Bjørn Wirkola

Bjørn Wirkola

Wirkola at the 1966 World Championships
Personal information
Born 4 August 1943 (1943-08-04) (age 73)
Alta, Norway
Height 177 cm (5 ft 10 in)
Weight 69 kg (152 lb)
Sport
Sport Ski jumping
Club Alta IF

Bjørn Tore Wirkola (born 4 August 1943) is a retired Norwegian ski jumper. He became World Champion in Oslo in 1966, winning both the large and normal hill competitions. The 1966 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships were also held in conjunction with the Holmenkollen ski festival, making Wirkola the Holmenkollen champion as well (a feat he would repeat the following year). Wirkola won the Four Hills Tournament from 1967 to 1969, and is still the only ski jumper who has won this tournament three years in a row. He also competed at three Winter Olympics: in 1964 he finished eleventh in the Nordic combined, in 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, he achieved his best finish with a fourth place in the individual normal hill, 0.6 points behind the bronze medalist Baldur Preiml of Austria, and the 1972 Winter Olympics, where he finished 37th in the wind-ravaged event in the Okurayama large hill.[1]

For his achievements as a ski jumper, Wirkola was awarded the Holmenkollen medal in 1968 (shared with King Olav V, Assar Rönnlund, and Gjermund Eggen). The common parlance expression jumping after Wirkola has come to refer to situations where one embarks on a task where one's predecessor has done a particularly good job – or where one is unlikely to succeed.

Besides ski jumping Wirkola played association football for Rosenborg BK in the Norwegian Premier League from 1971 to 1974, and won both league and cup championships in 1971. The same year he was awarded Egebergs Ærespris; recipients of that prize had to be international competitors in one sport and top-level national competitors in a different sport.

Wirkola is of Kven descent.[2]

References

  1. Bjørn Wirkola. sports-reference.com
  2. Mäkimies toi tv-kamerat Iihin (Finnish) Rantapohja

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bjørn Wirkola.


Preceded by
Frithjof Prydz
Egebergs Ærespris
1971
Succeeded by
Ivar Formo
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