World Cup Poland began its
2012–13 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup campaign with an individual normal hill competition in
Lillehammer on 24 November. Points were scored by
Maciej Kot (25th place) and
Kamil Stoch (30th). Outside the top 30 were
Dawid Kubacki,
Krzysztof Miętus, and
Piotr Żyła, while failed to qualify. On the large hill, only Miętus scored points, finishing 26th with jumps of 128.5 m and 125.5 m. Stoch and Żyła placed in the 40s, and the remaining Poles in the 50s of the results table. Poland was 10th in the Nations Cup standings, with Maciej Kot as the highest-ranked individual Pole (32nd place, 6 points). The team's performance was described in the media as "very weak". The next competitions were held in
Rukatunturi, with Kłusek absent from the team. In the team event, Poland, composed of Stoch, Żyła, Kubacki, and Kot, finished last in 11th place, with Kubacki recording the longest jump at 123.5 m. In the individual competition, Kubacki scored his first World Cup points, finishing 22nd with jumps of 127.5 m and 115.5 m. Kot was 32nd, while Miętus and Żyła placed in the 50s, and Stoch did not advance to the main competition. Subsequently, Żyła and Stoch traveled with head coach Łukasz Kruczek to training in
Ramsau am Dachstein, Austria. For the World Cup in Krasnaya Polyana, the team consisted of Dawid Kubacki, Maciej Kot, Bartłomiej Kłusek, and Krzysztof Miętus, with coach
Zbigniew Klimowski. In both Russian competitions, points were scored by Kot and Kubacki. In the first, they placed 28th and 30th, respectively, and in the second, 22nd and 17th. Coach Kruczek later admitted he had considered resigning after the weak early-season results, but the athletes opposed it. For the competitions in
Engelberg, Switzerland, before the Four Hills Tournament,
Kamil Stoch and
Piotr Żyła joined the team. The first competition was on 15 December. Stoch led after the first round with a jump of 132.5 m, holding a 0.8-point advantage over 2nd-placed Schlierenzauer. In the second round, he jumped 134 m and finished 2nd, 0.1 points behind
Andreas Kofler. Kubacki finished 9th, Kot 17th, Miętus 23rd, Murańka 28th, and Żyła did not score points. This was the largest number of points scored by Poles at that time (134 points). In the second Swiss competition, three Poles scored points: Kot 13th, Stoch 14th, and Kubacki 17th. Stoch was the highest-ranked Pole in the overall standings (18th), and Poland moved up to 7th in the Nations Cup. Seven Poles were entered for the
2012–13 Four Hills Tournament. Before the first competition in
Oberstdorf, Stoch won the trial round. In the first round, he outperformed his KO-system opponent,
Jaka Hvala, jumping 132.5 m and ranking 5th. He ultimately finished 13th after landing at 125 m in the final round, trailing the leader, Jacobsen, by 44.3 points. Hula finished 21st, Kubacki 26th, and Murańka 28th. Żyła, Miętus, and Kot were eliminated in the KO round. For the
Garmisch-Partenkirchen competition, all Poles qualified except Murańka, who was disqualified. In the first round, Stoch defeated
Simon Ammann and was 2nd after a 142 m jump. Kot was 6th (134.5 m), and Kubacki and Żyła also advanced. In the final round, Stoch dropped to 6th (tied with
Dmitriy Vassiliev), Kot moved up to 5th, Kubacki was 28th, and Żyła 30th. After this competition, Stoch moved to 7th in the Four Hills overall standings, 60.2 points behind the leader. Before the
Innsbruck event, Klemens Murańka was sent back to Poland. All other Polish representatives qualified, with Stoch and Kot 2nd in qualifying alongside Jacobsen, and Miętus 5th. After the first round, Stoch was 4th with a 124.5 m jump. In the second round, he jumped 1.5 m less and finished 2nd, 12.8 points behind winner Schlierenzauer. Kot was 9th, Żyła (a lucky loser) 22nd, and Miętus 27th; the remaining Poles did not score points. After these competitions, Stoch moved to 6th in the Four Hills standings, 60.5 points behind the leader. In the top 30, Kot was 24th, Kubacki 26th, and Żyła 30th. In the qualifications for the
Bischofshofen competition, the highest-placed Polish jumper was Stoch, who finished 2nd. After the first round, in which he jumped 131 m, he was in 4th place. 5th-placed Maciej Kot jumped one meter farther; Stefan Hula (who defeated
