- Nykänen, Matti
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▪ Finnish ski jumperborn July 17, 1963, Jyväskylä, Fin.Finnish ski jumper who was arguably the finest performer in the history of his sport. He was not exceptionally fast down the ski ramp, and he had an unorthdox manner of jumping that did not help him in the style portion of the competition. But he routinely made perfect takeoffs and was able to ride on the air for great distances. Some experts on ski jumping believed that his unusual build—broad yet thin—acted like a sail, capturing the wind and carrying him well past other jumpers. He was the first in his sport to win three gold medals in the same Olympics.Nykänen began training intensively at the age of 9, making 2,000 to 3,000 jumps a year. At age 17 he captured both the junior world title and the Finnish large hill championship. He triumphed internationally in the large hill event at Oslo's annual Holmenkollen competition the following year and reigned as World Cup champion in 1983, 1985, 1986, and 1988.Off the slopes Nykänen had a reputation for heavy drinking and wild behaviour. He dropped out of school after the ninth grade, received a suspended sentence in 1986 for stealing cigarettes and beer from a kiosk, and was twice removed from his country's national team as punishment for bad behaviour. Despite his troubles, Nykänen's victories earned him status as a national hero in Finland, where ski jumping is immensely popular.Nykänen earned his first two Olympic medals in the 1984 Games in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia (now in Bosnia and Herzegovina). He won a silver in the normal hill jump, losing the gold to Jens Weissflog of East Germany. In the large hill event he decisively secured the gold medal, beating rival Weissflog and setting Olympic records both with the length of his jumps and with his large margin of victory. In the 1988 Olympics in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, he dominated the ski-jump competition, winning gold in the normal and large hill jumps and in the team ski-jumping competition. Nykänen won easily in both individual events. His 17.0- and 16.1-point margins of victory in the normal and large hill jumps, respectively, were so huge that in both cases his lead was larger than the number of points separating the silver medalist from the 10th-place finisher.
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Universalium. 2010.