Hockey
Baseball
Basketball
Football
HELP
SEARCH
CANOE NAGANO '98 ISP DIRECTORY
|
|
Saturday, February 14, 1998
Funaki wins for Japan
HAKUBA, Japan (AP) -- At last.
Kazuyoshi Funaki sparked long-awaited celebrations and tears of welled-up emotion among
Japanese fans Sunday (Saturday night EST) with a performance of soaring perfection off the 120-meter
hill to give the nation its first Olympic ski jump title in 26 years.
Silver medalist on the 90m hill Wednesday, the 22-year-old star made sure of the gold this
time with a massive leap of 132.5 meters, accompanied by a sweep of perfect style marks, to win the
title.
Funaki seemed to stay aloft for hours, hanging in the air and barely moving his arms and
skis. When he landed, the whole crowd knew he had won the gold and erupted in a huge release of
pent-up emotion.
"It's common in Europe to have big crowds so I'm used to it," Funaki said. "I didn't really
notice it, but then I did hear a very loud cheer and it sure was encouraging."
The last time a Japanese jumper won an Olympic event was 1972 in Sapporo, the last time the
Winter Games were held in this country. That was a 1-2-3 sweep before a crowd that included the
nation's emperor.
The crowd, minus any Japanese royalty this time, was out in hopes of another triumph
Sunday, after Funaki's near-miss off the small hill. And at one stage, it looked like a 1-2 Japanese
finish.
Masahiko Harada had already smashed the hill record of 132 meters with a leap of 136 and
appeared to have clinched second place ahead of 90m gold medalist Jani Soininen.
Harada soared so far it was difficult to measure the distance because there were no lines
across the landing area at the point he hit the snow. That meant no score went up on the scoreboard
and it was only when everyone had finished and the medalists were lining up that it was confirmed
Soininen had won the silver.
Harada and Soininen even went to the wrong places on the podium before the final results
were confirmed and they swapped over.
"I made a mistake in the first jump," a tearful Harada said after he had heard the result
confirmed. "I needed four more meters. I couldn't do my best jumps. I was very disappointed.
"But I still want to engrave this event in my heart. After the normal hill result (when he
finished fifth) I read papers and saw TV, I saw the headlines 'Harada failed again'.
"I didn't want to do that again and I promised to myself that I will not repeat the same
mistake. But I was able to perform a super jump."
At least his first individual bronze medal partly made up for his two Olympic flops.
With the Japanese quartet in a team gold medal-winning position at the 1994 Olympics at
Lillehammer, Harada needed only a modest jump to clinch the title, going last of the four, but came
up with the worst leap of the round and surrendered the gold to the Germans.
In Wednesday's 90m competition, Harada had the biggest jump of the opening round, 91.5
meters, and, going last in Round 2, needed something like 88 and good style marks to win his first
Olympic title. His 84.5 left him fifth.
Sunday's confusion also took some of the gloss off Harada's amazing 136-meter leap but set
up a thrilling finish.
After Harada's leap, still without a score, the competition continued and Funaki, going
third from last, soared into the lead with his immaculate jump.
Only Soininen, Takanobu Okabe and Austria's Andreas Widhoelzl, the first-round leader,
could beat him.
The Japanese fans collectively held their breath as Soininen leaped 126.5, 6 meters short
of Funaki's jump and they roared when his score went up, well down on Funaki's and surely, they
thought, worse than Harada's.
Okabe came up with only 119.5 and sixth place score of 250.1 and then it was Widhoelzl's
turn.
The Austrian, bronze medalist in the 90m, dropped well short and another roar went up from
the Japanese fans. His jump of 120.5 was only enough for fourth place this time.
Funaki and Harada hugged each other at the line but then came the realization that Harada
had won only bronze.
Results
HAKUBA, Japan (AP) -- Final results Sunday from the K120 individual ski jumping medal event
at the Winter Olympics (first jump, second jump in parentheses):
1, Kazuyoshi Funaki, Japan (129.8, 142.5), 272.3 points.
2, Jani Soininen, Finland (130.6, 130.2), 260.8.
3, Masahiko Harada, Japan (117.0, 141.3), 258.3.
4, Andreas Widhoelzl, Austria (138.8, 119.4), 258.2.
5, Primoz Peterka, Slovenia (115.2, 135.9), 251.1.
