Anders Jacobsen (ski jumper)

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Anders Jacobsen

AndersJacobsen-2010.jpg
Jacobsen in 2010

Country
 Norway
Born
(1985-02-17) 17 February 1985 (age 34)
Hønefoss, Norway[1]
Height1.73 m (5 ft 8 in)[1]
Ski clubRingkollen Skiklubb
Personal best230.5 m (756 ft)
Planica, 20 March 2010
World Cup career
Seasons
2007–2011
2013–2015
Individual wins10
Team wins6
Indiv. podiums28
Team podiums20
Indiv. starts164
Team starts26
Four Hills titles1 (2007)
Updated on 10 February 2016.

Anders Jacobsen (Norwegian pronunciation: [ˈɑnːəʂ ˈjɑːkɔbsn̩]; born 17 February 1985) is a Norwegian former ski jumper. He competed at the 2010 and 2014 Winter Olympics and won a team bronze medal in the large hill event in 2010.[1] He is the youngest Norwegian winner of Four Hills Tournament.




Contents





  • 1 Career

    • 1.1 Early career


    • 1.2 2006/07 season


    • 1.3 2007/08 season


    • 1.4 2008/09 season


    • 1.5 2009/10 season



  • 2 World Cup

    • 2.1 Standings


    • 2.2 Wins


    • 2.3 Individual starts (164)



  • 3 Trivia


  • 4 References


  • 5 External links




Career



Early career


He made his debut in the Continental Cup on 11 January 2003, where he finished in the 50th position. In August the same year in a FIS Cup meeting in Rælingen, he placed 13th.


In 2006 he was picked for one of the eight spots in the Norwegian World Cup team. He made his debut in the Grand Prix season on 4 August, in Hinterzarten, where he finished 7th in the team competition (with Tom Hilde, Lars Bystøl and Roar Ljøkelsøy). On 5 August, he was eighth; on 14 August, in Courchevel, he was fourth; on 24 August, in Zakopane he was seventh; on 30 September, in Klingenthal, he was sixth; on 4 October, in Oberhof, he was tenth. He was tenth in the Grand Prix, with 184 points.



2006/07 season


After Daniel Forfang's retirement he remained in the current Norwegian squad. He made his debut in the 2006/07 Ski jumping World Cup in Kuusamo on 24 November 2006, with a third place.


Jacobsen won four World Cup events that season, including the Innsbruck event on 4 January 2007 on his way to becoming overall winner of the 2006-07 Four Hills Tournament.


Entering the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2007 in Sapporo, Jacobsen led the overall Ski jumping World Cup standings. At those championships, he earned a silver medal in the team large hill. But he failed in the large hill competition, and finished 7th in the normal hill competition.


After the World Championships, Jacobsen has struggled to maintain his form. He failed to qualify for the finals in Lahti, finished tenth in Kuopio, and 14th in the first Holmenkollen competition. Adam Małysz won all those races and therefore he overtook the lead in the World cup standings.



2007/08 season


Not having his best season during 2007/2008, Jacobsen still won one world cup victory (being one of four Norwegian jumpers who each won a world cup victory that season), lead the Norwegian team to three team wins in the world cup and a team-bronze in the ski flying world championships, and placed sixth overall in the world cup, behind teammates Tom Hilde and Anders Bardal.



2008/09 season


As every Norwegian athlete, Jacobsen struggled to maintain the previous season's results in the 2008/2009 season, and had only one podium (3rd place in Trondheim early season) before entering the Four-Hills Tournament. There he showed growing shape, placing 6th overall. Before entering the World Championship, he placed second in the two last world cup races in Klingenthal and in the skiflying hill in Oberstdorf. The World Championship started dreadful for Jacobsen, falling from a bronze medal to 17th place after 86,5 m in the final round in the normal hill event. Yet again he placed third after the first round at the large hill event, winning the bronze medal after the race's cancellation. After winning a silver in the team large hill event Jacobsen won altogether two medals at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2009 in Liberec. At the end of the season, he was eighth in the overall world cup standings.



2009/10 season


Jacobsen started the season with a fifth place in the opening race in Kuusamo, but then fell during training, and his placings dropped, mostly varying between top 20 and top 30. However, during the Four Hills Tournament, in the race in Garmisch-Partenkirchen Jacobsen struck back with a fifth place, falling from second place. He eventually won his sixth world cup victory in ski flying hill in Oberstdorf on January 31.



World Cup



Standings















































Season
Overall

4H

SF

NT

2006/07
2nd, silver medalist(s)1st, gold medalist(s)N/A19

2007/08
69N/A9

2008/09
86515

2009/10
710517

2010/11
191016N/A

2012/13
5
2nd, silver medalist(s)
17N/A

2013/14
5113N/A

2014/15
17527N/A


Wins































































No.
Season
Date
Location
Hill
Size
1
2006/0717 December 2006  
Switzerland Engelberg

Gross-Titlis-Schanze HS137
LH
2
4 January 2007  
Austria Innsbruck

Bergiselschanze HS130
LH
3
13 January 2007  
Norway Vikersund

Vikersundbakken HS207 (night)
FH
4
10 February 2007  
Germany Willingen

Mühlenkopfschanze HS145 (night)
LH
5
2007/089 February 2008  
Czech Republic Liberec

