Startlister og resultater verdenscup kombinert Oberhof som arrangeres 17. - 18. januar 2026.

Publisert 13. januar 2026 i Resultater

Verdenscup kombinert Oberhof 2026

Dato

17. – 18. januar

Sted

Oberhof – Tyskland
Thüringen Schanzenanlage Kanzlergrund HS100, Bakkerekord: Wolgang Bösl (106 meter)

På TV

Konkurransene sendes på Vsport 1 og Viaplay gjennom helgen.

Vintersport på TV

Norske deltakere

  • Ida Marie Hagen (Haslum IL)
  • Marte Leinan Lund (Tolga IL)
  • Ingrid Låte (Strandbygda IL)
  • Hanna Midtsundstad (Våler IF)
  • Mille Marie Hagen (Haslum IL)
  • Jens Lurås Oftebro (IL Jardar)
  • Einar Lurås Oftebro (IL Jardar)
  • Andreas Skoglund (Molde og Omegn IF)
  • Aleksander Skoglund (Molde og Omegn IF)
  • Espen Andersen (Lommedalens IL)
  • Eidar Johan Strøm (Alta IF)
  • Alvin Le (Orkdal IL)

Startlister og resultater

Fredag 16. januar – PCR

  • Kl 10.30: Provisorisk konkurranseomgang (PCR) menn
  • Kl 13.00: Provisorisk konkurranseomgang (PCR) kvinner

Lørdag 17. januar – Kompakt

Søndag 18. januar – Gundersen

  • Kl 08.30: Hopp kvinner HS100
    • Startliste
    • Liveresultater
  • Kl 09.15: Hopp menn HS100
    • Startliste
    • Liveresultater
  • Kl 14.35: 5 km langrenn kvinner
    • Resultater
  • Kl 15.45: 10 km langrenn menn
    • Resultater

Om rennene

Menn

Johannes Lamparter
● Johannes Lamparter (AUT) has won 21 individual World Cup events, ranking
him ninth on the men’s all-time list.
● Only Felix Gottwald (AUT) has won more individual World Cup events for
Austria than Johannes Lamparter (21). Gottwald is ranked eighth overall with
23 victories.
● Johannes Lamparter (AUT) has claimed his 21 individual victories in the
World Cup at 10 different venues. He has yet to compete in Oberhof.
● Johannes Lamparter (AUT) won his only World Championship individual gold
medal on German snow, in Oberstdorf on 4 March 2021. Aged 19, he beat Jarl
Magnus Riiber (NOR) and Akito Watabe (JPN) in a Large Hill Gundersen.
● Johannes Lamparter (AUT) won the most recent men’s World Cup event on
German snow, an Individual Compact in Schonach on 19 January 2025.
Oberhof
● World Cup events will be held in Oberhof for the first time since January 2010.
● The events in Oberhof are the first and only World Cup competitions to be held
in Germany this season, after the events in Schonach on 3-4 January were
cancelled due to bad weather conditions.
● Johannes Rydzek (GER) is one of only two current athletes who took part in
the last World Cup event in Oberhof in January 2010, as did Alessandro Pittin
(ITA). They also both competed in Oberhof in December 2008, when Akito
Watabe (JPN) was also on the start line.
● Ronny Ackermann is the only German Nordic Combined athlete to win a
World Cup event in Oberhof – a Gundersen on 30 December 2003.
Germany
● Last week, Julian Schmid (GER) won the Mass Start in Otepää (Estonia). It
was his fourth individual victory in the World Cup and his first since February
2023, when he won a Gundersen in Oberstdorf (Germany).
● Johannes Rydzek (GER) finished second twice in Otepää. These were his first
podium finishes in the World Cup since he won a Gundersen in Ruka (Finland)
at the start of last season, on 30 November 2024.
● Johannes Rydzek (GER) and Vinzenz Geiger (GER) have both won 18
individual World Cup events. Among German athletes, only Eric Frenzel (43)
and Ronny Ackermann (28) won more.
● Two of Vinzenz Geiger’s (GER) individual wins in the World Cup were on
German snow: in Klingenthal on 6 and 7 February 2021. Johannes Rydzek
(GER) has yet to win an individual World Cup event in front of a home crowd
Brothers
● Last week in Otepää (Estonia), Einar Luraas Oftebro (NOR) finished third in
the Mass Start (his first World Cup podium) and won the Gundersen (his first
World Cup victory).
● Einar’s younger brother Jens Luraas Oftebro (NOR) has won seven
individual World Cup events, most recently in Seefeld (Austria) on 1 February
2025.
● Jens Luraas Oftebro (NOR) finished fourth in all three men’s World Cup
events in Otepää. The Oftebrothers have yet to share a World Cup podium.
● Austrian brothers Thomas Rettenegger and Stefan Rettenegger have
shared one podium in the World Cup. Last month, on 19 December 2025,
Thomas won a Mass Start in Ramsau (Austria) and Stefan finished third.
● Stefan Rettenegger (AUT) has claimed 12 podium finishes in individual World
Cup events, but has yet to record his first win (5 second places, 7 third places).
He also has two World Cup podium finishes (both seconds) in Team events.
Other contenders
● Besides Einar Luraas Oftebro (NOR), another Norwegian claimed his first
World Cup podium finish last week in Otepää: Andreas Skoglund, younger
brother of Aleksander Skoglund (NOR), finished third in the Gundersen.
● Ilkka Herola (FIN) is the only man outside the ‘big three’ nations of Austria,
Germany or Norway to reach a World Cup podium this season. Herola finished
third in the first event of the season, a Compact in Ruka on 28 November.
● Kristjan Ilves (EST) can become the first athlete representing Estonia to win a
World Cup event in Nordic Combined. Ilves has already claimed 12 podium
finishes in individual World Cup events (6 second places and 6 third places).

