Host city | Planica, Kingdom of Yugoslavia |
---|---|
Sport | Ski jumping |
Events | International |
Main venue | Bloudkova velikanka K106 |
Planica 1935 was a ski jumping event held on 17 March 1935 in Planica, Drava Banovina, Kingdom of Yugoslavia. Total of 12,500 people have gathered in the competition.
Schedule
Date | Event | Rounds | Longest jump of the day | Visitors |
---|---|---|---|---|
13 March 1935 | Unofficial training | 4 | 88 metres (289 ft) by Stanisław Marusarz | N/A |
14 March 1935 | Official training 1 | 1 | 93 metres (305 ft) by Reidar Andersen (WR) | N/A |
15 March 1935 | Official training 2 | 6 | 99 metres (325 ft) by Reidar Andersen (WR) | 500 |
17 March 1935 | International event | 3 | 87.5 metres (287 ft) by Stanisław Marusarz | 12,000 |
Competition
On 13 March 1935 unofficial training was held with only three jumpers performing in a couple of rounds: Marusarz, Novšak and Norbert Knobloch. The longest jump of the day was at 87 metres.[1]
On 14 March 1935 first official training with many competititors at start. Reidar Andersen set the world record in his third attempt at 93 metres.[2]
On 15 March 1935 second official training was on schedule with three world records: Stanisław Marusarz landed at 95 metres and Reidar Andersen at 98 and 99 metres.[3]
On 17 March 1935 there was an international competition in three rounds and the winner was Polish Stanisław Marusarz.[4][5]
Unofficial training
13 March 1935 — chronological order of jumps not available
Bib | Name | Country | Jump 1 | Jump 2 | Jump 3 | Jump 4 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
N/A | Stanisław Marusarz | Poland | 76 m | 78 m | 88 m | 85 m |
Albin Novšak | Poland | 42 m | 52 m | 58 m | — | |
Norbert Knobloch | Austria | 54 m | — | — | — |
First official training
11:00 AM — 14 March 1935 — chronological order
Bib | Name | Country | Dist. |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Randmod Sørensen | Norway | 76 m |
2 | Reidar Andersen | Norway | 86 m |
3 | Bronisław Czech | Poland | 67 m |
4 | Josef Bradl | Austria | 72 m |
5 | Walter Reinhardt | Austria | 58 m |
6 | Stanisław Marusarz | Poland | 90 m |
7 | Albin Novšak | Kingdom of Yugoslavia | 57 m |
8 | Randmod Sørensen | Norway | 80 m |
9 | Franc Pribošek | Kingdom of Yugoslavia | 57 m |
10 | Hubert Köstinger | Austria | 65 m |
11 | Reidar Andersen | Norway | 87 m |
12 | Randmod Sørensen | Norway | 90 m |
13 | Reidar Andersen | Norway | 93 m |
14 | Josef Bradl | Austria | 50–60 m |
15 | Walter Reinhardt | Austria | 50–60 m |
16 | Hubert Köstinger | Austria | 50–60 m |
17 | Franc Pribošek | Kingdom of Yugoslavia | 62 m |
18 | Bogo Šramel | Kingdom of Yugoslavia | 62 m |
19 | Stanisław Marusarz | Poland | 91 m |
20 | Franc Palme | Kingdom of Yugoslavia | 55 m |
21 | Tone Dečman | Kingdom of Yugoslavia | 62 m |
Second official training
Morning — 15 March 1935 — chronological order of jumps not available
International competition
11:30 AM — 17 March 1935 — Two rounds — chronological order
World record!
Fall or touch!
Official results
International competition
Rank | Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Stanisław Marusarz | 326.1 |
2 | Antonín Bartoň | 312.9 |
3 | Marcel Raymond | 304.6 |
4 | Guido Borter | 298.9 |
5 | Bronisław Czech | 285.3 |
6 | Alfred Steinmüller | 283.9 |
7 | Bogo Šramel | 270.9 |
8 | Gregor Höll | 265.2 |
9 | František Šimůnek | 258.1 |
10 | Bohuslav Kadavý | 241.4 |
11 | Albin Novšak | 217.6 |
Ski jumping world records
Date | Name | Country | Metres | Feet |
---|---|---|---|---|
14 March 1935 | Reidar Andersen | Norway | 93 | 305 |
15 March 1935 | Stanisław Marusarz | Poland | 95 | 312 |
15 March 1935 | Reidar Andersen | Norway | 98 | 322 |
15 March 1935 | Reidar Andersen | Norway | 99 | 325 |
References
- ↑ "Planica vabi, p.7" (in Slovenian). Jutro. 14 March 1935.
- ↑ "V Planici že dosegli 93 metrsko znamko, p.7" (in Slovenian). Jutro. 15 March 1935.
- ↑ "Sport: V Planici tik pred zaželjenim ciljem, p.7" (in Slovenian). Jutro. 16 March 1935.
- ↑ "V Planici ni bilo 100 metrov, p.1,2" (in Slovenian). Jutro. 18 March 1935.
- ↑ "Zaman smo čakali 100 metrov, p.1" (in Slovenian). Ponedeljski Slovenec. 18 March 1935.