6, Takanobu Okabe, Japan (134.0, 116.1), 250.1.
7, Reinhard Schwarzenberger, Austria (108.4, 135.8), 244.2.
8, Michal Dolezal, Czech Republic (107.8, 135.4), 243.2.
9, Roar Ljoekelsoey, Norway (116.6, 125.7), 242.3.
10, Lasse Ottesen, Norway (118.8, 120.1), 238.9.
11, Wojciech Skupien, Poland (111.1, 126.4), 237.5.
12, Dieter Thoma, Germany (105.2, 130.4), 235.6.
13, Kristian Brenden, Norway (104.4, 130.1), 234.5.
14, Martin Schmitt, Germany (112.3, 121.4), 233.7.
15, Jakub Suchacek, Czech Republic (111.0, 118.3), 229.3.
16, Nicolas Dessum, France (113.3, 115.2), 228.5.
17, Blaz Vrhovnik, Slovenia (107.3, 119.5), 226.8.
18, Mika Laitinen, Finland (114.6, 107.9), 222.5.
19, Bruno Reuteler, Switzerland (105.9, 116.4), 222.3.
20, Robert Mateja, Poland (107.7, 111.9), 219.6.
21, Jerome Gay, France (107.9, 111.4), 219.3.
22, Roberto Cecon, Italy (109.8, 107.8), 217.6.
23, Artur Khamidulin, Russia (109.6, 107.6), 217.2.
24, Frantisek Jez, Czech Republic (104.3, 104.4), 208.7.
25, Stanislav Filimonov, Kazakstan (98.3, 108.3), 206.6.
26, Martin Mesik, Slovakia (101.6, 96.4), 198.0.
27, Alexander Volkov, Russia (98.3, 81.2), 179.5.
28, Peter Zonta, Slovenia (105.1, 73.3), 178.4.
29, Volodymyr Hlyvka, Ukraine (94.7, 73.8), 168.5.
30, Casey Colby, Lake Placid, N.Y. (96.2, 69.6), 165.8.
Did not qualify for second jump
31, Ari-Pekka Nikkola, Finland (94.3), 94.3.
32, Aleksandr Sinyavsky, Belarus (94.2), 94.2.
33, Marco Steinauer, Switzerland (93.9), 93.9.
34, Miha Rihtar, Slovenia (93.4), 93.4.
35, Valery Kobelev, Russia (92.9), 92.9.
36, Ivan Kozlov, Ukraine (91.9), 91.9.
37, Janne Ahonen, Finland (91.3), 91.3.
38, Henning Stensrud, Norway (89.7), 89.7.
39, Simon Ammann, Switzerland (89.3), 89.3.
40, Choi C. Heung, South Korea (89.1), 89.1.
41, Sylvain Freiholz, Switzerland (88.8), 88.8.
42, Pavel Gaiduk, Kazakstan (87.1), 87.1.
43, Martin Hoellwarth, Austria (86.6), 86.6.
44, Alan Alborn, Anchorage, Alaska (82.5), 82.5.
45, Lukasz P. Kruczek, Poland (81.6), 81.6.
46, Alexandr Kolmakov, Kazakstan (80.7), 80.7.
47, Hiroya Saito, Japan (79.5), 79.5.
48, Sven Hannawald, Germany (78.0), 78.0.
49, Dmitriy Chvykov, Kazakstan (76.2), 76.2.
50, Randy Weber, Steamboat Springs, Colo. (75.3), 75.3.
51, Kim Hyun-ki, South Korea (72.9), 72.9.
52, Adam Malysz, Poland (71.1), 71.1.
53, Choi J. Yong, South Korea (66.6), 66.6.
54, Nikolai Petruchin, Russia (66.1), 66.1.
55, Alexej Schibko, Belarus (65.1), 65.1.
56, Jaroslav Sakala, Czech Republic (61.2), 61.2.
57, Hansjoerg Jaekle, Germany (61.1), 61.1.
58, Brendan Doran, Steamboat Springs, Colo. (58.7), 58.7.
59, Kakhaber Tsakadze, Georgia (52.6), 52.6.
60, Stefan Horngacher, Austria (41.2), 41.2.
61, Lyubym Kohan, Ukraine (35.2), 35.2.
62, Kim Heung-soo, South Korea (9.9), 9.9.
|