Ski jumping Raw Air: Live ticker – Trondheim Individual II

  • 16:22

    Halvor Egner Granerud (NOR)

    Things are actually going well for Halvor Egner Granerud in training, but things don’t seem to be working out in the competition itself and he has to find himself in eleventh place after 120.5 meters.

  • 16:21

    Junshiro Kobayashi (JPN)

    Junshiro Kobayashi delivers exactly the same distance. However, since he found more tailwind, the numerous plus points meant he moved straight up to third place and thus safely into the final.

  • 4:20 p.m

    Fredrik Villumstad (NOR)

    Fredrik Villumstad is too late at the take-off table, stands too steeply over the crossbars and can’t get the distance he was actually hoping for. With 123 meters he is in ninth place and will have to worry about whether it will work out somehow.

  • 16:19

    Giovanni Bresadola (ITA)

    Things aren’t going much better for Giovanni Bresadola and the young Italian doesn’t have enough distance to be sure that he’ll make it to the final.

  • 16:19

    Constantin Schmid (GER)

    However, it could be difficult for the next German to make it to the finals. 122 meters could be too little with a slight updraft and corresponding deductions.

  • 16:18

    Alex Insam (ITA)

    Alex Insam doesn’t get away from the take-off table cleanly either, but thanks to a good posture in flight he can still get 125.5 meters and hope for the final. All he has to do is leave five jumpers behind him.

  • 16:17

    Killian Peier (SUI)

    The jump was nothing! Killian Peier completely messes up his jump and then can’t get up to speed at all. After just 112.5 meters, it is already clear to Peier that the final will not end.

  • 16:16

    Robert Johansson (NOR)

    Robert Johansson can be seen that he had hoped for more from Trondheim after his good results in Oslo. After only 117.5 meters he has to settle in the middle of the field and is in danger of missing the final.

  • 4:15 p.m

    Erik Belshaw (USA)

    Erik Belshaw can follow up and also delivers a really good jump into the snow. With 125.5 5 meters, the US boy is the first pursuer of the two Polish jumpers.

  • 16:14

    Dawid Kubacki (POL)

    Dawid Kubacki can follow suit and the 34-year-old also has a good jump with a lot of tailwind. After 127.5 meters and good grades, he takes the lead with 2.2 points.

  • 16:13

    Kamil Stoch (POL)

    Things were already going well for Kamil Stoch in training and the Polish veteran can deliver now too! After he was thrown out in the first round yesterday, he now has a good 124.5 meters and is in the lead thanks to a few plus points.

  • 16:12

    Stephan Leyhe (GER)

    Phew! Big disappointment with the second DSV jumper in the field. Stephan Leyhe made a mistake in the inrun lane and when he had no luck with the wind, it only went to 110.5 meters. The final is far away!

  • 16:11

    Eetu Nousiainen (FIN)

    Eetu Nousiainen actually gets off the take-off table quite well, but then doesn’t get through his flight phase well and loses speed, which then makes another jump impossible. After 118.5 meters the final becomes difficult.

  • 4:10 p.m

    Vladimir Zografski (BUL)

    Vladimir Zografski also has petrified facial expressions. For the lone fighter in Bulgaria there is no more than 112.5 meters on the scoreboards.

  • 4:10 p.m

    Tate Frantz (USA)

    Tate Frantz is one of those whose long season is already showing and the 18-year-old can no longer come close to the distances he was able to deliver a few weeks ago. At 119.5 meters he still has to wait to see whether he will make it to the final.

  • 16:09

    Keiichi Sato (JPN)

    The Japanese doesn’t have to get his hopes up about making it into the top 30. After difficulties at the take-off table, his jump ends after just 110 meters with a strong tailwind.

  • 16:08

    Yevhen Marusiak (UKR)

    Yevhen Marusiak still has the possibility of another jump on the large hill in Trondheim. After 123.5 meters he is currently in third place.

  • 16:07

    Karl Geiger (GER)

    Now it applies to Karl Geiger. Can the DSV jumper finally score points again today? At least the chance is there after it goes to 125 meters. For the moment, Geiger sits in second position.

