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Men's large hill individual
at the XIX Olympic Winter Games
Pictogram for ski jumping
Venue Park City
DatesFebruary 12 & 13
Competitors66 from 21 nations
winning score281.4
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Simon Ammann
  Switzerland
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Adam Małysz
  Poland
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Matti Hautamäki
  Finland
←  1998
2006 →

The men's large hill individual ski jumping competition for the 2002 Winter Olympics was held in Park City, United States. The competition went for two days, with the qualifying round on February 12 and the final rounds on February 13. [1]

Results

Qualifying

Fourteen skiers were pre-qualified, on the basis of their World Cup performance, meaning that they directly advanced to the final round. These skiers still jumped in the qualifying round, but they were not included with non-pre-qualified skiers in the standings. The fifty-two skiers who were not pre-qualified competed for thirty-six spots in the final round.

Rank Name Country Score Notes
1 Robert Kranjec   Slovenia 119.1
2 Masahiko Harada   Japan 116.1
3 Veli-Matti Lindström   Finland 114.3
4 Alan Alborn   United States 114.1
5 Robert Mateja   Poland 111.4
6 Michael Uhrmann   Germany 111.2
7 Janne Ahonen   Finland 111.0
8 Andreas Küttel   Switzerland 109.6
9 Primož Peterka   Slovenia 105.3
10 Nicolas Dessum   France 104.4
11 Valery Kobelev   Russia 103.6
12 Kim Hyun-Ki   South Korea 102.7
13 Ildar Fatchullin   Russia 102.3
14 Noriaki Kasai   Japan 101.9
15 Damjan Fras   Slovenia 100.8
16 Anders Bardal   Norway 99.5
16 Jens Salumäe   Estonia 99.5
18 Tomisław Tajner   Poland 98.0
19 Hideharu Miyahira   Japan 97.7
20 Tommy Ingebrigtsen   Norway 97.6
21 Emmanuel Chedal   France 97.3
22 Clint Jones   United States 97.2
23 Roar Ljøkelsøy   Norway 96.8
23 Jan Mazoch   Czech Republic 96.8
25 Stanislav Filimonov   Kazakhstan 96.3
26 Tomasz Pochwała   Poland 94.4
27 Sylvain Freiholz   Switzerland 93.6
28 Maxim Polunin   Kazakhstan 92.2
29 Jakub Janda   Czech Republic 89.4
30 Lars Bystøl   Norway 88.5
30 Dmitry Chvykov   Kyrgyzstan 88.5
32 Choi Yong-Jik   South Korea 85.8
33 Rémi Santiago   France 84.0
34 Aleksandr Belov   Russia 83.0
35 Marco Steinauer   Switzerland 82.1
36 Kang Chil-Gu   South Korea 81.0
37 Jan Matura   Czech Republic 79.5
38 Pavel Gayduk   Kazakhstan 76.2
39 Georgi Zharkov   Bulgaria 75.3
40 Jaan Jüris   Estonia 74.4
41 Choi Heung-Chul   South Korea 73.1
41 Michal Doležal   Czech Republic 73.1
43 Brendon Doran   United States 68.1
44 Florentin Durand   France 66.7
45 Andrey Lyskovets   Belarus 66.3
46 Aleksandr Korobov   Kazakhstan 65.2
47 Anton Kalinichenko   Russia 61.3
48 Glynn Pedersen   Great Britain 56.3
49 Volodymyr Hlyvka   Ukraine 54.9
50 Kakha Tsakadze   Georgia 54.0
51 Tommy Schwall   United States 44.0
52 Tambet Pikkor   Estonia 39.0
* Adam Małysz   Poland 120.8 [1]
* Sven Hannawald   Germany 119.1 [1]
* Roberto Cecon   Italy 118.0 [1]
* Matti Hautamäki   Finland 117.3 [1]
* Kazuyoshi Funaki   Japan 112.4 [1]
* Simon Ammann   Switzerland 110.6 [1]
* Stefan Horngacher   Austria 107.6 [1]
* Andreas Widhölzl   Austria 103.6 [1]
* Peter Žonta   Slovenia 103.5 [1]
* Stephan Hocke   Germany 100.8 [1]
* Martin Schmitt   Germany 99.4 [1]
* Martin Koch   Austria 99.0 [1]
* Martin Höllwarth   Austria 95.9 [1]
* Risto Jussilainen   Finland 87.1 [1]

^ 1: These skiers were pre-qualified; they did perform jumps in the qualification round, but were not ranked with the non-pre-qualified jumpers.

