Olympic victory, cruciate ligament tear, long search for form: Andreas Wellinger has experienced a lot in his career. In the USA he is now creating something that he has not been able to do for a long time. That gives the team courage for the World Cup.
Andreas Wellinger celebrated his return to the top ski jumpers with a loud “Yes!”
After a long period of suffering with several injuries, the 2018 Olympic champion was exuberant and also a little incredulous about the unexpected success in Lake Placid. Cheering, he hugged his teammates and supervisors. At the World Cup in the USA, Wellinger gave the German ski jumpers the long-awaited first World Cup victory of the winter.
The 27-year-old jumped 129 and 125.5 meters and won ahead of the Japanese Ryoyu Kobayashi. For Wellinger it was the fourth individual World Cup victory of his career and the first podium finish in an individual World Cup since November 2018. Austria’s Daniel Tschofenig was third.
Searching for a form after a cruciate ligament tear
“It’s unbelievable what happened today. I can’t really put it into words yet because I’m just overjoyed and have to realize it first,” said Wellinger. “I’ve fought brutally the last few weeks, the last months, the last years.”
Wellinger had been looking for his form of earlier days for years. With three medals – including gold in the individual on the normal hill – the mostly happy action sports fan shaped the Winter Games in Pyeongchang. A cruciate ligament tear in June 2019 threw him off track for a very long time. Wellinger temporarily slipped out of the World Cup team and was not nominated for the 2022 Winter Games in China.
Most recently he had flashed his class from earlier days again and again. But it wasn’t enough for a real breakthrough. “The fact that the leap onto the podium is first place again just feels so great,” said Wellinger.
The first World Cup day for ski jumpers in the USA since 2004 went great right from the start. Even before the actual competition, Wellinger showed that he is a force to be reckoned with on this day: he won the qualification, which had to be rescheduled the day before the crucial two heats due to strong winds. After his victory in the competition, Wellinger’s Bavarian jumping colleague Karl Geiger was also happy. “Mega cool,” he said of Wellinger’s performance.
Geiger and Eisenbichler also satisfied
Geiger himself is slowly stabilizing again. After a fifth place last weekend in Willingen, he also showed a slight upward trend on Saturday with jumps of 127.5 and 120.5 meters. “It was a really nice ski jumping day,” said the man from Oberstdorf. “It was great fun.” Eighth place on his 30th birthday should not be the end of the development for the success guarantor of the past few years.
Markus Eisenbichler also achieved a decent result with his tenth place. A week and a half before the start of the World Championships in Planica, Slovenia, Wellinger’s performance in the team of national coach Stefan Horngacher is particularly encouraging.
Source: Stern

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