1984–85 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup
Winners | |
---|---|
Overall | 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 | Planica | Srednja Bloudkova | K92 / 15 km | Geir Andersen | Hubert Schwarz | Hallstein Bøgseth |
9 | 2 | 20 December 1984 | St. Moritz | Olympiaschanze | K94 / 15 km | Geir Andersen | Hubert Schwarz | Thomas Müller |
10 | 3 | 29 December 1984 | Oberwiesenthal | Fichtelbergschanzen | K90 / 15 km | Heiko Hunger | Uwe Dotzauer | Oliver Warg |
11 | 4 | 5 January 1985 | Schonach | Langenwaldschanze | K90 / 15 km | Hermann Weinbuch | Geir Andersen | Hubert Schwarz |
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 1985 | ||||||||
12 | 5 | 23 February 1985 | Leningrad | Toksovo | K88 / 15 km | Geir Andersen | Hermann Weinbuch | Hallstein Bøgseth |
13 | 6 | 2 March 1985 | Lahti | Salpausselkä | K88 / 15 km | Geir Andersen | Hermann Weinbuch | Thomas Müller |
14 | 7 | 16 March 1985 | Oslo | Holmenkollbakken | K105 / 15 km | Hermann Weinbuch | Geir Andersen | Heiko Hunger |
Standings
Overall
|
Nations Cup
|
References
- ↑ "FIS Nordic Combined World Cup 1984/85 overall standings". FIS. Retrieved 28 Jul 2015.
External links
- FIS Nordic Combined World Cup 1984/85 (in English)
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