Ještěd A HS134 (night)
LH
6
2009/1031 January 2010  
Germany Oberstdorf

Heini-Klopfer-Skiflugschanze HS213
FH
7
2012/1330 December 2012  
Germany Oberstdorf

Schattenbergschanze HS137 (night)
LH
8
1 January 2013  
Germany Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Große Olympiaschanze HS140
LH
9
12 January 2013  
Poland Zakopane

Wielka Krokiew HS134 (night)
LH
10
2014/151 January 2015  
Germany Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Große Olympiaschanze HS140
LH


Individual starts (164)




































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































winner  1 ; second  2 ; third  3 ; disqualified  dq ; did not compete (–); stuck in qualifications (q)

Season

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

29

30

31

Points


2006/07

Kuusamo

Lillehammer

Lillehammer

Engelberg

Engelberg

Oberstdorf

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Innsbruck

Bischofshofen

Vikersund

Zakopane

Oberstdorf

Oberstdorf

Titisee-Neustadt

Titisee-Neustadt

Klingenthal

Willingen

Lahti

Kuopio

Oslo

Oslo

Planica

Planica

Planica







1319

3
10

2

2

1
4
5

1

2

1
7
6

2

3
4


1
31
10
14
7
6

2
8









2007/08

Kuusamo

Trondheim

Trondheim

Villach

Villach

Engelberg

Engelberg

Oberstdorf

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Bischofshofen

Bischofshofen

Predazzo

Predazzo

Harrachov

Zakopane

Zakopane

Sapporo

Sapporo

Liberec

Liberec

Willingen

Kuopio

Kuopio

Lillehammer

Oslo

Planica

Planica




827
6




38
10
8
16
23
8
21

3

3

2
6
4
16
16

1
10

3
15
13
6
4
8






2008/09

Kuusamo

Trondheim

Trondheim

Pragelato

Pragelato

Engelberg

Engelberg

Oberstdorf

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Innsbruck

Bischofshofen

Tauplitz

Tauplitz

Zakopane

Zakopane

Whistler

Whistler

Sapporo

Willingen

Klingenthal

Oberstdorf

Lahti

Kuopio

Lillehammer

Vikersund

Planica

Planica




661
32

3
8
10
42
35
23
6
7
10
7
4
4


dq
19

9

2

2
6
34
15
22
22
12






2009/10

Kuusamo

Lillehammer

Lillehammer

Engelberg

Engelberg

Engelberg

Oberstdorf

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Innsbruck

Bischofshofen

Bad Mitterndorf

Bad Mitterndorf

Sapporo

Sapporo

Zakopane

Zakopane

Oberstdorf

Klingenthal

Willingen

Lahti

Kuopio

Lillehammer

Oslo








557
5
40
36
30
18
15
24
5
5
10
40
13



7

1
7

2
41

3
20
15










2010/11

Kuusamo

Kuopio

Lillehammer

Lillehammer

Engelberg

Engelberg

Engelberg

Oberstdorf

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Innsbruck

Bischofshofen

Harrachov

Harrachov

Sapporo

Sapporo

Zakopane

Zakopane

Zakopane

Willingen

Klingenthal

Oberstdorf

Vikersund

Vikersund

Lahti

Planica

Planica





344
10
21
11
8
34
16
15
23
4
15
9








16
12
6
12
31
15
28







2012/13

Lillehammer

Lillehammer

Kuusamo

Krasnaja Polana

Krasnaja Polana

Engelberg

Engelberg

Oberstdorf

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Innsbruck

Bischofshofen

Wisła

Zakopane

Sapporo

Sapporo

Vikersund

Vikersund

Harrachov

Harrachov

Klingenthal

Oberstdorf

Lahti

Kuopio

Trondheim

Oslo

Planica

Planica




878
4
4
39
35
7
27
25

1

1
7

2
15

1
14
43
7
21


5
5

3
35
8
5
22







2013/14

Klingenthal

Kuusamo

Lillehammer

Lillehammer

Titisee-Neustadt

Titisee-Neustadt

Engelberg

Engelberg

Oberstdorf

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Innsbruck

Bischofshofen

Tauplitz

Tauplitz

Wisła

Zakopane

Sapporo

Sapporo

Willingen

Willingen

Falun

Lahti

Lahti

Kuopio

Trondheim

Oslo

Planica

Planica



82


q

34
17


30
26
16
11


32
29




13
37
42










2014/15

Klingenthal

Kuusamo

Kuusamo

Lillehammer

Lillehammer

Nizhny Tagil

Nizhny Tagil

Engelberg

Engelberg

Oberstdorf

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Innsbruck

Bischofshofen

Tauplitz

Wisła

Zakopane

Sapporo

Sapporo

Willingen

Willingen

Titisee-Neustadt

Titisee-Neustadt

Vikersund

Vikersund

Lahti

Kuopio

Trondheim

Oslo

Oslo

Planica

Planica
511
25


42





14

1
9
5
14
8
11


11
23
8
12
23

10
6
16
14
7
21


Trivia


  • He is the youngest Norwegian ski jumper in history to win the Four Hills Tournament (21 years old).

  • Prior to his professional career, Jacobsen worked as a plumber.[2]


References




  1. ^ abc Anders Jacobsen. sports-reference.com


  2. ^ Stein Erik Kirkebren (8 June 2006) Hopper av jobben. aftenposten.no




External links





  • Anders Jacobsen at the International Ski Federation







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