1991–92 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup
The 1991/92 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup was the 13th World Cup season in ski jumping and the 2nd official World Cup season in ski flying. It began in Thunder Bay, Canada on 1 December 1991 and finished in Planica, Slovenia on 29 March 1992. The individual World Cup was won by Toni Nieminen and Nations Cup by Austria.
Winners | |
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Overall | |
Ski Flying | |
Four Hills Tournament | |
Swiss Tournament | |
Nations Cup | |
Competitions | |
Venues | 16 |
Individual | 21 |
Team | 2 |
Cancelled | 2 |
Lower competitive circuit this season included the Europa/Continental Cup.
Map of world cup hosts
All 16 locations which have been hosting world cup events for men this season. Event in Falun canceled. Oberstdorf hosted ski flying event and four hills tournament.
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Calendar
Men
Standings
Overall
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Ski Flying
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Nations Cup
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Four Hills Tournament
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gollark: "Load far pointer" is only 80 bits → not 128 → uncool.
gollark: This is osmarks-approved™ assßssembly.
gollark: Even if you may need to generate slightly awful asm and use the xmm/ymm/whatever registers.
References
- "K120: Thunder Bay". International Ski Federation. 1 December 1991.
- "K120: Thunder Bay". International Ski Federation. 2 December 1991.
- "K90: Sapporo". International Ski Federation. 14 December 1991.
- "K115: Sapporo". International Ski Federation. 15 December 1991.
- "K115: Oberstdorf". International Ski Federation. 29 December 1991.
- "K107: Garmisch-Partenkirchen". International Ski Federation. 1 January 1992.
- "K109: Innsbruck". International Ski Federation. 4 January 1992.
- "K120: Bischofshofen". International Ski Federation. 6 January 1992.
- "K90: Predazzo". International Ski Federation. 10 January 1992.
- "K95: St. Moritz". International Ski Federation. 17 January 1992.
- "K120: Engelberg". International Ski Federation. 19 January 1992.
- "K182: Oberstdorf". International Ski Federation. 25 January 1992.
- "K182: Oberstdorf". International Ski Federation. 26 January 1992.
- "K90: Lahti". International Ski Federation. 29 February 1992.
- "K114: Lahti". International Ski Federation. 1 March 1992.
- "K90: Örnsköldsvik". International Ski Federation. 4 March 1992.
- "K120: Trondheim". International Ski Federation. 8 March 1992.
- "K120: Trondheim". International Ski Federation. 11 March 1992.
- "K110: Oslo". International Ski Federation. 15 March 1992.
- "K180: Harrachov". International Ski Federation. 21 March 1992.
- "K120: Planica". International Ski Federation. 29 March 1992.
- "Team K120: Predazzo". International Ski Federation. 12 January 1992.
- "Team K120: Planica". International Ski Federation. 28 March 1992.
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