Ski jumping is the original extreme winter sport, with skiers flying off ever-bigger ski jumps starting in the 19th century. The Large Hill competition was included in the inaugural Olympic Winter Games in 1924, with the Norwegians almost sweeping the podium.
The men's Normal Hill ski jump — smaller than the large hill — was introduced at the Innsbruck Winter Games in 1964, followed by the men's team event at Calgary 1988. Women made their Olympic debut in 2014. The mixed team event — with two men and two women — was added in 2022 at Beijing. Ski jumping results are determined by points awarded for jump length and style, determined by judges. An individual women's Large Hill event and men’s super team event will debut at Milano Cortina 2026.
The super team competition replaces the original four-person team ski jumping event. In super team, two men from each nation compete together in three rounds, allowing nations with fewer Olympic qualifiers to compete. Scores carry over from one round to the next.
The men are divided into two groups, with one ski jumper from each country in both groups. After round one, the top 12 teams based on the two ski jumpers’ combined scores move on to round two. Scores are again tabulated from round two, combined with round one, to determine the top eight teams. These eight nations move on to the final round where medals are decided. The team with the most total points from both skiers in the three rounds wins.
What You Need to Know
Ski jumping was originally dominated by the Scandinavians. But in the past 50 years, the Austrians, Germans, Polish, and Japanese have vied for the medals. The U.S. is credited with getting women’s ski jumping off the ground in the early 2000s. But by the time women made their ski jumping Olympic debut, the U.S. program was experiencing a down swing. Ski jumping pioneers Jessica Jerome, and world champions Lindsay Van (2009) and Sarah Hendrickson (2013) finished 10th, 15th, and 21st respectively, in the sport’s Olympic debut.
Team USA Olympic Medal History
At the 1924 Olympic Winter Games, it looked like Norway had swept the podium in the one and only ski jumping event, the Large Hill. Fifty years later, a scoring error was discovered and Norwegian American Anders Haugen was determined the rightful winner of the bronze medal, bumping Norway’s Thorleif Haug to fourth place. On September 12, 1974, Haug’s youngest daughter presented the bronze medal to Haugen, who was then 85 years old. At the 1984 Sarajevo Games, Jeff Hastings came close to winning an Olympic medal, finishing fourth in the Large Hill.
Who to Watch
The U.S. and Norway have joined forces with a training partnership that has helped boost the Americans. Team USA’s Tate Frantz had a breakout 2024-25 season, with a silver medal at the junior world championships, several top-10 world cup finishes, and a top-25 world ranking. Inspired by performances like this, two-time Olympian Kevin Bickner came out of retirement to try for his third Olympic team. Since his return, he has scored some of his best results, moving into the top 30 world rankings last season. Also on the men’s side, Jason Colby has been scoring world cup personal bests this season.
For the women, Annika Belshaw scored 14 top-30 finishes last season and ended the season ranked 29th. She and Paige Jones lead the U.S. women. The foursome of Frantz, Bickner, Belshaw, and Jones finished sixth in the mixed team event at the 2025 world championships.
Important Dates
Ski jumping competition begins on February 7. Medals will be awarded on:
February 7 (Women’s Normal Hill)
February 9 (Men’s Normal Hill)
February 10 (Mixed Team)
February 14 (Men’s Large Hill)
February 15 (Women’s Large Hill)
February 16 (Men’s Super Team)