Startlister og resultater for verdenscup hopp kvinner Sapporo som arrangeres 23.-25. januar 2026.
Verdenscup hopp kvinner Sapporo 2026
Dato
23. – 25. januar
Sted
Sapporo – Japan
Okurayama Ski Jump Stadium HS 134
Bakkerekord: 148,5 meter, Kamil Stoch (2019)
På TV
Rennene sendes på Vsport 1 og Viaplay.
Norske deltakere
- Anna Odine Strøm (Alta IF)
- Heidi Dyhre Traaserud (Heddal IL)
- Gyda Westvold Hansen (IL Nansen)
- Eirin Kvandal (Mosjøen IL)
- Silje Opseth (Holeværingen)
Program og resultater
Fredag 23. januar
- Kl 08.00: Kvalifisering HS134
Lørdag 24. januar
- Kl 08.15: Renn HS134
Topp 27

Søndag 25. januar
Kl 01.30: Kvalifisering HS 134Avlyst på grunn av vindforhold- Kl 03.00: Renn HS 134 (bare en omgang gjennomført pga vinden)
Topp 27

Statistikk
Nika Prevc
● Nika Prevc (SLO) has won 33 individual World Cup events, ranking her
joint-ninth alongside Jens Weißflog (GDR/GER) on the all-time list for men and
women combined. Janne Ahonen (FIN) is eighth with 36 wins.
● Only Sara Takanashi (JPN, 63 wins) has won more women’s individual World
Cup events than Nika Prevc (SLO, 33).
● Nika Prevc (SLO) has 48 World Cup podiums, but is yet to achieve a top-three
result in Sapporo. Her best finish in Sapporo to date was sixth, in 2025.
● Nika Prevc (SLO) has won individual World Cup events in 17 different venues.
She can equal the women’s record, which is held by Sara Takanashi (JPN),
who won in 18 different host cities.
● Last week, Domen Prevc (SLO) won both men’s World Cup events in
Sapporo. Peter Prevc (SLO) has won four individual World Cup events in
Sapporo (2014, 2015, 2016, 2017).
Japan
● This season, Nozomi Maruyama (JPN) has finished in the top-10 in all
women’s World Cup events in which she competed. She only skipped the
events in Ljubno (SLO).
● Sara Takanashi (JPN) has won six individual World Cup events in Sapporo
(between 2014 and 2016), a joint record alongside Finnish ski jumper Matti
Nykänen (1985-1988).
● Two of Yuki Ito’s (JPN) nine individual wins in World Cup events came in
Sapporo, her very first victory (on 14 January 2017) and her most recent one
(on 14 January 2024).
Germany
● Selina Freitag (GER) has collected 20 individual podium finishes in the World
Cup, including six this season. She is still chasing her first victory (11 second
places, nine third places).
● German women have claimed eight podium finishes in the last 10 women’s
World Cup events (7 third places and 1 second place). In the first 10 of this
season they did not reach the podium once.
● The last German woman to win an individual World Cup event was Katharina
Schmid in Villach (AUT) on 5 January 2025. German women have since
recorded 20 individual podium finishes (10 second places, 10 third places).
Lisa Eder
● Lisa Eder (AUT) won the event in Zao (JPN) on Wednesday (21 Jan), claiming
her first individual World Cup victory. She had already collected 13 individual
World Cup podiums prior to that win (six second places, seven third places).
● Lisa Eder (AUT) claimed her first victory in her 117th start in an individual
World Cup event. Only Ursa Bogataj (SLO) competed in more World Cup
events before her first victory (in her 153rd individual event).
More facts
● The only two venues to have hosted at least 100 individual World Cup events in
Ski Jumping (men and women combined) are Planica (JUG/SLO, 109) and
Sapporo (105).
● Coming to Sapporo, the top-six in the women’s World Cup standings represent
six different countries (and three different continents). Only in 2012/13, the final
women’s World Cup standings contained six different nations in the top six.
● Abigail Strate (CAN) won the event in Oberstdorf on 1 January, which is her
only World Cup victory. The only other Canadian woman to win a World Cup
event is Alexandria Loutitt, whose two victories both came in Japan (Zao in
2023 and Sapporo in 2025).
● Zeng Ping (CHN) can become the first Chinese athlete to win a World Cup
event in one of the four traditional FIS sports (Alpine Skiing, Cross-Country
Skiing, Nordic Combined, Ski Jumping)