the 13th gate.[1]

A total of 81 out of 84 registered athletes from 17 countries took part in the qualification. Despite being on the start list, Primož Peterka, Pekka Salminen, and Matti Hautamäki did not participate.[1] The latter, who was guaranteed a place in the competition due to his sixth position in the World Cup standings, withdrew from the event. As a result, the right to compete went to Ivan Lunardi, who in qualification had placed first among those not advancing to the competition.[1]

First individual competition (18 December 1999)

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Martin Schmitt, double winner of competitions in Zakopane
Tommy Ingebrigtsen, 10th place finisher in the first competition in Zakopane

The first individual competition began on 18 December at 1:00 PM.[7] It featured 50 competitors from 13 countries.[11] The event took place in strong winds that frequently changed direction. After jumps by Frank Löffler at 125 metres and Lasse Ottesen at 124.5 metres, the competition jury decided to interrupt the event and lower the start gate from position 10 to position 8.[14]

The first jumper after the restart was Norwayn Henning Stensrud, who reached 108.5 metres. Next was Tommy Ingebrigtsen, who landed 14.5 metres farther than his compatriot and became the new leader. After him came Bine Norčič [pl], whose 113.5 metre jump placed him second. As the competition went on, the tailwind intensified, making conditions increasingly difficult for jumpers.[14][15] Among those unable to surpass Ingebrigtsen were Primož Urh-Zupan (111.5 m), Michal Doležal (112 m), and Adam Małysz (108 m). Many subsequent jumps were under 100 metres, though Hiroya Saitō (103 m) and Alexander Herr (101 m) managed to pass that mark.[16]

Michael Uhrmann and Roberto Cecon failed to qualify for the second round with jumps of 95.5 and 96 metres respectively. Kazuyoshi Funaki recorded 103 m. With number 71, Mika Laitinen reached 98 m and missed the final. The winner of the January World Cup event in Zakopane, Janne Ahonen, jumped 121.5 m, placing second just 0.7 points behind Ingebrigtsen. Stefan Horngacher jumped 104 m, while Noriaki Kasai managed 96 m and failed to advance. Hideharu Miyahira reached 103 m, Jani Soininen jumped 113.5 m to take third, and Ville Kantee landed at 106.5 m. Risto Jussilainen flew 122.5 m to lead by 0.6 points over Ingebrigtsen, but Andreas Goldberger jumped half a metre farther to take over first. Andreas Widhölzl landed at 110.5 m. World Cup leader Martin Schmitt recorded the longest jump of the round at 123.5 m, giving him the lead by 0.9 points over Goldberger.[16]

Among the 13 jumpers repeating their first-round attempts, Frank Löffler and Lasse Ottesen were best, each reaching 117.5 m and placing sixth and seventh. After the first round, the top three were Schmitt, Goldberger, and Jussilainen, followed by Ingebrigtsen and Ahonen.[16]

The second round began with Jakub Janda, who jumped 87 m. Reinhard Schwarzenberger, next up, landed 12.5 m farther to take the lead. Hansjörg Jäkle, 28th after the first round (100 m), improved by 5.5 m to lead by 12.2 points. Peter Žonta, in 26th, then jumped 3 m farther and moved ahead by 8.1 points. Žonta stayed in front until Hideharu Miyahira, 22nd after round one, jumped 110.5 m. Kazuyoshi Funaki's 103.5 m was not enough to overtake his teammate.[17] Stefan Horngacher, 18th at the halfway mark, tied Miyahira's 110.5 m and took the lead. Ville Kantee followed with 111.5 m to overtake him. Adam Małysz jumped 4.5 m less than Kantee and slotted into second. Andreas Widhölzl, 12th after round one, soared 124 m to take the lead by 33.2 points. Michal Doležal was 6.5 m shorter, and Bine Norčič's [pl] 99 m cost him a top spot. Jani Soininen's 109.5 m placed him third, but Lasse Ottesen's 121 m moved him into first by 5.2 points over Widhölzl.[17] Frank Löffler's 98 m left him seventh. Janne Ahonen, fifth after round one, landed at 116 m to take the lead thanks to his earlier advantage and strong style marks. Tommy Ingebrigtsen jumped 20 m less and dropped out of podium contention. Risto Jussilainen's 112 m put him fourth, just ahead of Goldberger, who jumped 108.5 m. Martin Schmitt closed with 123.5 m to win by 16.1 points over Ahonen, with Ottesen in third. This was Schmitt's 12th career World Cup win and second of the season.[17]