  • 16:06

    Antti Aalto (FIN)

    Antti Aalto can be seen below. The Finnish veteran hoped for more from his jump. At 116.5 meters it will be difficult towards the final round.

  • 4:05 p.m

    Valentin Foubert (FRA)

    Things are going better at the jump table for Valentin Foubert and the 21-year-old’s timing is fine. He leaves something behind in flight, but overall he can look forward to his first jump with satisfaction of 120 meters.

  • 16:04

    Yanick Wasser (SUI)

    The first Swiss cannot keep up with this distance. At 114.5 meters there shouldn’t be anything countable for him today.

  • 16:03

    Benjamin Ostvold (NOR)

    Benjamin Østvold is lucky with the conditions and manages to confidently bring his technique to the edge of the take-off table. This means you go straight down to 131 meters and confidently reach the top. Nobody is likely to be able to take it off so quickly.

  • 16:03

    Artti Aigro (EST)

    Artti Aigro also seems tired at the end of the season. The 24-year-old, who has been traveling with the Norwegian since this winter, can’t go further than 114.5 meters.

  • 16:01

    Vitaliy Kalinichenko (UKR)

    The next athlete joins the track with Vitaliy Kalinichenko. But the 30-year-old also has a difficult time coming out of the gate with a lot of tailwind and has to land after just 105.5 meters. This means he will also be one of those who will be eliminated.

  • 16:01

    Noriaki Kasai (JPN)

    Noriaki Kasai had already struggled in training on the facility and things weren’t quite right in the competition either. After 114 meters he is not yet sure of the final.

  • 4:00 p.m

    Kasperi Valto (FIN)

    If it rains, it will be Kasperi Valto who will open today’s competition on the large hill. However, in tailwind conditions, he was unable to climb more than 109 meters from Gate 19.

  • 3:55 p.m

    The conditions

    After almost perfect conditions on Tuesday, the athletes will face changing winds in Trondheim again today and the luck factor could play a role again later when it comes to the placings.

  • 3:50 p.m

    Three Swiss

    The team from Switzerland is represented by three athletes in Trondheim. The main goal here should also be to take part in the final. The team consists of Yanick Wasser, Killian Peier and Gregor Deschwanden.

  • 3:46 p.m

    Austrians with many favorites

    While the German team has difficulty delivering good performances across the board at the end of the season, the ÖSV team can also rely on Jan Hörl in addition to Stefan Kraft. Michael Hayböck, Daniel Huber as well as Daniel Tschofenig and Manuel Fettner can also be expected to achieve results well ahead.

  • 15:43

    Difficult weeks for violinists

    Karl Geiger looks back on difficult weeks. The DSV jumper had not landed in the World Cup points since the second competition in Lahti. Accordingly, there isn’t much to do in the raw air and Geiger has to intervene early in the competition as the 15th athlete. Stephan Leyhe, Constantin Schmid, Philipp Raimund as well as Pius Paschke and Andreas Wellinger complete the German team during the Raw Air.

  • 3:39 p.m

    Kraft leads Raw Air

    In the Raw Air, Stefan Kraft is still in the lead with 1050.2 points. After yesterday’s jumping, the Austrian was able to pull ahead of Johann Andre Forfang from Norway by 20.1 points. Jan Hörl is 23 points behind in third place. Peter Prevc, who will end his career in Planica, is fourth with 34.9 points. Andreas Wellinger is the best German athlete, 58.8 points behind Kraft. Everything speaks for strength in the overall World Cup too. Five individual competitions before the end of the season he is 221 points ahead of Ryoyu Kobayashi. Wellinger is 396 points behind.

  • 15:27

    Switch to the large hill

    After the ski jumpers went over the ski jump from the normal hill in Trondheim yesterday, today it’s time to get down to business on the neighboring large hill. Like the small facility, this one was also modernized for next year’s World Championships and it is the first time that the majority of athletes will have the chance to test the facility.

  • Welcome!

    Hello and welcome to the men’s Raw Air from Trondheim! The live ticker begins in good time before the start.

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