The photo of the victory podium in Predazzo on Sunday was identical to that on Saturday. The now overall World Cup leader Karl Geiger won again ahead of Salzburg’s Stefan Kraft and Poland’s Dawid Kubacki. Kraft lacked 4.7 points on the Germans after sets at 103.5 and 101 m, so Kraft continues to chase his 18th World Cup victory and his second success of the season.
Kraft had gone 1.9 points ahead of Geiger into the final of the best 30 after Geiger lost points in a 107 m jump on landing. In the second round, Geiger landed safely at 103.5 meters and outperformed by 2.5 meters. Geiger celebrated his fourth World Cup success.
After two second places, Kraft is now in second place overall. Austria’s currently best man is 120 points short of the new leader Geiger. The previous leader Ryoyu Kobayashi (JPN) could not cope with the little Bakken in Val di Fiemme and fell 44 points behind Kraft to third.
Daniel Huber falls far behind in run two
Philipp Aschenwald was second best ÖSV man in twelfth, Gregor Schlierenzauer was 17th immediately before Daniel Huber. Huber, who was seventh after the first round, was annoyed in the run because Piotr Zyla had shortened a hatch immediately after him after 104 meters , With far more tailwind and less start-up, Huber landed at just 92.5 m and lost ten positions. Michael Hayböck finished 20th, Jan Hörl improved from 30th to 24th.
Double winner Geiger was happy. “A dream comes true. My first time in the yellow jersey,” the 26-year-old from Allgäu posted on social networks on Saturday. Now he is traveling home as a leader. The World Cup team is now moving back to Germany, where the athletes in Titisee-Neustadt are returning to a large hill.
Result jumping in Val di Fiemme
place |
knight |
Points |
Width (1st DG / 2nd DG) |
1. |
Karl Geiger (GER) |
285.2 |
(107.0 / 103,5m) |
Second |
Stefan Kraft (AUT) |
280.5 |
(103.5 / 101.0) |
Third |
Dawid Kubacki (POL) |
278.2 |
(102.5 / 101.0) |
4th |
Piotr Zyla (POL) |
277.3 |
(101.0 / 104.0) |
, |
Kamil Stoch (POL) |
277.3 |
(102.0 / 100.0) |
6th |
Johann Andre Forfang (NOR) |
270.7 |
(100.0 / 100.0) |
7th |
Peter Prevc (SLO) |
266.0 |
(99.0 / 101.5) |
, |
Marius Lindvik (NOR) |
266.0 |
(101.5 / 101.5) |
9th |
Anze Lanisek (SLO) |
263.8 |
(100.0 / 99.5) |
10th |
Yukiya Sato (JPN) |
263.6 |
(97.0 / 101.0) |
11th |
Roman Koudelka (CZE) |
263.3 |
(102.5 / 93.5) |
12th |
Philipp Aschenwald (AUT) |
263.0 |
(99.5 / 97.0) |
13th |
Stephan Leyhe (GER) |
262.1 |
(96.0 / 100.5) |
14th |
Domen Prevc (SLO) |
261.2 |
(96.0 / 101.0) |
15th |
Cene Prevc (SLO) |
259.6 |
(100.0 / 96.5) |
16th |
Daniel-Andre Tande (NOR) |
257.6 |
(99.0 / 99.5) |
17th |
Gregor Schlierenzauer (AUT) |
257.3 |
(97.5 / 97.5) |
18th |
Pius Paschke (GER) |
256.6 |
(96.0 / 100.0) |
, |
Daniel Huber (AUT) |
256.6 |
(102.0 / 92.5) |
20th |
Michael Hayboeck (AUT) |
254.8 |
(98.5 / 98.0) |
21st |
Keiichi Sato (JPN) |
254.1 |
(99.5 / 98.0) |
, |
Junshiro Kobayashi (JPN) |
254.1 |
(99.0 / 96.0) |
23rd |
Different hair (NOR) |
251.7 |
(97.5 / 98.5) |
24th |
Jan Hörl (AUT) |
250.9 |
(94.0 / 102.5) |
25th |
Ryoyu Kobayashi (JPN) |
250.7 |
(95.5 / 96.5) |
26th |
Robert Johansson (NOR) |
249.3 |
(93.0 / 98.5) |
27th |
Viktor Polasek (CZE) |
247.8 |
(98.0 / 95.0) |
28th |
Stefan Hula (POL) |
246.3 |
(96.0 / 96.5) |
29th |
Sergei Tkachenko (KAZ) |
243.2 |
(99.0 / 96.5) |
30th |
Luca Roth (GER) |
234.7 |
(98.0 / 95.0) |
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