Severin Freund) and Piotr Żyła also advanced. In the final round, Stoch maintained his position, jumping 131.5 m slightly late on the take-off. Kot fell to 10th place, while Hula and Żyła finished in the last point-scoring positions. In the overall World Cup standings, compared to the situation before the Tournament, Kamil Stoch moved up from 18th to 8th place, while Maciej Kot advanced from 30th to 19th. Two Polish representatives scored their first points of the season – Piotr Żyła, ranked 47th, and Stefan Hula, one position higher. Other Poles dropped in the rankings. In the Nations Cup, Poland moved up from 7th to 6th place, ahead of Russia. On January 8, 10 Polish jumpers started in the qualifications for the
Wisła competition, 8 of whom advanced to the main event (
Jan Ziobro and Klemens Murańka were eliminated). Maciej Kot won the qualification round. The following day, the first-ever competition on the
Malinka ski jumping hill took place under variable wind conditions. After the opening round, the highest-placed Pole was Piotr Żyła, 12th after a jump of 125 m. Kamil Stoch was three positions lower with 122 m. Maciej Kot and Stefan Hula also advanced, while
Aleksander Zniszczoł,
Łukasz Rutkowski,
Krzysztof Miętus (40s),
Dawid Kubacki, and (50s) finished the round. In the final round, Żyła jumped 123 m, achieving the highest position of his career so far, 6th place. Stoch was 7th, Kot 13th, and Hula 27th. Some Polish jumpers complained about fatigue due to the high frequency of competitions at the start of the year. On January 11, a team competition was held at
Wielka Krokiew. Poland jumped in the lineup: Żyła, Kot, Miętus, and Stoch. After the first round, they were leading, ahead of Slovenia by 25.7 points. They ultimately finished 2nd, with one factor being Miętus' jump of 108 m. Qualifications for the individual event took place on January 12. Among the 11 Polish representatives, 8 advanced to the top 40, while Kamil Stoch was prequalified. Only Murańka and Kłusek failed to advance. After the first competition round, Stoch was the leader (jumping 133 m). Kot (9th), Ziobro (11th), Żyła, Zniszczoł, Hula, and Miętus also advanced. Kubacki and Rutkowski did not score points. Stoch ultimately stood on the lowest podium step, surpassed by Norwegian jumpers after a 127 m jump. Kot moved up to 5th, Żyła 18th, Ziobro 20th, and the rest finished in the 30s. After the home competitions, Poland advanced to 5th place in the Nations Cup, ahead of Japan. Individually, Stoch moved from 8th to 7th, along with several other Polish jumpers. The next World Cup round took place in
Sapporo a week later. In the first competition, the highest-placed Pole was Stoch (9th). Kot was 10th, while Żyła and Hula also scored points, and Miętus was disqualified. The second competition was held in difficult weather conditions. Stoch placed 5th, Kot 14th, Kubacki 18th (after being in the top 10 after the first jump), Żyła 22nd, and Miętus 25th. After the competitions in Japan, Stoch advanced another position. The first ski flying competitions of the 2012–13 season took place in
Vikersund. Kamil Stoch achieved the highest Polish result, finishing 5th. After the first round, he was 3rd, but despite matching the Polish record with a 232.5-meter jump in the second round, he dropped in the rankings. Piotr Żyła placed 6th, with Maciej Kot (16th) and Krzysztof Miętus (25th) also scoring points. In the second competition, Stoch was the highest-placed Pole in 7th, followed by Żyła (10th), Kot (14th), Miętus (22nd), and Kubacki (28th). After these events, Stoch moved to 5th in the overall World Cup standings, overtaking
Andreas Kofler. In the ski flying standings, Stoch was 6th, and Żyła was 8th. The same Polish team competed in
Harrachov. The first competition, postponed to 3 February 2013 due to challenging wind conditions, saw Stoch finish 9th, benefiting from over 50 points of compensation for a lowered gate in his first jump. Miętus was 14th, Kot 16th, and Żyła 22nd. Kubacki, disrupted by a strong gust in his second jump, earned one point. In the single-round second competition held the same day, Stoch was 8th with a 177.5-meter jump, followed by Żyła (13th), Kot (16th), Miętus (21st), and Kubacki (34th). Coach Łukasz Kruczek described the day as "crazy" and the competitions as risky. After Harrachov, Stoch dropped from 6th to 8th in the ski flying standings, while maintaining 5th in the overall World Cup standings. For the opening individual competition of the
