Planica 1987

Planica 1987 was a two day ski flying competition part of 1986/87 World Cup season, held from 14–15 March 1987 in Planica, SR Slovenia, Yugoslavia. Circa 100,000 people in total has gathered in three days.

Planica 1987
Host cityPlanica, SR Slovenia, Yugoslavia
Sport(s)Ski flying
EventsWorld Cup (2x)
Main venueVelikanka bratov Gorišek K185

Schedule

Date Event Rounds Longest jump of the day Visitors
13 March 1987  Official training3192 metres (630 ft) by Andreas Felder (touch)
189 metres (620 ft) by Piotr Fijas
10,000
14 March 1987  Competition 14194 metres (636 ft) by Piotr Fijas40,000
15 March 1987  Competition 23193 metres (613 ft) by Vegard Opaas50,000

All jumps over 190 metres

Chronological order:

  • 192 metres (630 ft) – 13 March – Andreas Felder (WR touch, 2RD, Official training)
  • 194 metres (636 ft) – 14 March – Piotr Fijas (WR, 3RD, canceled and repeated after)
  • 191 metres (627 ft) – 14 March – Andreas Felder (repeated 3RD)
  • 190 metres (623 ft) – 15 March – Ole Gunnar Fidjestøl (2RD)
  • 193 metres (633 ft) – 15 March – Vegard Opaas (3RD, canceled after)

191 rule

191 rule, proposed by founder of World Cup Torbjørn Yggeseth, which didn't score flights exceeding 191 metres (627 ft), was first time implemented. Piotr Fijas' 194 metres world record was officially recognized seven years later at the FIS meeting in Rio 1994.

World Cup

There were two individual ski flying events on Velikanka bratov Gorišek K185. By ski flying rules of that time there were three round of jumps, but only two best counted in a final result.[1][2]

On 11 and 12 March 1987, trial jumpers were already testing the flying hill, while competition was training on the neighbour Bloudkova velikanka K130 hill.

On 13 March 1987, official training was scheduled at 10:00 AM with 18 Yugoslavian ski jumpers at the start. Felder touched the ground at 192 metres WR distance in the second training round infront of 10,000 people. Fijas landed at 189 metres.[3][4]

Official training

Incomplete list and order — 10,000 people — 13 March 1987

Bib Name Round 1 Round 2 Round 3
3 Vili Tepeš150.0 mN/AN/A
N/A Miran Tepeš159.0 m166.0 m172.0 m
N/A Matjaž ZupanN/A165.0 m158.0 m
N/A Janez DebelakN/AN/A154.0 m
N/A Bojan GlobočnikN/AN/AN/A
N/A Borut MurN/AN/A147.0 m
N/A Matjaž ŽagarN/A161.0 mN/A
N/A Rajko LotričN/A164.0 m147.0 m
N/A Tomaž DolarN/AN/AN/A
N/A Vasja BajcN/AN/A154.0 m
N/A Janez ŠtirnN/AN/AN/A
N/A Iztok MelinN/AN/AN/A
N/A Robert KopačN/AN/AN/A
N/A Iztok GolobN/AN/AN/A
N/A Dušan ŠilarN/AN/AN/A
N/A Primož UlagaN/A155.0 mN/A
N/A Grega PeljhanN/AN/AN/A
N/A Krištof GašpircN/AN/AN/A
N/A Andreas Felder163.0 m192.0 m184.0 m
N/A Ole Gunnar FidjestølN/AN/AN/A
N/A Vegard OpaasN/AN/AN/A
N/A Hroar Stjernen181.0 mN/AN/A
N/A Robert Selbekk-HansenN/AN/AN/A
N/A Frédéric BergerN/AN/AN/A
N/A Jan Boklöv171.0 mN/AN/A
N/A Piotr Fijas170.0 mN/A189.0 m
N/A Jiří Parma170.0 mN/AN/A
N/A Rolf SchilliN/AN/AN/A

  Invalid WR! Touch.
  Crash!

On 14 March 1987, first competition went quiet normal until the last round. It all started complicating in the third round after Piotr Fijas 194 metres world record distance in front of 40,000 people. After this jump jury canceled the third round and repeated it all over from the beginning from a lower gate. Then in the repeated round Andreas Felder, although with lower speed managed to land at 191 metres and won the competition.[5]

On 15 March 1987, first two rounds of second competition went well until Vegard Opaas' jump at 193 metres. Jury canceled the competition right after this jump. Opaas was furious at technical delegate Torbjørn Yggeseth who robbed him of an almost certain victory, which would help him in a very tied World Cup overall battle with Ernst Vettori. Only one best jump of first two rounds counted as official result and Ole Gunnar Fidjestøl won the second competition.[6]

Ski flying world records

The all-time longest standing ski jump in parallel style ever.

Date Name Country Metres Feet
13 March 1987   Andreas Felder  Austria 192 630
14 March 1987   Piotr Fijas  Poland 194 636

  Not recognized! Touched the ground at world record distance.

References

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