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The '''Four Hills Tournament''' ({{
The Four Hills Tournament champion is the one who gets the most points over the four events. Unlike the World Cup ranking, however, the actual points scored during the competitions are the ones that are used to determine the winner. In 2005–06, [[Janne Ahonen]] and [[Jakub Janda]] shared the overall victory after finishing with exactly the same points total after the four competitions. In 2001–02, the anniversary 50th edition, [[Sven Hannawald]] was the first to achieve the ''grand slam'' of ski jumping, winning all four events in the same edition. In 2017–18 season [[Kamil Stoch]] became the second ski jumper in history to obtain this achievement, and just a year later, in the 2018–19 edition, [[
The four individual events themselves are part of the World Cup and award points toward the world cup in exactly the same manner as all other world cup events.
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| 138.0 m (2015)<br>{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Michael Hayböck]]<ref name="YahooNews">{{cite web | url=https://sports.yahoo.com/news/germanys-freitag-wins-3rd-stop-4-hills-tour-155634450--spt.html | title=Germany's Freitag wins 3rd stop of 4 Hills Tour | publisher=[[Yahoo Sports]] | date=4 January 2015 | access-date=4 January 2015 | archive-date=5 March 2016 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160305095445/http://sports.yahoo.com/news/germanys-freitag-wins-3rd-stop-4-hills-tour-155634450--spt.html | url-status=dead }}</ref>
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| 6 January
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| style="background:#ff9;"| {{flagicon|POL}} [[Kamil Stoch]]
| style="background:#ff9;"| {{flagicon|POL}} [[Kamil Stoch]]
| style="background:#ff9;"| {{flagicon|POL}} '''[[Kamil Stoch]] * '''
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| [[2018–19 Four Hills Tournament|2018–19]]
| style="background:#ff9;"| {{flagicon|JPN}} [[
| style="background:#ff9;"| {{flagicon|JPN}} [[
| style="background:#ff9;"| {{flagicon|JPN}} [[
| style="background:#ff9;"| {{flagicon|JPN}} [[
| style="background:#ff9;"| {{flagicon|JPN}} '''[[
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| [[2019–20 Four Hills Tournament|2019–20]]
| {{flagicon|JPN}} [[
| {{flagicon|NOR}} [[Marius Lindvik]]
| {{flagicon|NOR}} [[Marius Lindvik]]
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| [[2021–22 Four Hills Tournament|2021–22]]
|style="background: #efefff" |{{flagicon|JPN}} [[
|style="background: #efefff" |{{flagicon|JPN}} [[
|style="background: #efefff" |{{flagicon|JPN}} [[
| {{flagicon|AUT}} [[Daniel Huber (ski jumper)|Daniel Huber]]
|style="background: #efefff" |{{flagicon|JPN}} '''[[
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| [[2022–23 Four Hills Tournament|2022–23]]
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|{{Flagicon|GER}} [[Andreas Wellinger]]
|{{Flagicon|SLO}} [[Anže Lanišek]]
|{{Flagicon|AUT}} [[Jan Hörl]]
|▼
|{{Flagicon|AUT}} [[Stefan Kraft]]
|{{Flagicon|JAP}} '''[[Ryōyū Kobayashi]]''' (3)
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;Notes
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== Records ==
[[Janne Ahonen]] is the only ski jumper to have won the tournament five times, with wins in 1998–99, 2002–03, 2004–05, 2005–06 and 2007–08. [[Jens Weißflog]] was the first ski jumper to reach four wins, winning the tournament in 1984, 1985, 1991 and 1996. [[Helmut Recknagel]], [[Bjørn Wirkola]]
Janne Ahonen's fourth victory in 2005–06 was also the first time the tournament victory was shared, with [[Jakub Janda]], who claimed his first Four Hills Tournament crown.
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Jens Weißflog and Bjørn Wirkola have both won ten Four Hills Tournament events. Janne Ahonen and Gregor Schlierenzauer are next with nine victories, followed by [[Ryōyū Kobayashi]] with eight.
In 2000–01, the 49th edition of the tournament, [[Adam Małysz]] beat second placed Janne Ahonen by 104.4 points. This is the biggest winning margin in the tournament's history. He also won all four qualifications that year. The following year [[Sven Hannawald]] became the first person to win all four competitions in a single season. In 2017-18 [[Kamil Stoch]] has repeated Hannawald's record and year after,
Three nations each have sixteen victories: [[Austria]], [[Finland]] and [[Germany]] (including nine victories earned by ski jumpers from [[East Germany]], four - from [[West Germany]] and three - from unified German team). Fourth is [[Norway]] with eleven victories. [[Poland]] has five victories, [[Japan]] has
===Overall winners===
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| style="text-align:center" | '''4''' || {{flagicon|DDR}}{{flagicon|GER}} [[Jens Weissflog]] || [[1983–84 Four Hills Tournament|1983–84]], [[1984–85 Four Hills Tournament|1984–85]], [[1990–91 Four Hills Tournament|1990–91]], [[1995–96 Four Hills Tournament|1995–96]]
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| rowspan="4" style="text-align:center
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| {{flagicon|NOR}} [[Bjørn Wirkola]] || [[1966–67 Four Hills Tournament|1966–67]], [[1967–68 Four Hills Tournament|1967–68]], [[1968–69 Four Hills Tournament|1968–69]]
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| {{flagicon|POL}} [[Kamil Stoch]] || [[2016–17 Four Hills Tournament|2016–17]], [[2017–18 Four Hills Tournament|2017–18]], [[2020–21 Four Hills Tournament|2020–21]]
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| rowspan="7" style="text-align:center" | '''2''' || {{flagicon|
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| {{flagicon|DDR}} [[Jochen Danneberg]] || [[1975–76 Four Hills Tournament|1975–76]], [[1976–77 Four Hills Tournament|1976–77]]
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| {{flagicon|AUT}} [[Gregor Schlierenzauer]] || [[2011–12 Four Hills Tournament|2011–12]], [[2012–13 Four Hills Tournament|2012–13]]
▲| {{flagicon|JPN}} [[Ryōyū Kobayashi]] || [[2018–19 Four Hills Tournament|2018–19]], [[2021–22 Four Hills Tournament|2021–22]]
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