1999–2000 FIS Ski Flying World Cup
| Winners | |
|---|---|
| Overall |  Sven Hannawald | 
| Nations Cup (unofficial) | Germany | 
| Competitions | |
| Venues | 2 | 
| Individual | 2 | 
| Team | 1 | 
| Cancelled | 1 | 
The 1999/00 FIS Ski Flying World Cup was the 10th official World Cup season in ski flying awarded with small crystal globe as the subdiscipline of FIS Ski Jumping World Cup. First ski flying team event in history was held this season in Planica.[1]
Map of World Cup hosts
|  Bad Mitterndorf |  Planica | 
|---|---|
|   |   | 
| Kulm | Velikanka bratov Gorišek | 
| Europe | |
World records
List of world record distances achieved within this World Cup season.
| Date | Athlete | Hill | Round | Place | Metres | Feet | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 16 March 2000 |  Thomas Hörl | Velikanka bratov Gorišek K185 | Training – R1 | Planica, Slovenia | 224.5 | 737 | 
| 18 March 2000 |  Andreas Goldberger | Velikanka bratov Gorišek K185 | Team event – R2 | Planica, Slovenia | 225 | 738 | 
Calendar
Men's Individual
| All | No. | Date | Place (Hill) | Size | Winner | Second | Third | Ski flying leader | R. | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FIS Ski Flying World Championships 2000 (14 February •  Vikersund) | |||||||||
| 481 | 1 | 19 February 2000 |  Bad Mitterndorf (Kulm K185) | F 045 |  Sven Hannawald |  Andreas Widhölzl |  Tommy Ingebrigtsen |  Sven Hannawald | [2] | 
| 20 February 2000 | F cnx | cancelled due to weather conditions | — | ||||||
| 488 | 2 | 19 March 2000 |  Planica (Velikanka b. Gorišek K185) | F 046 |  Sven Hannawald |  Janne Ahonen |  Andreas Goldberger |  Sven Hannawald | [3] | 
| 10th FIS Ski Flying Men's Overall (19 February – 19 March 2000) |  Sven Hannawald |  Janne Ahonen |  Tommy Ingebrigtsen | Ski Flying Overall | |||||
Men's team
| All | No. | Date | Place (Hill) | Size | Winner | Second | Third | R. | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 16 | 1 | 18 March 2000 |  Planica (Velikanka bratov Gorišek K185) | F 001 |  Germany |  Finland |  Japan | [4] | 
Standings
Ski Flying
Nations Cup (unofficial)
| Rank | after 3 events | Points | 
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Germany | 674 | 
| 2 | Austria | 574 | 
| 3 | Finland | 567 | 
| 4 | Japan | 522 | 
| 5 | Norway | 468 | 
| 6 | Poland | 155 | 
| 7 | Slovenia | 101 | 
| 8 | Czech Republic | 50 | 
| 9 | France | 46 | 
| 10 | Italy | 44 | 
References
- ^ "1999/00 FIS Ski Flying World Cup final standings". skijumping.pl. 6 May 2016. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
- ^ "Tauplitz". International Ski Federation. 19 February 2000.
- ^ "Planica". International Ski Federation. 19 March 2000.
- ^ "Team: Planica". International Ski Federation. 18 Mar 2000.





