Steve Collins (ski jumper) explained

Steve Collins
Birth Date:13 March 1964
Birth Place:Thunder Bay, Canada
Personalbest:172 m (564 ft)
Harrachov, 28-29 March 1980
Seasons:19801986
1988
19911992
Wins:1
Totalpodiums:3
Individual Starts:63
Updated:10 February 2016

Steve Collins (born 13 March 1964) is a Canadian former ski jumper who was successful in the 1980s.[1]

Career

Steve began his World Cup jumping career on 27 December 1979 with a 10th place finish at Cortina d'Ampezzo Italy on the Large Hill, followed 3 days later with a 66th place finish on the K-115 hill at Schattenbergschanze in Oberstdorf, Germany. The following year, on 28 February 1980, he won the FIS Junior World Ski Championships at Örnsköldsvik in Sweden.[2] In 1979 Collins won the national Tom Longboat Award that recognizes Aboriginal athletes for their outstanding contributions to sport in Canada.[3] He once held the record for the longest jump on a 90-meter hill with 128.5 meters at Big Thunder in Thunder Bay on 15 December 1980.[4] Along with team-mate Horst Bulau, Canada gained more than respectable results in the sport that had been dominated by Europeans.[5] [6] He left the World Cup circuit in 1988, but returned to his home hill in Thunder Bay for both hills in 1990 and his final World Cup appearance on 12 February 1991.

World Cup

Standings

 Season Overall
scope=row align=center12 42 N/A
scope=row align=center15 37 N/A
scope=row align=center55 73 N/A
scope=row align=center32 37 N/A
scope=row align=center69 20 N/A
scope=row align=center27 N/A
scope=row align=center20 49 N/A
scope=row align=center42 123 N/A
scope=row align=center
scope=row align=center

Additional podiums

RankSeasonDateLocationHillSize
scope=row style="text-align:center;"3rd21 February 1981   Big Thunder, K-90 NH
scope=row style="text-align:center;"3rd15 December 1985   MacKenzie Intervale K86 NH

Olympics

YearLocationRank (Normal Hill)Rank (Large Hill)
scope=row align=center28 9
scope=row align=center25 36
scope=row align=center13 35

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Canadian Ski Hall of Fame: Steve Collins. Canadian Ski Museum. 30 March 2015. 21 January 2010. 24 September 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150924102406/http://www.skimuseum.ca/bios/Collins_Steve.pdf. dead.
  2. Web site: COLLINS Steve - Biographie. data.fis-ski.com. 20 February 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180220033025/https://data.fis-ski.com/dynamic/athlete-biography.html?sector=JP&competitorid=10802&type=result&limit=50&bt=next&rec_start=50. 20 February 2018. en.
  3. Web site: List of Regional(R) and National(N) “Tom Longboat” recipients 1951-2001. Forsyth. Janice. 2005. Aboriginal Sports Circle. December 18, 2017. November 7, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171107015758/http://www.aboriginalsportcircle.ca/en/pdf/Recipients-1951-2001.pdf. dead.
  4. Web site: The Canadian Ski Hall of Fame: Steve Collins. Canadian Ski Museum. 30 March 2015. 21 January 2010. 24 September 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150924102406/http://www.skimuseum.ca/bios/Collins_Steve.pdf. dead.
  5. Web site: Catching up with Canadian ski jumping legend Horst Bulau. St. Catharines Standard. 19 February 2018.
  6. Web site: USA Nordic Sport Story Project. ??. 19 February 2018. bot: unknown. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304131056/http://usasjstoryproject.blogspot.co.uk/2012/12/usasj-story-project-dec-31-bakke.html. 4 March 2016.