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| Event type

Large Hill, Team, Men

Date22 February 1994
StatusOlympic
LocationLysgårdsbakkene, Lillehammer
Participants48 from 12 countries
FormatTwo jumps per team member, with both scored on distance and form. Four members per team, with all 4 jumps in each round to count towards team total.
Judge #1Kyoichi OmoriJPN
Judge #2Fabio MorandiniITA
Judge #3Räto WohlwendSUI
Judge #4Gerhard WenningerAUT
Judge #5Miroslav MartinákSVK
DetailsK-Point: 123 m

Traditionally the domain of the Finns and Norwegians, the two nations had won all but one of the world and Olympic championships to be held, the 1994 Olympic title was to be decided between two nations who had never challenged for a major title beforehand. After the first round Germany and Japan were separated by less than a point but Jinya Nishikata and Takanobu Okabe performed well in the second round and with one man left for each nation Japan held the advantage. By the time Masahiko Harada stood at the top of the jump he knew what he had to do to ensure a Japanese victory. A jump of around 105 m would be enough and since he had made a leap of 122 m in the first round this appeared to be a relative formality. Instead the jump turned into a disaster as he mistimed his leap and landed at just 97.5 m. One of the defining images of the 1994 Games is of Harada kneeling in the snow with head in his hands as his team-mates stood in disbelief. Prior to 1994 only the best three jumps of each team counted per round but the rules were changed before Lillehammer and all jumps were now added to the team’s score. If the old rules had still been in place Japan would have recorded a clear victory.

PosNumberCompetitorsNOCPointsJump #1Jump #2
19GermanyGER970.1486.8 (1)483.3 (1)Gold
9-1Jens Weißflog 277.7136.3141.4
9-2Dieter Thoma 254.1126.8127.3
9-3Hansjörg Jäkle 231.8110.1121.7
9-4Christof Duffner 206.5113.692.9
211JapanJPN956.9486.0 (2)470.9 (2)Silver
11-1Takanobu Okabe 262.0124.1137.9
11-2Jinya Nishikata 254.4110.4144.0
11-3Noriaki Kasai 248.9132.9116.0
11-4Masahiko Harada 191.6118.673.0
310AustriaAUT918.9472.0 (3)446.9 (4)Bronze
10-1Andi Goldberger 254.3122.3132.0
10-2Stefan Horngacher 236.6120.7115.9
10-3Heinz Kuttin 218.5107.5111.0
10-4Christian Moser 209.5121.588.0
412NorwayNOR898.8449.7 (4)449.1 (3)
12-1Espen Bredesen 257.7126.1131.6
12-2Lasse Ottesen 239.8114.7125.1
12-3Øyvind Berg 215.598.7116.8
12-4Roar Ljøkelsøy 185.8110.275.6
57FinlandFIN889.5443.8 (5)445.7 (5)
7-1Raimo Ylipulli 231.6104.4127.2
7-2Jani Soininen 231.0115.5115.5
7-3Janne Ahonen 214.9115.699.3
7-4Janne Väätäinen 212.0108.3103.7
66FranceFRA822.1414.7 (6)407.4 (6)
6-1Nicolas Jean-Prost 224.0122.0102.0
6-2Steve Delaup 203.290.3112.9
6-3Nicolas Dessum 202.4103.299.2
6-4Didier Mollard 192.599.293.3
78Czech RepublicCZE800.7401.9 (8)398.8 (7)
8-1Zbyněk Krompolc 221.9109.5112.4
8-2Jaroslav Sakala 203.9106.197.8
8-3Ladislav Dluhoš 199.894.2105.6
8-4Jiří Parma 175.192.183.0
85ItalyITA782.3405.8 (7)376.5 (8)
5-1Roberto Cecon 236.2123.5112.7
5-2Ivo Pertile 199.896.1103.7
5-3Ivan Lunardi 188.598.390.2
5-4Andrea Cecon 157.887.969.9
94SloveniaSLO739.4377.3 (9)362.1 (9)
4-1Robert Meglič 215.297.9117.3
4-2Samo Gostiša 180.287.892.4
4-3Matjaž Zupan 180.294.785.5
4-4Matjaž Kladnik 163.896.966.9
103SwedenSWE653.3320.7 (10)332.6 (10)
3-1Mikael Martinsson 209.3103.8105.5
3-2Staffan Tällberg 187.778.5109.2
3-3Johan Rasmussen 145.588.057.5
3-4Fredrik Johansson 110.850.460.4
112United StatesUSA505.0235.2 (11)269.8 (11)
2-1Greg Boester 146.475.371.1
2-2Randy Weber 130.550.879.7
2-3Ted Langlois 129.160.768.4
2-4Kurt Stein 99.048.450.6
121Russian FederationRUS416.3198.0 (12)218.3 (12)
1-1Mikhail Yesin 118.555.862.7
1-2Stanislav Pokhilko 116.358.457.9
1-3Dmitry Chelovenko 101.154.147.0
1-4Aleksey Solodyankin 80.429.750.7