1984–85 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup

Nordic Combined World Cup 1984/85
Winners
Overall Norway Geir Andersen
Nations Cup  Norway
Competitions
Venues 7
Individual 7

The 1984/85 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup was the second World Cup season, a combination of ski jumping and cross-country skiing organized by International Ski Federation. It started on 15 Dec 1984 in Planica, Yugoslavia and ended on 16 March 1985 in Oslo, Norway.[1]

Calendar

Men

Num Season Date Place Hill Discipline Winner Second Third
8 1 15 December 1984 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Planica Srednja Bloudkova K92 / 15 km Norway Geir Andersen West Germany Hubert Schwarz Norway Hallstein Bøgseth
9 2 20 December 1984 Switzerland St. Moritz Olympiaschanze K94 / 15 km Norway Geir Andersen West Germany Hubert Schwarz West Germany Thomas Müller
10 3 29 December 1984 East Germany Oberwiesenthal Fichtelbergschanzen K90 / 15 km East Germany Heiko Hunger East Germany Uwe Dotzauer East Germany Oliver Warg
11 4 5 January 1985 West Germany Schonach Langenwaldschanze K90 / 15 km West Germany Hermann Weinbuch Norway Geir Andersen West Germany Hubert Schwarz
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 1985
12 5 23 February 1985 Soviet Union Leningrad Toksovo K88 / 15 km Norway Geir Andersen West Germany Hermann Weinbuch Norway Hallstein Bøgseth
13 6 2 March 1985 Finland Lahti Salpausselkä K88 / 15 km Norway Geir Andersen West Germany Hermann Weinbuch West Germany Thomas Müller
14 7 16 March 1985 Norway Oslo Holmenkollbakken K105 / 15 km West Germany Hermann Weinbuch Norway Geir Andersen East Germany Heiko Hunger

Standings

Overall

Rank Points
1 Norway Geir Andersen 140
2 West Germany Hermann Weinbuch 126
3 West Germany Hubert Schwarz 79
4 Norway Hallstein Bøgseth 69
5 East Germany Heiko Hunger 62
6 East Germany Uwe Dotzauer 52
7 West Germany Thomas Müller 46
8 Norway Torbjørn Løkken 39
9 Norway Ivar Olsen 38
10 Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher 34
  • Standings after 7 events.

Nations Cup

Rank Points
1 Norway Norway 391
2 West Germany West Germany 299
3 East Germany East Germany 177
4 Finland Finland 49
5 Austria Austria 48
6 United States United States 44
7 Switzerland Switzerland 41
8 Poland Poland 24
9 Italy Italy 22
9 Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 22
  • Standings after 7 events.

References

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