Kvinner

Ida Marie Hagen on verge of women’s all-time wins record
● Ida Marie Hagen (NOR) has won 23 individual World Cup events, joint-most
among women alongside Gyda Westvold Hansen (NOR, 23). In Oberhof, she
can become the outright record holder.
● Of the 55 women’s individual World Cup events to date, 46 were won by Ida
Marie Hagen (NOR, 23) or Gyda Westvold Hansen (NOR, 23). Number three
on the women’s all-time list is Nathalie Armbruster (GER) with three victories.
● Gyda Westvold Hansen (NOR) won her 23rd individual World Cup event aged
22, in Oslo (Norway) on 16 March 2025. This season, the two-time overall
champion switched to Ski Jumping.
● Ida Marie Hagen (NOR) has won six of the seven women’s World Cup events
this season. The exception was a Mass Start in Trondheim (Norway), in which
she finished second.
● Last season, Ida Marie Hagen (NOR) won each of the first seven women’s
World Cup events, but went on to finish second in the overall standings.
● Ida Marie Hagen (NOR) has finished on the podium in 35 of the last 38
women’s individual World Cup events. The exceptions occurred between 1 and
7 February 2025: a DSQ in Seefeld (Austria), which also ruled her out of the
final event of the ‘Triple’, and a 15th place in Otepää (Estonia) after a fall.
● In total, Ida Marie Hagen (NOR) has finished on the podium in 39 individual
World Cup events, one shy of the women’s record held by Gyda Westvold
Hansen (NOR, 40 podium places).
● Ida Marie Hagen (NOR) has won each of the last five women’s individual
World Cup events. It is the fourth longest winning run in the women’s World
Cup, after a run of 14 by Gyda Westvold Hansen (NOR, 2022-2023), a run of
11 by Hagen herself (2024-2025) and a run of six by Westvold Hansen (2021-
2022).
Alexa Brabec
● Alexa Brabec (USA) has finished in the top four in all seven women’s World
Cup events this season, including four podium places (2 second places, 2
thirds).
● Alexa Brabec can become the second American woman to win a World Cup
event, after Tara Geraghty-Moats, who won the first-ever women’s event, in
Ramsau (Austria) in December 2020.
● Five men won at least one World Cup event for USA: Bill Demong (9), Todd
Lodwick (6), Kerry Lynch (1), Johnny Spillane (1) and Bryan Fletcher (1).
Germany
● Oberhof will host women’s Nordic Combined World Cup events for the first
time this weekend.
● The events in Oberhof are the first and only World Cup competitions to be held
in Germany this season, after the events in Schonach on 3-4 January were
cancelled due to bad weather conditions.
● Nathalie Armbruster (GER) has won three World Cup events, all last season.
Armbruster won twice in Seefeld (Austria) and once in Otepää (Estonia),
where she beat Ida Marie Hagen (NOR), who came second.
● Coming to Oberhof, Nathalie Armbruster (GER) has reached the podium 22
times in 48 individual World Cup starts.
● Nathalie Armbruster (GER) has claimed three podium finishes on German
snow, all in Schonach. There, she recorded a third place in 2023 and 2024 and
a second place in 2025.
● Jenny Nowak’s (GER) best result in an individual World Cup event came in
front of a home crowd: a second place in a Gundersen in Schonach on 11
February 2023.
Other contenders
● Coming to Oberhof, the top six in the women’s World Cup standings represent
six different countries (and three different continents).
● Minja Korhonen (FIN) finished on the podium in all three women’s events in
Otepää (Estonia) last week. In total, she has claimed six World Cup podium
finishes (2 second places, 4 third places).
● Minja Korhonen (FIN) is 18 years old and can become the second woman to
win a World Cup event before turning 19, after Katharina Gruber (AUT) won
aged 17 in Trondheim (Norway) last month.
● Minja Korhonen (FIN) can become the first Finnish woman to win a World
Cup event in Nordic Combined.
● Yuna Kasai (JPN) has won one World Cup event, a Mass Start in Otepää
(Estonia) on 7 February 2025. Her twin sister Haruka Kasai (JPN) finished
second that day.
● Only Haruka Kasai (JPN, 13 podium finishes) has claimed as many podium
finishes in women’s World Cup events without a victory as Lisa Hirner (AUT,
3 second places and 6 third places).
● Lena Brocard (FRA) is the only Nordic Combined athlete who has started in
all 55 women’s individual World Cup events. Her best result was a fourth place
in a Gundersen in Schonach (Germany) on 28 January 2024.

Værvarsel

Terminliste verdenscup kombinert menn 2025-26

Terminliste verdenscup kombinert kvinner 2025-26

Arrangørens hjemmeside