Qualifications for the second individual competition (19 December 1999)

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Hideharu Miyahira, fifth-place finisher in the second competition in Zakopane

The qualification round for the second individual competition in Zakopane began on 19 December at 11:00 AM.[7] The winner was Martin Schmitt. The World Cup leader and winner of the first competition jumped 119.5 metres this time. Janne Ahonen from Finland took second place with a jump of 118.5 metres. The third-best qualifier, Kazuyoshi Funaki, reached a distance 5.5 metres shorter. The best jumper among those fighting for a place in the main competition was Mika Laitinen, who took fifth place with a jump of 111.5 metres. All jumpers in the qualification round started their attempts from gate 11.[2]

80 of 82 registered athletes from 17 countries participated in the qualification. Primož Peterka and Andreas Widhölzl did not participate despite being listed. Widhölzl had guaranteed participation in the competition due to his second place in the World Cup standings.[2]

Second individual competition (19 December 1999)

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Jussi Hautamäki, 10th-place finisher in the second competition in Zakopane

On 19 December at 12:30 PM, the second individual competition on the Wielka Krokiew hill began.[7] 50 athletes from 10 countries took part.[12] The event started amid snowfall.[14]

The first competitor was Andrzej Młynarczyk [pl], who reached 89.5 metres. Espen Bredesen, starting after him, landed 9.5 metres farther and became the new leader. He was overtaken by the next jumper, Jakub Hlava, who achieved 104.5 metres. The Czech's result was bettered by Jon Petter Sandaker [pl], who jumped half a metre farther to take the lead. The Norwayn stayed in first place until Jaroslav Sakala's jump of 108.5 metres. Reinhard Schwarzenberger, seventh on the start list, jumped 9 metres farther and moved into the lead. The Austrian was not surpassed by, among others, Damjan Fras (105 m), Frank Löffler (89.5 m), Hiroya Saitō (96 m), Tommy Ingebrigtsen (105 m), Lasse Ottesen (111 m), Wolfgang Loitzl (110.5 m) and Mika Laitinen (114 m).[18]

The first to dethrone Schwarzenberger was the 38th competitor, Kazuyoshi Funaki, who reached 117.5 metres. The Japanese jumper was not beaten by his compatriot Noriaki Kasai (114 m). Stefan Horngacher landed six metres shorter and placed in the second ten. Hideharu Miyahira, starting after the Austrian, jumped 119 metres to take the lead by 0.7 points over Funaki. The next jumper, Jani Soininen, landed at 117.5 metres and took third place. Miyahira was then overtaken by Janne Ahonen, who jumped 124.5 metres and beat the Japanese by 11.4 points. Ahonen could not be surpassed by Ville Kantee (121 m), Risto Jussilainen (120 m), Andreas Goldberger (116 m) or Andreas Widhölzl (124 m). The last competitor of the first round, World Cup leader Martin Schmitt, also reached 124.5 metres but trailed Ahonen by 1 point due to lower style marks. At the halfway point, Janne Ahonen led ahead of Martin Schmitt and Andreas Widhölzl.[18]

The second round began with Espen Bredesen, 30th after the first round. The Norwayn jumped 99 metres, which did not keep him in the lead for long, as Alexander Herr, starting immediately after, reached 108.5 metres. The German led until the 26th competitor of the second round, Peter Žonta, jumped 115 metres. The Slovenian stayed in front until Lasse Ottesen, 17th after the first round, also landed at 115 metres but beat Žonta by 14.7 points overall. Jussi Hautamäki, 15th after the first round, matched that distance and took the lead by 2.9 points over Ottesen. 10th after the first round, Andreas Goldberger jumped 115.5 metres and went into first place with a 12-point advantage over Hautamäki. His compatriot Reinhard Schwarzenberger landed at 103 metres and dropped to seventh. Jani Soininen reached 109.5 metres, losing to Goldberger by 8.1 points. Seventh after the first round, Kazuyoshi Funaki jumped 123 metres to take the lead by 19.7 points over Goldberger. Hideharu Miyahira landed 8 metres shorter and took second place. Fifth after the first round, Risto Jussilainen jumped 108.5 metres and finished fourth, behind Funaki, Miyahira and Goldberger. Ville Kantee landed at 112 metres and took third place. Next, Andreas Widhölzl jumped 6.5 metres farther than the Finn before him, taking the lead by 0.6 points over Funaki. Martin Schmitt, second after the first round, reached 126.5 metres and overtook the Austrian by 15.3 points. The last jumper, Janne Ahonen, landed at 121 metres, which was enough for second place, 7.4 points behind Schmitt.[19]

