Ski jumping at the 2018 Winter Olympics – Women's normal hill individual

The women's normal hill individual ski jumping competition for the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea, was held on 12 February 2018 at the Alpensia Ski Jumping Stadium.[1][2]

Women's normal hill individual
at the XXIII Olympic Winter Games
VenueAlpensia Ski Jumping Stadium
Dates12 February
Competitors35 from 14 nations
Winning score264.6
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Maren Lundby  Norway
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Katharina Althaus  Germany
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Sara Takanashi  Japan
← 2014
2022 →

Summary edit

The defending champion was Carina Vogt, the field also included the 2014 silver medalist Daniela Iraschko-Stolz. None of them returned to the podium. Maren Lundby, who showed the best results in both jumps, became the champion. Katharina Althaus won the silver medal, and Sara Takanashi became third. For all of them this was the first Olympic medal.

In the victory ceremony, the medals were presented by Octavian Morariu, member of the International Olympic Committee accompanied by Erik Røste, Norwegian Ski Federation president.

Results edit

The final was started at 21:50.[3][4]

Rank Bib Name Country Round 1 Final round Total
Distance (m) Points Rank Distance (m) Points Rank Points
  35 Maren Lundby   Norway 105.5 125.4 1 110.0 139.2 1 264.6
  34 Katharina Althaus   Germany 106.5 123.2 2 106.0 129.4 2 252.6
  33 Sara Takanashi   Japan 103.5 120.3 3 103.5 123.5 3 243.8
4 31 Irina Avvakumova   Olympic Athletes from Russia 99.0 114.7 4 102.0 116.0 5 230.7
5 30 Carina Vogt   Germany 97.0 108.6 6 101.5 119.3 4 227.9
6 19 Daniela Iraschko-Stolz   Austria 101.5 113.3 5 99.0 112.6 7 225.9
7 26 Nika Križnar   Slovenia 101.0 108.5 7 104.0 114.7 6 223.2
8 22 Ramona Straub   Germany 98.5 104.4 10 98.5 106.1 8 210.5
9 32 Yuki Ito   Japan 94.0 105.1 9 93.0 98.8 10 203.9
10 25 Juliane Seyfarth   Germany 102.5 108.3 8 90.0 86.0 17 194.3
11 29 Chiara Hölzl   Austria 88.0 92.2 14 95.5 101.0 9 193.2
12 23 Kaori Iwabuchi   Japan 93.5 98.2 11 89.0 90.1 13 188.3
13 21 Jacqueline Seifriedsberger   Austria 93.0 93.7 13 92.0 89.8 14 183.5
14 27 Ema Klinec   Slovenia 91.5 94.2 12 89.0 87.4 16 181.6
15 17 Lara Malsiner   Italy 88.5 90.2 16 92.5 89.3 15 179.5
16 15 Silje Opseth   Norway 89.5 83.5 18 91.5 94.7 11 178.2
17 24 Yūka Setō   Japan 93.0 90.3 15 89.0 81.7 24 172.0
18 20 Manuela Malsiner   Italy 86.5 79.6 20 89.0 83.8 22 163.4
19 3 Sarah Hendrickson   United States 86.0 76.7 23 88.0 83.9 21 160.6
20 16 Chang Xinyue   China 83.0 69.6 26 84.5 85.3 18 154.9
21 9 Lucile Morat   France 86.5 79.7 19 86.5 75.1 27 154.8
22 18 Špela Rogelj   Slovenia 80.0 64.3 28 90.5 90.2 12 154.5
23 11 Julia Kykkänen   Finland 85.0 77.2 22 84.0 75.4 26 152.6
24 7 Alexandra Kustova   Olympic Athletes from Russia 85.0 77.3 21 85.5 75.0 28 152.3
25 14 Sofia Tikhonova   Olympic Athletes from Russia 86.5 75.0 24 86.0 75.8 25 150.8
25 12 Daniela Haralambie   Romania 80.5 66.5 27 85.0 84.3 20 150.8
27 10 Anastasiya Barannikova   Olympic Athletes from Russia 88.0 83.7 17 82.0 65.3 29 149.0
28 13 Léa Lemare   France 74.5 62.3 29 93.5 84.5 19 146.8
29 6 Abby Ringquist   United States 77.5 62.0 30 91.0 82.4 23 144.4
30 28 Urša Bogataj   Slovenia 84.5 71.2 25 81.0 64.0 30 135.2
31 4 Nita Englund   United States 77.0 57.9 31 did not advance
32 5 Taylor Henrich   Canada 78.0 56.5 32
33 8 Elena Runggaldier   Italy 71.5 48.8 33
34 1 Evelyn Insam   Italy 72.0 46.4 34
35 2 Park Guy-lim   South Korea 56.0 14.2 35

References edit

  1. ^ "Schedule |The PyeongChang 2018 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games". pyeongchang2018.com. Archived from the original on 2017-11-05. Retrieved 2018-01-03.
  2. ^ Start list
  3. ^ Round 1 results
  4. ^ Final results