Final

The final consisted of two jumps, with the top thirty after the first jump qualifying for the second jump. The combined total of the two jumps was used to determine the final ranking.

Rank Name Country Jump 1 Rank Jump 2 Rank Total
Simon Ammann   Switzerland 140.5 1 140.9 1 281.4
Adam Małysz   Poland 137.3 3 132.4 2 269.7
Matti Hautamäki   Finland 129.1 4 126.9 3 256.0
4 Sven Hannawald   Germany 140.5 1 114.8 11 255.3
5 Stefan Horngacher   Austria 123.5 9 123.7 4 247.2
6 Andreas Küttel   Switzerland 125.0 8 120.6 6 245.6
7 Kazuyoshi Funaki   Japan 128.7 5 116.8 9 245.5
8 Martin Koch   Austria 126.3 7 118.2 8 244.5
9 Janne Ahonen   Finland 119.2 16 122.3 5 241.5
10 Martin Schmitt   Germany 127.3 6 113.1 13 240.4
11 Robert Kranjec   Slovenia 118.1 17 119.5 7 237.6
12 Stephan Hocke   Germany 123.5 9 113.4 12 236.9
13 Peter Žonta   Slovenia 121.2 12 113.0 14 234.2
14 Martin Höllwarth   Austria 122.3 11 111.0 18 233.3
15 Primož Peterka   Slovenia 120.9 13 112.1 17 233.0
16 Michael Uhrmann   Germany 120.2 14 112.2 16 232.4
17 Valery Kobelev   Russia 115.3 19 116.2 10 231.5
18 Risto Jussilainen   Finland 116.7 18 109.5 20 226.2
19 Roberto Cecon   Italy 113.0 23 112.6 15 225.6
20 Masahiko Harada   Japan 115.1 20 107.7 21 222.8
21 Andreas Widhölzl   Austria 114.9 21 107.7 21 222.6
22 Damjan Fras   Slovenia 119.9 15 101.3 25 221.2
23 Nicolas Dessum   France 110.3 27 109.8 19 220.1
24 Hideharu Miyahira   Japan 108.6 29 106.8 23 215.4
25 Anders Bardal   Norway 110.3 27 102.6 24 212.9
26 Tommy Ingebrigtsen   Norway 110.7 25 97.1 26 207.8
27 Sylvain Freiholz   Switzerland 110.4 26 95.4 27 205.8
28 Emmanuel Chedal   France 111.3 24 93.6 28 204.9
29 Robert Mateja   Poland 108.6 29 93.6 28 202.2
30 Stanislav Filimonov   Kazakhstan 114.9 21 82.5 30 197.4
31 Kim Hyun-Ki   South Korea 108.5 31
32 Roar Ljøkelsøy   Norway 107.2 32
33 Rémi Santiago   France 106.1 33
34 Alan Alborn   United States 105.4 34
35 Ildar Fatchullin   Russia 103.1 35
36 Jan Mazoch   Czech Republic 102.7 36
37 Veli-Matti Lindström   Finland 102.1 37
38 Lars Bystøl   Norway 99.4 38
39 Dmitry Chvykov   Kyrgyzstan 98.4 39
39 Tomisław Tajner   Poland 98.4 39
41 Noriaki Kasai   Japan 97.5 41
42 Clint Jones   United States 94.4 42
43 Tomasz Pochwała   Poland 93.9 43
44 Jakub Janda   Czech Republic 91.3 44
45 Marco Steinauer   Switzerland 87.2 45
46 Choi Yong-Jik   South Korea 86.7 46
47 Kang Chil-Gu   South Korea 83.2 47
48 Maxim Polunin   Kazakhstan 83.1 48
49 Jens Salumäe   Estonia 78.9 49
50 Aleksandr Belov   Russia 66.7 50

References

  1. ^ "Ski Jumping at the 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Games: Men's Large Hill, Individual". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 1 September 2019.