The German became the first ski jumper in history to win two individual events during one World Cup weekend in Zakopane. Right behind Schmitt were Janne Ahonen and Andreas Widhölzl.[19]

World Cup standings after the competitions in Zakopane

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Several changes occurred among the top competitors in the World Cup after the competitions in Zakopane. Janne Ahonen advanced from 11th to fourth place, overtaking Risto Jussilainen, Ville Kantee, Matti Hautamäki, Jani Soininen, Hideharu Miyahira, Noriaki Kasai, and Stefan Horngacher.[20] Matti Hautamäki dropped from sixth to ninth place, with Miyahira and Soininen – tied for seventh – moving ahead of him. Horngacher retained 10th place at Kasai's expense. There was one personnel change in the top 15 of the overall World Cup standings: Kazuyoshi Funaki moved up to 12th place, while Masahiko Harada, who had been in that position before the competitions in Poland, fell to 15th, tied with Mika Laitinen.[20]

In the Nations Cup standings, there were no changes at the top: Finland, Austria, and Germany remained in the first three positions.[20]

World Cup standings after the competitions in Zakopane[20]
Rank Athlete Country Points Deficit to leader
1. Martin Schmitt Germany 560
2. Andreas Widhölzl Austria 370 190
3. Andreas Goldberger Austria 289 271
4. Janne Ahonen Finland 286 274
5. Risto Jussilainen Finland 279 281
6. Ville Kantee Finland 265 295
7. Hideharu Miyahira Japan 220 340
7. Jani Soininen Finland 220 340
9. Matti Hautamäki Finland 178 382
10. Stefan Horngacher Austria 162 398
11. Noriaki Kasai Japan 157 403
12. Kazuyoshi Funaki Japan 143 417
13. Jussi Hautamäki Finland 138 422
14. Peter Žonta Slovenia 120 440
15. Mika Laitinen Finland 107 453
15. Masahiko Harada Japan 107 453
17. Wolfgang Loitzl Austria 101 459
18. Lasse Ottesen Norway 83 477
19. Hansjörg Jäkle Germany 79 481
20. Nicolas Dessum France 76 484
21. Roberto Cecon Italy 75 485
22. Sven Hannawald Germany 56 504
23. Michal Doležal Czech Republic 48 512
24. Marco Steinauer Switzerland 47 513
25. Roar Ljøkelsøy Norway 45 515
25. Jérôme Gay France 45 515
27. Tommy Ingebrigtsen Norway 44 516
27. Michael Uhrmann Germany 44 516
29. Robert Mateja Poland 43 517
30. Simon Ammann Switzerland 41 519
31. Adam Małysz Poland 36 524
32. Alexander Herr Germany 32 528
32. Primož Urh-Zupan Slovenia 32 528
34. Morten Ågheim Norway 29 531
35. Sylvain Freiholz Switzerland 27 533
36. Ivan Lunardi Italy 24 536
36. Hiroya Saitō Japan 24 536
36. Pekka Salminen Finland 24 536
36. Christof Duffner Germany 24 536
40. Martin Koch Austria 23 537
40. Bine Norčič [pl] Slovenia 23 537
42. Martin Höllwarth Austria 22 538
42. Frank Löffler Germany 22 538
42. Damjan Fras Slovenia 22 538
45. Blaž Vrhovnik Slovenia 21 539
46. Bruno Reuteler Switzerland 20 540
47. Bernhard Metzler [pl] Austria 18 542
47. Reinhard Schwarzenberger Austria 18 542
47. Henning Stensrud Norway 18 542
47. Łukasz Kruczek Poland 18 542
51. Choi Heung-chul South Korea 17 543
52. Yuta Watase Japan 16 544
53. Gerd Siegmund Germany 15 545
54. Alan Alborn United States 14 546
55. Kazuya Yoshioka Japan 13 547
55. Primož Peterka Slovenia 13 547
55. Dmitriy Vassiliev Russia 13 547
58. Jaroslav Sakala Czech Republic 9 551
59. Jakub Hlava Czech Republic 7 553
60. Jakub Sucháček Czech Republic 6 554
60. Jon Petter Sandaker [pl] Norway 6 554
62. Jakub Janda Czech Republic 2 558
63. Espen Bredesen Norway 1 559

