2013–14 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup
| 2013–14 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Discipline | Men | Women | |
| Overall | Kamil Stoch | Sara Takanashi | |
| Nations Cup | Austria | Japan | |
| Ski flying | Peter Prevc | — | |
| Four Hills Tournament | Thomas Diethart | — | |
| Competition | |||
| Edition | 35th | 3rd | |
| Locations | 20 | 11 | |
| Individual | 28 | 18 | |
| Team | 4 | — | |
| Mixed | 1 | 1 | |
| Cancelled | 0 | 1 | |
| Rescheduled | 1 | 2 | |
The 2013–14 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup was the 35th World Cup season in ski jumping for men, the 17th official World Cup season in ski flying and the 3rd World Cup season for women.
Season began on 23 November 2013 in Klingenthal, Germany and ended on 23 March 2014 in Planica, Slovenia. Women's World Cup has began on 7 December 2011 in Lillehammer, Norway and ended on 22 March 2014 in Planica, Slovenia.
Kamil Stoch won the men's overall title, leading overall standings for most of the season and managed to secure the title in the second-to-last event in Planica and also won most events of the season (six). He won his first overall and the first for Poland after Małysz in 2006.
The Four Hills Tournament was won by Thomas Diethart of Austria, who won events in Garmisch-Partenkirchen and Bischofshofen and finished third in Oberstdorf. Before the beginning of the Tournament, Diethart competed at only four World Cup events. This was a huge surprise, he was basically unknown to the wider audience.
Peaks of the season were Winter Olympics (premiere for women), FIS Ski Flying World Championships and the Four Hills Tournament.
Due to Planica's ski flying hill being renovated, the World Cup finals took place at HS139 hill instead of the HS215.
In women's cup, Sara Takanashi won 15 out of 18 events and secured her second consecutive overall title.