1991–92 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup

Nordic Combined World Cup 1991/92
Winners
Overall France Fabrice Guy
Nations Cup  Norway
Competitions
Venues 8
Individual 8

The 1991/92 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup was the 9th world cup season, a combination of ski jumping and cross-country skiing organized by FIS. It started on 14 Dec 1991 in Štrbské Pleso, Czechoslovakia and ended on 13 March 1992 in Oslo, Norway.[1]

Calendar

Men

Num Season Date Place Hill Discipline Winner Second Third
64 1 14 December 1991 Czechoslovakia Štrbské Pleso MS 1970 B K90 / 15 km France Fabrice Guy Norway Fred Børre Lundberg Norway Bård Jørgen Elden
65 2 21 December 1991 France Courchevel Tremplin du Praz K90 / 15 km France Fabrice Guy Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher Norway Knut Tore Apeland
66 3 4 January 1992 Germany Schonach Langenwaldschanze K90 / 15 km France Fabrice Guy Norway Fred Børre Lundberg Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher
67 4 11 January 1992 Austria Breitenwang Raimund-Ertl-Schanze K75 / 15 km Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher Norway Fred Børre Lundberg Czechoslovakia Milan Kučera
68 5 18 January 1992 Austria Murau Hans-Walland Großschanze K120 / 15 km France Fabrice Guy Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher Austria Klaus Ofner
1992 Winter Olympics
69 6 28 February 1992 Finland Lahti Salpausselkä K90 / 15 km Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher Austria Klaus Ofner Norway Knut Tore Apeland
70 7 10 March 1992 Norway Trondheim Granåsen K120 / 15 km France Fabrice Guy Norway Trond Einar Elden Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher
71 8 13 March 1992 Norway Oslo Holmenkollbakken K110 / 15 km France Fabrice Guy Norway Fred Børre Lundberg France Sylvain Guillaume

Standings

Overall

Rank Points
1 France Fabrice Guy 170
2 Austria Klaus Sulzenbacher 128
3 Norway Fred Børre Lundberg 123
4 Austria Klaus Ofner 69
5 Norway Trond Einar Elden 50
6 Norway Knut Tore Apeland 43
7 Norway Frode Moen 42
7 France Sylvain Guillaume 42
9 Switzerland Andreas Schaad 35
9 Czechoslovakia František Maka 35
  • Standings after 8 events.

Nations Cup

Rank Points
1 Norway Norway 349
2 Austria Austria 294
3 France France 259
4 Germany Germany 160
5 Switzerland Switzerland 101
6 Japan Japan 82
7 Russia Russia 66
8 Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 35
8 Poland Poland 35
10 United States United States 33
  • Standings after 8 events.

References

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