Andrzej Stękała

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Andrzej Stękała
Andrzej Stękała Lahti 2016.JPG
Andrzej Stękała (2016)
Country Poland
Born (1995-06-30) 30 June 1995 (age 26)
Zakopane, Poland
Height1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)[1]
Ski clubAZS Zakopane
Personal best235 m (771 ft)
Vikersund, 14 February 2016
World Cup career
Seasons2015–present
Indiv. podiums1
Team podiums3
Indiv. starts43
Team starts1
Updated on 6 March 2021.

Andrzej Stękała ([ˈandʐɛj stɛŋˈkawa]; born 30 June 1995) is a Polish ski jumper, a member of the Polish national team and bronze medalist of the Ski Flying World Championships (2020) in team.

Career[]

Stękała's World Cup debut took place in Engelberg in 2015.[2] His best result so far is third place with the Polish team at a team event in Zakopane in 2016.[3] On 12 February 2016, on Vikersundbakken, he improved his personal best to 168 m. The next day he made a new personal best – 198 m. On 14 February 2015 he improved his personal best in the qualification during the same weekend in Vikersund to 235 m, which is 16.5 m less than the Polish national record (the record 251.5 m belongs to Kamil Stoch).[4]

On 29 January 2021 he won the first qualifications in his career after a 152-meter jump (one meter shorter than the then hill record) in Willingen.[5]

World Championships[]

Place Day Year Locality Hill Point K HS Competition Jump 1 Jump 2 Note (points) Loss (points) Winner
30. 27 February 2021 Oberstdorf Schattenbergschanze K-95 HS-106 individual 95.0 m 87.5 m 211.6 57.2 Piotr Żyła

Ski Flying World Championships[]

Place Day Year Locality Hill Point K HS Competition Jump 1 Jump 2 Jump 3 Jump 4 Note (points) Loss (points) Winner
10. 11–12 December 2020 Planica Letalnica bratov Gorišek K-200 HS-240 individual 224.5 m 215.5 m 224.5 m 212.0 m 792.4 84.8 Karl Geiger
3. FIS bronze medal.png 13 December 2020 Planica Letalnica bratov Gorišek K-200 HS-240 team 228.0 m 229.0 m 1665.5 (430.2) 62.2 Norway

World Cup[]

Season standings[]

Season Overall Ski-Flying Four Hills
Tournament
2015–16 34 28 51
2020–21 6

Individual starts[]

Season 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Points
2015/16 Klingenthal HS140 Lillehammer HS100 Lillehammer HS100 Nizhny Tagil HS134 Nizhny Tagil HS134 Engelberg HS137 Engelberg HS137 Oberstdorf HS137 Garmisch-Partenkirchen HS140 Innsbruck HS130 Bischofshofen HS140 Willingen HS145 Zakopane HS134 Sapporo HS134 Sapporo HS134 Trondheim HS140 Vikersund HS225 Vikersund HS225 Vikersund HS225 Lahti HS130 Lahti HS100 Kuopio HS127 Almaty HS140 Almaty HS140 Wisła HS134 Titisee-Neustadt HS142 Planica HS225 Planica HS225 Planica HS225 105
27 38 q 30 28 17 32 22 6 53 24 26 21 q 41 38 28 32 29 30 25
2018/19 Wisła HS134 Kuusamo HS142 Kuusamo HS142 Nizhny Tagil HS134 Nizhny Tagil HS134 Engelberg HS140 Engelberg HS140 Oberstdorf HS137 Garmisch-Partenkirchen HS142 Innsbruck HS130 Bischofshofen HS142 Predazzo HS135 Predazzo HS135 Zakopane HS140 Sapporo HS137 Sapporo HS137 Oberstdorf HS235 Oberstdorf HS235 Oberstdorf HS235 Lahti HS130 Willingen HS145 Willingen HS145 Oslo HS134 Lillehammer HS140 Trondheim HS138 Vikersund HS240 Planica HS240 Planica HS240 0
q
2019/20 Wisła HS134 Kuusamo HS142 Nizhny Tagil HS134 Nizhny Tagil HS134 Klingenthal HS140 Engelberg HS140 Engelberg HS140 Oberstdorf HS137 Garmisch-Partenkirchen HS142 Innsbruck HS130 Bischofshofen HS142 Predazzo HS104 Predazzo HS104 Titisee-Neustadt HS142 Titisee-Neustadt HS142 Zakopane HS140 Sapporo HS137 Sapporo HS137 Willingen HS145 Tauplitz HS235 Tauplitz HS235 Râșnov HS97 Râșnov HS97 Lahti HS130 Lahti HS130 Lillehammer HS140 Lillehammer HS140 0
q q 45 q 46 35 q
2020/21 Wisła HS134 Kuusamo HS142 Kuusamo HS142 Nizhny Tagil HS134 Nizhny Tagil HS134 Engelberg HS140 Engelberg HS140 Oberstdorf HS137 Garmisch-Partenkirchen HS142 Innsbruck HS130 Bischofshofen HS142 Titisee-Neustadt HS142 Titisee-Neustadt HS142 Zakopane HS140 Lahti HS130 Willingen HS145 Willingen HS145 Klingenthal HS140 Klingenthal HS140 Zakopane HS140 Zakopane HS140 Râșnov HS97 Planica HS240 Planica HS240 444
19 11 33 7 15 7 10 18 8 5 21 5 15 20 21 21 18 2 22

References[]

  1. ^ "Andrzej STĘKAŁA – sylwetka" (in Polish). skijumping.pl. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  2. ^ Michał Bugno (14 December 2015). "Andrzej Stękała zadebiutuje w Pucharze Świata" (in Polish). wp.pl. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  3. ^ "Puchar Świata w skokach narciarskich: Stękała, Kot, Hula i Stoch na podium w Zakopanem" (in Polish). sport.dziennik.pl. 23 January 2016. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  4. ^ "Puchar Świata w Planicy: Nowy rekord Polski Kamila Stocha. Polacy na podium!" (in Polish). gp24.pl. 25 March 2017. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  5. ^ Piotr Majchrzak (29 January 2021). "Kapitalna forma Polaków w Willingen! Stękała wygrywa kwalifikacje! Rekord Murańki" (in Polish). sport.pl. Retrieved 29 January 2021.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""