Matti Nykänen

Matti Nykänen
Nykänen in January 2014
Country Finland
Full nameMatti Ensio Nykänen
Born(1963-07-17)17 July 1963
Jyväskylä, Finland
Died4 February 2019(2019-02-04) (aged 55)
Lappeenranta, Finland
Height1.74 m (5 ft 8+12 in)
Personal best191 m (627 ft)
Planica, 15 March 1985
World Cup career
Seasons19811991
Indiv. starts130
Indiv. podiums76
Indiv. wins46
Overall titles4 (1983, 1985, 1986, 1988)
Four Hills titles2 (1983, 1988)
Medal record
Men's ski jumping
Olympic Games
1984 SarajevoIndividual LH
1988 CalgaryIndividual NH
1988 CalgaryIndividual LH
1988 CalgaryTeam LH
1984 SarajevoIndividual NH
Ski Jumping World Championships
1982 OsloIndividual LH
1984 EngelbergTeam LH
1985 SeefeldTeam LH
1987 OberstdorfTeam LH
1989 LahtiTeam LH
1987 OberstdorfIndividual NH
1982 OsloTeam LH
1985 SeefeldIndividual LH
1989 LahtiIndividual LH
Men's ski flying
Ski Flying World Championships
1985 PlanicaIndividual
1990 VikersundIndividual
1983 HarrachovIndividual
1986 Bad MitterndorfIndividual
1988 OberstdorfIndividual
Junior World Championships
1981 SchonachIndividual NH
Updated on 10 February 2016.

Matti Ensio Nykänen (pronounced [ˈmɑtːi ˈnykænen] ; 17 July 1963 4 February 2019) was a Finnish ski jumper who competed from 1981 to 1991. He is one of the most successful ski jumpers of all time, having won five Winter Olympic medals (four gold), nine World Championship medals (five gold), and 22 Finnish Championship medals (14 gold). Most notably, he won three gold medals at the 1988 Winter Olympics, becoming, along with Yvonne van Gennip of the Netherlands, the most medaled athlete that winter.

Nykänen is the only ski jumper in history to have won all five of the sport's major individual titles: a gold medal at the Winter Olympics (three times), the Ski Jumping World Championships (once), the Ski Flying World Championships (once), four World Cup overall titles, and the Four Hills Tournament (twice). His four World Cup titles is an all-time male record shared with Adam Małysz. Nykänen remains the only male five-time ski flying world record holder in history.

From the 1990s onwards, Nykänen's status as a celebrity was mainly fueled by his personal relationships, his career as a pop singer, and various incidents often related to heavy use of alcohol and violent behaviour. He was sentenced to 26 months in prison following a stabbing incident in 2004, and again for 16 months following an aggravated assault on his wife in 2009.