switched his silver medal with Roberto Cecon bronze at the press conference after medal ceremony, as he deserved it more due to ridiculous rule which didn't allow to score jumps exceeding 191 metres.
Historic 200 metres barrier broken
On 17 March 1994sports history was made. Austrian ski jumper Andreas Goldberger became the first person in history to jump over barrier, but it didn't count, as he touched the snow with his hands at during practice. On the same day and also in the first round, just a few minutes later after Goldi, Finnish ski jumper Toni Nieminen made a history and officially became the first person to land on his feet over when he stood at.
Competition
On 17 March 1994 practise session with 36 on start in two rounds was on schedule with historic 200 metres barrier broken and started with WR by test jumper Martin Höllwarth at 196 metres. But Miran Tepeš was honoured to be the first, landing at 163 metres. On 18 March 1994 official training infront of 20,000 people with two rounds were on schedule and third round was canceled due to strong wind. Before that 15 trial V-jumpers made practise test jumps. In the first round Christof Duffner crashed from a huge height at 207 metres metres world record distance. About 15 minutes later Espen Bredesen set the third and last world record that year at 209 metres. On 19 March 1994 first day of competition was on schedule but canceled due to strong. Unfortunate to 40,000 people visiting the event, crowd was very disappointed as they didn't manage to see a single jump that day. On 20 March 1994 second day of competition was on schedule infront of 30,000 people and without any weather problems. The event marked the last time the 191 meters rule—jumps that exceeded the distance points didn't register further—was in use. At the time the single day event also counted for World Cup points and statistics. Only 2 of 4 jumps counted into final results. Czech Jaroslav Sakala became the world champion.
Practise
13:00 PM — 17 March 1994 — incomplete
Official training
9:00 AM trial round — 18 March 1994 — incomplete — 43 on start list
Bib
Name
1RD
2RD
7
Noriaki Kasai
174.0 m
N/A
9
Jure Žagar
149.0 m
149.0 m
11
Toni Nieminen
187.0 m
N/A
14
Roberto Cecon
N/A
193.0 m
17
Christof Duffner
207.0 m
N/A
18
Matjaž Zupan
112.0 m
124.0 m
20
Espen Bredesen
209.0 m
N/A
25
Werner Rathmayr
N/A
181.0 m
32
Matjaž Kladnik
167.0 m
152.0 m
36
Andreas Goldberger
—
201.0 m
37
Jaroslav Sakala
183.0 m
200.0 m
39
Samo Gostiša
125.0 m
135.0 m
N/A
Jérôme Gay
146.0 m
N/A
N/A
Nicolas Jean-Prost
174.0 m
N/A
N/A
Dejan Jekovec
124.0 m
94.0 m
N/A
Gerd Siegmund
186.0 m
N/A
N/A
Jinya Nishikata
188.0 m
N/A
N/A
Lasse Ottesen
N/A
176.0 m
Official results
10:00 AM — 20 March 1994 — Two rounds — chronological order Points were officially scored maximum as 191 metres jump. World record. First official over 200 metres. Crash at world record distance. World record. Fall.