FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 1926

The 3rd Nordic World Ski Championships was from 4 to 6 February 1926 in Lahti, Finland, discharged.

Length of the route was first extended from 18 to 30 km. In the following World Championships but was gone again over a length of 18 km. The cross-country distance of 30 km was first introduced at the World Championships from 1954 again.

  • 2.1 Single ( normal hill / 17 km)
  • 3.1 Normal Hill

Cross-country men

30 km

Date: February 4, 1926 15 of 21 runners were able to finish the race started. Abandonment had to include the Czechoslovaks Josef Německý and Emmerich Rath.

50 km

Date: February 6, 1926 14 out of 19 runners finished the race. Had to give, inter alia, the Czechoslovak Josef Německý.

Nordic Combined Men

Single ( normal hill / 17 km)

Date: February 4, 1926

The maximum width in jumping achieved Jacob Tullin Thams 39.5 m in the second round. The fastest time in the 17 km run scored the winner Johan Grøttumsbråten with 1:20:27. He ran faster than the next best athlete Thorleif Haug by more than three minutes. The Czechoslovak Emmerich Rath could finish in last place, 17 km cross country indeed, but due to the large backlog time he received no points.

Sudeten German athletes changing before the war often the dressing. So was William Dick 1925 Ski Jumping World Champion for Czechoslovakia, while in 1926 for Germany was launched in 1927 and decided again for Czechoslovakia. As a Czechoslovak athlete, he seems to be under the will of Slavicized name Dick.

Ski jumping men

Normal hill

Date: February 4, 1926

Out of 28 athletes were only 20 in the standings. Eliminated include Josef Bim (TCH ) and William Dick, (GER ). The longest jump of the competition was the winner Jacob Tullin Thams 38.5 m.

Medal Tally

Source

  • Hermann Hansen, Knut Sveen: VM på ski '97. Alt om ski -VM 1925 to 1997. Adresseavisens Forlag, Trondheim 1996. ISBN 82-7164-044-5

Chamonix 1924 | Johannisbad 1925 | Lahti 1926 | Cortina d' Ampezzo 1927 | St. Moritz 1928 | Zakopane 1929 | 1930 Oslo | Oberhof 1931 | Lake Placid 1932 | Innsbruck 1933 | Sollefteå 1934 | High Tatras 1935 | Garmisch- Partenkirchen 1936 | Chamonix 1937 | Lahti 1938 | Zakopane 1939 | Cortina d' Ampezzo in 1941 ( unofficial) | St. Moritz 1948 | Lake Placid 1950 | 1952 Oslo | Falun 1954 | Cortina d' Ampezzo 1956 | Lahti 1958 | Squaw Valley 1960 | Zakopane 1962 | Innsbruck 1964 | Oslo 1966 | Grenoble 1968 | Vysoke Tatry 1970 | Sapporo 1972 | Falun 1974 | Innsbruck 1976 | Lahti 1978 | Lake Placid 1980 | Falun 1980 | Oslo 1982 | Sarajevo 1984 | Engelberg and Rovaniemi 1984 | Seefeld 1985 | Oberstdorf 1987 | Lahti 1989 | Val di Fiemme 1991 | Falun 1993 | Thunder Bay 1995 | Trondheim 1997 | Ramsau 1999 | Lahti 2001 | Val di Fiemme 2003 | Oberstdorf 2005 | Sapporo 2007 | Liberec 2009 | Oslo 2011 | Val di Fiemme 2013 | Falun 2015 | Lahti 2017 | 2019

  • Nordic World Ski Championships
  • Sporting event in 1926
  • Sporting event in Lahti
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