Nordic Skiing
World Championships & Olympic Games
1924-1998
Click the year to read the results:
1924 Chamonix
1926 Lahti
1928 Sankt Moritz
1929 Zakopane
1930 Oslo
1931 Oberhof
1932 Lake Placid
1933 Innsbruck
1934 Sollefteå
1935 Vysoké Tatry
1936 Garmisch-Partenkirchen
1937 Chamonix
1938 Lahti
1939 Zakopane
1948 Sankt Moritz
1950 Lake Placid - Rumford
1952 Oslo
1954 Falun
1956 Cortina d'Ampezzo
1958 Lahti
1960 Squaw Valley
1962 Zakopane
1964 Innsbruck
1966 Oslo
1968 Grenoble
1970 Vysoké Tatry
1972 Sapporo
1974 Falun
1976 Innsbruck
1978 Lahti
1980 Lake Placid
1982 Oslo
1984 Sarajevo
1985 Seefeld
1987 Oberstdorf
1988 Calgary
1989 Lahti
1991 Val di Fiemme
1992 Albertville
1993 Falun
1994 Lillehammer
1995 Thunder Bay
1997 Trondheim
1998 Nagano
1999 Ramsau
2001 Lahti
2002 Salt Lake City
ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS ARE MOST WELCOME!
KORJAUKSET JA TÄYDENNYKSET OVAT TERVETULLEITA!
 

NOTES FOR AN ENGLISH READER:

Some abbreviations on these pages are in Finnish. M10km is 10 km race for men, N10km is 10 km race for women, etc. M 4x10km is naturally the mens' relay and N 4x5 km womens' relay. These abbreviations are easy to read as long as you remember that M means men - so N must mean women (obviously, there are not many alternatives left!) But here are the tricky ones: pmäki is for pieni mäki, in other words small jumping hill. The big hill competition was added in international schedule in 1960's. Smäki is an abbreviation of suuri mäki, the big hill. The Team competition of ski jumping is in Finnish joukkuemäki, here jmäki. In the same way the Nordic combinated  or yhdistetty has the Team combined competition, called joukkueyhdistetty, in these pages simply as jyhd. As complex as it perhaps seems first, the sports result follow the international standard and are easily understood almost universally.

NAGANO 1998-KISAVEIKKAUS
OVER 200 METRES SKIJUMPS