Team line-ups

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Of the athletes ranked in the top 15 of the overall World Cup standings, the only one absent from the start list was Masahiko Harada, who before the competitions in Poland occupied 12th place. Initially entered for the event, sixth-ranked Matti Hautamäki ultimately did not compete in any of the Zakopane contests.[4]

As the host of the event, Poland was entitled to enter an additional 10 athletes in the qualification round from the so-called "national quota", granted for two competitions held in the home country.[21] Thus, for the qualifications for each of the two competitions on the Wielka Krokiew hill, there were 14 Polish representatives taking part.[1][2]

Athlete Birth date World Cup
rank
Qualifying round Main competition Source
18 December 19 December 18 December 19 December
Austria (8)
Andreas Goldberger 29 November 1972 3 9 28 6 7 [22]
Martin Höllwarth 13 April 1974 32 15 13 q 33 [23]
Stefan Horngacher 20 September 1969 10 1 3 14 17 [24]
Martin Koch 22 January 1982 46 29 49 q 19 [25]
Wolfgang Loitzl 13 January 1980 19 26 7 21 13 [26]
Bernhard Metzler [pl] 13 June 1979 49 22 42 [27]
Andreas Widhölzl 14 October 1976 2 4 4 4 3 [28]
Reinhard Schwarzenberger 7 January 1977 19 22 29 15 [29]
Czech Republic (4)
Michal Doležal 11 March 1978 45 47 34 7 34 [30]
Jakub Janda 27 April 1978 55 49 33 30 31 [31]
Jakub Hlava 29 December 1979 39 24 [32]
Jaroslav Sakala 14 July 1969 34 40 [33]
Belarus (3)
Dimitri Afanasenko [pl] 9 March 1981 q q [34]
Alexandr Diadulia [pl] 4 November 1982 q q q q [35]
Aleksey Shibko 27 September 1977 q q [36]
Finland (8)
Janne Ahonen 11 May 1977 11 2 1 2 2 [37]
Matti Hautamäki 14 July 1981 6 DNSq [38]
Jussi Hautamäki 20 April 1979 13 17 10 [39]
Risto Jussilainen 10 June 1975 4 q 50 5 8 [40]
Ville Kantee 8 December 1978 5 9 6 [41]
Mika Laitinen 5 March 1973 24 24 31 [42]
Pekka Salminen 3 June 1981 29 DNSq [43]
Jani Soininen 12 November 1972 15 45 19 35 11 [44]
Netherlands (1)
Niels de Groot [pl] 1 May 1981 q q [45]
Germany (6)
Frank Löffler 9 August 1980 12 39 [46]
Alexander Herr 4 October 1978 34 17 27 27 23 [47]
Hansjörg Jäkle 19 October 1971 20 25 36 23 20 [48]
Martin Schmitt 29 January 1978 1 1 1 [49]
Gerd Siegmund 7 February 1973 46 35 29 q 27 [50]
Michael Uhrmann 16 September 1978 24 37 46 [51]
Japan (5)
Kazuyoshi Funaki 27 April 1975 16 8 2 19 4 [52]
Noriaki Kasai 6 June 1972 9 5 11 34 14 [53]
Hideharu Miyahira 21 December 1973 7 13 5 15 5 [54]
Hiroya Saitō 1 September 1970 36 20 32 25 32 [55]
Kazuya Yoshioka 9 September 1978 46 12 14 31 29 [56]
Kazakhstan (4)
Stanislav Filimonov 7 June 1979 45 q [57]
Pavel Gaiduk 11 February 1976 q q [58]
Juri Rulev [pl] 8 December 1978 q q q q [59]
Alexandr Vetrov 1978 q q [60]
South Korea (1)
Choi Heung-chul 3 December 1981 38 50 q [61]
Norway (8)
Morten Ågheim 20 July 1980 28 21 43 32 40 [62]
Espen Bredesen 2 February 1968 47 30 [63]
Tommy Ingebrigtsen 8 August 1977 50 3 6 10 21 [64]
Roar Ljøkelsøy 31 May 1976 26 28 36 [65]
Lasse Ottesen 8 April 1974 55 22 24 3 12 [66]
Olav Magne Dønnem 21 November 1980 42 q [67]
Jon Petter Sandaker [pl] 24 February 1974 32 25 [68]
Henning Stensrud 20 August 1977 53 18 20 20 41 [69]
Poland (15)
Łukasz Kruczek 1 November 1975 36 37 25 q 44 [70]
Adam Małysz 3 December 1977 40 27 23 13 38 [71]
Andrzej Młynarczyk [pl] 1973 32 46 q 37 [72]
Tomasz Pochwała 7 May 1983 q q [73]
Wojciech Skupień 9 March 1976 36 41 46 q [74]
Grzegorz Sobczyk [pl] 10 February 1981 q [75]
Grzegorz Śliwka [pl] 19 April 1982 q q [76]
Tomisław Tajner 14 May 1983 q q [77]
Wojciech Tajner [pl] 24 June 1980 q q q [78]
Marcin Bachleda 4 September 1982 q q [79]
Krystian Długopolski 3 August 1980 q q q q [80]
Paweł Kruczek [pl] 1 January 1983 q q [81]
Mariusz Maciaś [pl] 1 January 1981 q q [82]
Maciej Maciusiak [pl] 28 March 1982 q q [83]
Robert Mateja 5 October 1974 25 28 16 40 49 [84]
Russia (4)
Ildar Fatchullin 16 October 1982 q q [85]
Anton Kalinitschenko 22 July 1982 38 q [86]
Valery Kobelev 4 March 1973 q q [87]
Dmitriy Vassiliev 26 December 1979 43 q q [88]
Slovakia (5)
Filip Kafka 26 April 1982 q q [89]
Peter Koštial [pl] 29 August 1979 q [90]
Martin Mesík 17 October 1979 46 44 q q [91]
Dušan Oršula 23 August 1979 q q q [92]
Ján Zelenčík [pl] 17 October 1979 q q [93]
Slovenia (6)
Damjan Fras 21 February 1973 38 q 47 49 26 [94]
Bine Norčič [pl] 16 March 1981 50 16 43 [95]
Primož Peterka 28 February 1979 43 30 q DNSq DNSq [96]
Primož Urh-Zupan 22 January 1983 50 23 37 11 47 [97]
Blaž Vrhovnik 8 May 1981 24 17 [98]
Peter Žonta 9 January 1979 14 16 9 18 16 [99]
 Switzerland (3)
Simon Ammann 25 June 1981 27 44 48 [100]
Sylvain Freiholz 23 November 1974 32 26 35 [101]
Marco Steinauer 13 April 1976 22 48 50 [102]
Ukraine (3)
Volodymyr Boshchuk 3 August 1982 q q [103]
Ivan Kozlov 6 May 1978 42 q q q [104]
Alexandr Popuk 6 April 1976 q q [105]
Italy (2)
Roberto Cecon 28 December 1971 18 36 28 [106]
Ivan Lunardi 15 May 1973 29 43 45 [107]
Legend
q – Athlete did not qualify for the main competition
– – Athlete was not entered in the qualifying round
DNSq – Athlete was entered but did not start in the qualifying round

