Srednja Bloudkova

Srednja Bloudkova (English: Bloudek's normal hill) was a ski jumping K90 hill located in Planica, Slovenia, that existed between 1949 and 2012.[1]

Srednja Bloudkova
on right; replaced with HS 62, 80
Constructor(s)Stanko Bloudek
LocationPlanica, Slovenia
Opened27 March 1949
Renovated1989
Closed2007
Demolished2012
Size
K–point90 m
Hill size100 m
Hill record110 m (361 ft)
Bine Zupan
(13 Mar 2004)
Top events
World Cup1980, 1981, 1982,
1983, 1984, 1986,
1988, 1989, 1993,
1994
Universiade2007

History

The hill was opened in 1949 and constructed by Slovenian engineer Stanko Bloudek. The hill has a perfect location and the first original inrun was made of thin steel stick construction. His main assistant at the construction of this hill was Stano Pelan, Slovenian pilot, constructor, bank officer, working supervisor, credited as Planica expert, FIS judge of ski jumping and technical judge delegate. This hill is also known under his name.

Winner of first international opening competition on this hill on 27 March 1949 was Janez Polda. Winner of the last international competition on March 28, 1971 was East German Hans-Georg Aschenbach.

Winner of the first World Cup competition on 21 March 1980 was Austrian Hans Millonig.

Constructors of present hill are brothers Vlado and Janez Gorišek. They reconstructed hill in 1989. In hill axis there was a wooden sculpture of a ski jumper.[2]

The last World Cup event was on 11 December 1994 with Austrian winner Andreas Goldberger. In total there was 11 individual World Cup competitions. Last official ski jumping event on this hill was held on 2007 FIS Nordic Junior World Ski Championships replacing Tarvisio, a venue dealing with a lack of snow. Those were also the last ski jumps ever at this hill.

As a part of Planica Nordic Centre renovation, the hill was completely demolished in late 2012. It stands just a few meters away from Stano Pelan Hill and right next to the Bloudkova velikanka. After they demolished Stano Pelan Hill, they built two completely new medium ski jumping hills at the same place, which are used for training. They are HS 62 and HS 80 size. Those two smaller hills opened in December 2013.

Competititions

Ski jumping

Date Event Winner Second Third
20 March 1949   OP Evert Karlsson Janez Polda Karl Holmström
27 March 1949   INT Janez Polda Lasse Johansson Rafael Viljamaa
11 March 1951   INT Sepp Bradl Janez Polda Albin Plank
23 March 1952   INT Keith Wegemann Sepp Bradl Alois Leodolter
8 March 1953   INT Herm Anwander Janez Polda Sepp Schiffner
7 March 1965   JPM.1 Dieter Mueller Helmut Wegscheider Dieter Bokeloh
26 March 1967   JPM.2 Reinhold Bachler Horst Queck Peter Lesser
22 March 1970   JPM.3 Vladimir Smirnov Aleksandr Ivannikov Reinhold Bachler
28 March 1971   JPM.5 Hans-Georg Aschenbach Walter Steiner Peter Štefančič
21 March 1980   WC Hans Millonig Armin Kogler Primož Ulaga
21 March 1981   WC Jari Puikkonen Horst Bulau Axel Zitzmann
27 March 1982   WC Ole Bremseth Per Bergerud Massimo Rigoni
26 March 1983   WC Matti Nykänen Primož Ulaga Olav Hansson
24 March 1984   WC Jens Weißflog Mike Holland Janusz Malik
22 March 1986   WC Matti Nykänen Andreas Felder Franz Neuländtner
27 March 1988   WC Primož Ulaga Pavel Ploc Ernst Vettori
25 March 1989   WC Jens Weißflog Andreas Felder Ari-Pekka Nikkola
11 December 1993   WC Espen Bredesen Takanobu Okabe Andreas Goldberger
10 December 1994   WC Kazuyoshi Funaki Andreas Goldberger Janne Ahonen
11 December 1994   WC Andreas Goldberger Mika Laitinen Lasse Ottesen

Nordic combined

Date Event Winner Second Third
15 December 1984   WC
K92 / 15 km
Geir Andersen Hubert Schwarz Hallstein Bøgseth

Hill record

Men

Date Distance
19 March 1949   Janez Polda 77 metres (253 ft)  
20 March 1949   Janez Polda 77.5 metres (254 ft)  
22 March 1949   Carlo De Lorenzi 78 metres (256 ft)  
24 March 1949   Janez Polda 80.5 metres (264 ft)  
27 March 1949   Evert Karlsson 85.5 metres (281 ft)  
27 March 1949   Janez Polda 86 metres (282 ft)  
7 March 1965   Marjan Pečar 87 metres (285 ft)  
26 March 1967   Horst Queck 91 metres (299 ft)  
28 March 1971   Hans-Georg Aschenbach 93 metres (305 ft)  
21 March 1980   Tom Levorstad 94 metres (308 ft)  
27 March 1982   Ole Bremseth 94 metres (308 ft)  
26 March 1983   Olav Hansson 95.5 metres (313 ft)  
24 March 1984   Jens Weißflog 97 metres (318 ft)  
11 March 1993   Espen Bredesen 101 metres (331 ft)  
11 March 1994   Andreas Goldberger 102.5 metres (336 ft)  
13 March 2004   Bine Zupan 110 metres (361 ft)  

Ladies

Date Distance
2 March 2003   Anette Sagen 105.5 metres (346 ft)  

See also

References

  1. "All comeptitititons and winners in Planica since 1934" (PDF). osc-planica. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 March 2012. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  2. "Complete environment report for Planica Nordic Centre" (PDF). Retrieved 20 July 2012.

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