2002–03 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup
Winners | |
---|---|
Overall | Ronny Ackermann |
Sprint | Ronny Ackermann |
Warsteiner Grand Prix | Felix Gottwald |
Nations Cup | Germany |
Competitions | |
Venues | 14 |
Individual | 15 |
Cancelled | 1 |
← 2001/02 2003/04 → |
The 2002/03 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup was the 20th world cup season, a combination of ski jumping and cross-country skiing organized by FIS. It started on 29 Nov 2002 in Kuusamo, Finland and ended on 15 March 2003 in Lahti, Finland.[1]
Calendar
Men
Num | Season | Date | Place | Hill | Discipline | Winner | Second | Third | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
207 | 1 | 29 November 2002 | Kuusamo | Rukatunturi | K120 / 7.5 km (Sprint) | Hannu Manninen | Ronny Ackermann | Björn Kircheisen | ||
1 December 2002 | Kuusamo | Rukatunturi | K120 / 7.5 km (Sprint) | cancelled | ||||||
208 | 2 | 6 December 2002 | Trondheim | Granåsen | K120 / 7.5 km (Sprint) | Björn Kircheisen | Johnny Spillane | Georg Hettich | ||
209 | 3 | 7 December 2002 | Trondheim | Granåsen | K120 / 15 km | Björn Kircheisen | Georg Hettich | Johnny Spillane | ||
210 | 4 | 8 December 2002 | Trondheim | Granåsen | K120 / 7.5 km (Sprint) | Björn Kircheisen | Ronny Ackermann | Johnny Spillane | ||
211 | 5 | 14 December 2002 | Harrachov | Čerťák | K90 / 15 km | Samppa Lajunen | Hannu Manninen | Björn Kircheisen | ||
212 | 6 | 15 December 2002 | Harrachov | Čerťák | K90 / 7.5 km (Sprint) | Hannu Manninen | Samppa Lajunen | Ronny Ackermann | ||
31 December 2002 | Oberhof | Hans-Renner-Schanze | K120 / 7.5 km (Sprint) | rescheduled to 1 January | ||||||
213 | 7 | 1 January 2003 | Oberhof | Hans-Renner-Schanze | K120 / 7.5 km (Sprint) | Felix Gottwald | Ronny Ackermann | Mario Stecher | ||
2nd Warsteiner Grand Prix Overall (1 January 2003) | Felix Gottwald | Ronny Ackermann | Mario Stecher | |||||||
214 | 8 | 8 January 2003 | Ramsau | W90-Mattensprunganlage | K90 / 7.5 km (Sprint) | Samppa Lajunen | Ronny Ackermann | Hannu Manninen | ||
215 | 9 | 12 January 2003 | Chaux-Neuve | La Côté Feuillée | K90 / 15 km | Felix Gottwald | Ronny Ackermann | Todd Lodwick | ||
216 | 10 | 22 January 2003 | Hakuba | Olympic Hills | K120 / 15 km | Ronny Ackermann | Hannu Manninen | Georg Hettich | ||
217 | 11 | 25 January 2003 | Sapporo | Ōkurayama | 10 km (Mass) / K120 | Ronny Ackermann | Georg Hettich | Samppa Lajunen | ||
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2003 | ||||||||||
218 | 12 | 8 March 2003 | Oslo | Holmenkollbakken | K115 / 7.5 km (Sprint) | Felix Gottwald | Ronny Ackermann | Ola Morten Græsli Björn Kircheisen | ||
219 | 13 | 9 March 2003 | Oslo | Holmenkollbakken | K115 / 7.5 km (Sprint) | Ronny Ackermann | Felix Gottwald | Ola Morten Græsli | ||
220 | 14 | 14 March 2003 | Lahti | Salpausselkä | K116 / 15 km | Ronny Ackermann | Felix Gottwald | Jouni Kaitainen | ||
221 | 15 | 15 March 2003 | Lahti | Salpausselkä | K116 / 7.5 km (Sprint) | Felix Gottwald | Kenneth Braaten | Ronny Ackermann |
Standings
Overall
| Sprint
| Warsteiner Grand Prix
| Nations Cup
|
References
- ^ "FIS Nordic Combined World Cup 2002/03 overall standings". FIS. Retrieved 28 Jul 2015.
External links
- FIS Nordic Combined World Cup 2002/03 (in English)
- v
- t
- e
FIS Nordic Combined World Cup seasons
- 1983–84
- 1984–85
- 1985–86
- 1986–87
- 1987–88
- 1988–89
- 1989–90
- 1990–91
- 1991–92
- 1992–93
- 1993–94
- 1994–95
- 1995–96
- 1996–97
- 1997–98
- 1998–99
- 1999–2000
- 2000–01
- 2001–02
- 2002–03
- 2003–04
- 2004–05
- 2005–06
- 2006–07
- 2007–08
- 2008–09
- 2009–10
- 2010–11
- 2011–12
- 2012–13
- 2013–14
- 2014–15
- 2015–16
- 2016–17
- 2017–18
- 2018–19
- 2019–20
- 2020–21
- 2021–22
- 2022–23
- 2023–24
- 2024–25