1990–91 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup

Nordic Combined World Cup 1990/91
Winners
Overall Norway Fred Børre Lundberg
Nations Cup  Norway
Competitions
Venues 8
Individual 8

The 1990/91 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup was the 8th world cup season, a combination of ski jumping and cross-country skiing organized by FIS. It started on 15 Dec 1990 in Trondheim, Norway and ended on 23 March 1991 in St. Moritz, Switzerland.[1]

Calendar

Men

No. Season Date Place Hill Discipline Winner Second Third
56 1 15 Dec 1990 Norway Trondheim Granåsen K-90 / 15 km Norway Fred Børre Lundberg Norway Trond Einar Elden Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher
57 2 29 Dec 1990 Germany Oberwiesenthal Fichtelbergschanzen K-90 / 15 km Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher Norway Fred Børre Lundberg Switzerland Hippolyt Kempf
58 3 5 Jan 1991 Germany Schonach Langenwaldschanze K-90 / 15 km Norway Fred Børre Lundberg Switzerland Hippolyt Kempf Germany Hans-Peter Pohl
59 4 12 Jan 1991 Austria Bad Goisern Kalmberg-Schanzen K-90 / 15 km Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher Switzerland Hippolyt Kempf Norway Fred Børre Lundberg
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 1991 (7-17 Feb)
60 5 2 Mar 1991 Finland Lahti Salpausselkä K-90 / 15 km Norway Trond Einar Elden Germany Thomas Abratis Norway Fred Børre Lundberg
61 6 8 Mar 1991 Sweden Falun Lugnet K-89 / 15 km Norway Trond Einar Elden France Fabrice Guy Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher
62 7 15 Mar 1991 Norway Oslo Holmenkollbakken K-110 / 15 km Norway Trond Einar Elden Norway Fred Børre Lundberg Norway Frode Moen
63 8 23 Mar 1991 Switzerland St. Moritz Olympiaschanze K-94 / 15 km Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher Japan Masashi Abe Norway Trond Einar Elden

Standings

Overall

Rank Points
1 Norway Fred Børre Lundberg 142
2 Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher 137
3 Norway Trond Einar Elden 123
4 Switzerland Hippolyt Kempf 78
5 Soviet Union Allar Levandi 60
6 France Fabrice Guy 59
7 Japan Masashi Abe 54
8 Norway Knut Tore Apeland 52
9 Norway Frode Moen 37
10 Germany Hans-Peter Pohl 34
  • Standings after 8 events.

Nations Cup

Rank Points
1 Norway Norway 456
2 Austria Austria 211
3 Switzerland Switzerland 134
4 France France 119
5 Germany Germany 112
6 Japan Japan 81
6 Soviet Union Soviet Union 60
8 Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 51
9 Poland Poland 12
9 Finland Finland 11
  • Standings after 8 events.

References

External links

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