Martin Schmitt
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Medal record | |||
Martin Schmitt |
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Men's ski jumping | |||
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Olympic Games | |||
Gold | 2002 Salt Lake City | Team large hill | |
Silver | 1998 Nagano | Team large hill | |
World Championships | |||
Gold | 1999 Ramsau | Individual large hill | |
Gold | 1999 Ramsau | Team large hill | |
Gold | 2001 Lahti | Individual large hill | |
Gold | 2001 Lahti | Team large hill | |
Silver | 2001 Lahti | Individual normal hill | |
Silver | 2005 Oberstdorf | Team normal hill | |
Silver | 1997 Trondheim | Team large hill | |
Bronze | 2001 Lahti | Team normal hill |
Martin Schmitt (born January 29, 1978 in Villingen Schwenningen, Germany) is one of Germany's most successful ski jumpers. Beginning his competitive career at the Furtwangen area skiing club in Germany, his and Sven Hannawald's successes made their sport one of the most popular in the country. With particular help from the news station RTL, they received great acclaim.
[edit] Successes
Schmitt's first great success came when, as a schoolboy at the Furtwangen ski boarding school, he achieved a bronze medal in the 1997 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships in Trondheim. The following season, he won the team large hill silver at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano.
In 1998/99 Schmitt won the team World Cup for the first time and triumphed at the 1999 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships in Ramsau by winning the team large hill. He defended his success at the World Cup 1999/2000.
Schmitt enjoyed particular world success in skijumping between 1999 and 2001. With 28 world cup successes (10 in the 1998/99 season, 11 in 1999/2000, 6 in 2000/01, and 1 in 2001/02), he finished fourth in the world rankings behind Matti Nykänen (48 victories), Jens Weissflog (33 victories) and Janne Ahonen (30 victories). At the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships, he won eight medals (including four gold), and at the Winter Olympics he won one silver and one gold medal. At the 2003 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships, he won a single silver medal.
In the 2000/2001 season his results attained a new peak, although he was beaten by the higher-ranked Adam Małysz. At the 2001 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships in Lahti, he won both the individual and team large hills. In addition he gained a silver medal in the individual Normal hill and a bronze in the team normal hill. Consequently, he became the first ski jumper to win four medals at the Ski jumping World Championships.
After the 2001 season, Schmitt began to suffer from injuries, and could no longer equal his earlier successes. Nonetheless, in the 2001/2002 season he won another team gold at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, as well as winning silver in the WC at Harrachov. His last world cup success was on March 1, 2002 in Lahti.
After many back injuries in the 2004-5 season, he did not take part in the World Cup for many weeks, in order that he could be better prepared for the 2005 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships in Oberstdorf. There he won a silver medal in the team normal hill.
[edit] External links
Olympic Champions in men's ski jumping team large hill |
1988 Finland Ari-Pekka Nikkola, Matti Nykänen, Tuomo Ylipulli, & Jari Puikkonen 1992 Finland Ari-Pekka Nikkola, Mika Laitinen, Risto Laakkonen, & Toni Nieminen 1994 Germany Hansjörg Jäkle, Christof Duffner, Dieter Thoma, & Jens Weissflog 1998 Japan Takanobu Okabe, Hiroya Saito, Masahiko Harada, & Kazuyoshi Funaki 2002 Germany Sven Hannawald, Stephan Hocke, Michael Uhrmann, & Martin Schmitt 2006 Austria Andreas Widhölzl, Andreas Kofler, Martin Koch, & Thomas Morgenstern |
World champions in ski jumping individual large hill |
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1925: Willen Dick | 1926: Jacob Tullin Thams | 1927: Tore Edman | 1929: Sigmund Ruud | 1930: Gunnar Andersen | 1931: Birger Ruud | 1933: Marcel Reymond | 1934: Kristian Johansson | 1935: Birger Ruud | 1937: Birger Ruud | 1938: Asbjørn Ruud | 1939: Josef Bradl | 1950: Hans Bjørnstad | 1954: Matti Pietikäinen | 1958: Juhani Kärkinen | 1962: Helmut Recknagel | 1966: Bjørn Wirkola | 1970: Gariy Napalkov | 1974: Hans-Georg Aschenbach | 1978: Tapio Räisänen | 1982 Matti Nykänen | 1985 Per Bergerud | 1987: Andreas Felder | 1989: Jari Puikkonen | 1991: Franci Petek | 1993: Espen Bredesen | 1995: Tommy Ingebrigtsen | 1997: Masahiko Harada | 1999: Martin Schmitt | 2001: Martin Schmitt | 2003: Adam Małysz | 2005: Janne Ahonen |