References

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  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Kwieciński, Adam. "Zakopane POL 1999.12.18 PS Q World Cup". wyniki-skoki.hostingasp.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 9 August 2025.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Kwieciński, Adam. "Zakopane POL 1999.12.19 PS Q World Cup". wyniki-skoki.hostingasp.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 9 August 2025.
  3. 1 2 "Skoki Narciarskie – Puchar Świata 1999/2000" [Ski Jumping – World Cup 1999/2000]. skokinarciarskie.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 9 August 2025.
  4. 1 2 3 "Skoki Narciarskie – Puchar Świata 1999/2000: Klasyfikacja po konkursie: 12.12.1999, Villach K-90" [Ski Jumping – World Cup 1999/2000: Standings after the competition: 12 December 1999, Villach K-90]. skokinarciarskie.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 9 August 2025.
  5. "Skoki Narciarskie – Villach, Puchar Świata 1999/2000: 12.12.1999 - Villach (Austria) K-90" [Ski Jumping – Villach, World Cup 1999/2000: 12 December 1999 - Villach (Austria) K-90]. skokinarciarskie.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 9 August 2025.
  6. "Schmitt najdalej" [Schmitt Jumps Farthest]. Gazeta Wyborcza Kraków (in Polish). 295. 18 December 1999.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Błoński, Robert (18 December 1999). "Wału nie ma. Bez halnego?" [No Wall. Without the Halny Wind?]. Gazeta Wyborcza (in Polish). 295.
  8. Błoński, Robert (21 December 1999). "Mgła nad Krokwią" [Fog Over Krokiew]. Gazeta Wyborcza (in Polish). 297.
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