FIS Team Tour 2013 in
Willingen, only three Poles qualified, but it was canceled. The team competition was held on 9 February 2013 with Poland fielding Żyła, Miętus, Kubacki, and Stoch, finishing 5th. On 13 February 2013, the
Klingenthal competition saw Żyła take 6th place with jumps of 135 m and 128.5 m. Miętus, 7th after a 145-meter first jump, finished 11th. Kot placed 13th, while Stoch, disqualified in the second round, was 30th. Kubacki did not score points. Poland retained 5th place in the FIS Team Tour standings but widened the gap to leaders Slovenia. Due to the upcoming World Championships, the
Oberstdorf ski flying events on 16 February 2013 featured Poland's junior team:
Klemens Murańka,
Krzysztof Biegun,
Jan Ziobro, , and
Aleksander Zniszczoł. For Biegun, Ziobro, and Kłusek, it was their debut on a flying hill, and for Biegun, his World Cup debut. Only Zniszczoł failed to qualify. In the trial round, all Poles finished in the bottom 10, but Biegun (175.5 m) and Ziobro (173.5 m) set personal bests. In the competition, only Biegun scored, jumping 180 m and 172 m to finish 30th. Biegun entered the overall World Cup standings at 80th. Poland, previously 5th in the FIS Team Tour, was overtaken by Japan and the Czech Republic. The final FIS Team Tour event was the team ski flying competition in Oberstdorf on 17 February 2013. Poland replaced Kłusek with Zniszczoł, with Biegun jumping 197.5 m in the first group. Poland was 6th after the first round and held that position until the end. The first World Cup events after the World Championships were in
Lahti. Stoch led both training sessions and trial rounds for both competitions. In the team event on 9 March 2013, Poland (Kot, Żyła, Miętus, Stoch) was 4th after the first round, 2.3 points behind 3rd-placed Austria. They ultimately finished 3rd. In the individual competition on 10 March 2013, Stoch placed 5th with jumps of 124 m and 123.5 m, having been second after the first round. Kot took 6th (125.5 m, 125.5 m), Żyła was 12th, and Miętus 19th. Kubacki and Hula did not score points. In the
Kuopio competition on 12 March 2013, Stoch led after the first round with a 135 m jump, holding a 7.9-point advantage over second-placed
Severin Freund. He jumped 129 m in the second round to secure victory. Żyła placed 15th, and Kubacki 24th. Kot, Hula, and Miętus did not score points. The
Trondheim competition began on 14 March 2013. Żyła won the qualifications with a 140 m jump. Stoch secured his second consecutive victory with jumps of 131 m and 140 m, placing 3rd after the first round. Żyła was 9th, Kubacki 17th, Kot 24th, and Hula 29th. Miętus finished last. After this competition, Stoch advanced to 3rd in the overall World Cup standings. The next day, 16 March 2013, competition began at
Holmenkollbakken. After the first jump, Stoch (132 m) was 2nd, and Żyła (135.5 m) 3rd. In the final round, Żyła jumped 133.5 m to secure his first career victory, tied with
Gregor Schlierenzauer. Stoch, jumping from a lowered gate at the coach's request, landed at 121 m and dropped to 4th. Kot was 11th, and Kubacki 20th. Miętus did not score points, and Hula was disqualified in qualifications. Thanks to his victory, Żyła moved from 24th to 19th in the overall World Cup standings. The season-ending World Cup events began on 21 March 2013 at
Letalnica bratov Gorišek. In the official training, Stoch and Żyła took the top two spots. Only Hula failed to qualify for the first competition. After the first round, Żyła was 4th with a 212.5 m jump, Kot 6th with 205.5 m, and Stoch 11th with 200 m. Kubacki and Miętus did not advance to the second round. In the final round, Stoch held 11th, Kot dropped to 8th, and Żyła jumped 216.5 m to secure 3rd place. Stoch reduced his gap to 2nd-placed
Anders Bardal in the overall World Cup standings to 63 points. The team competition followed, with Poland (Żyła, Kot, Miętus, Stoch) placing 5th after the first round and moving to 4th in the second. In the final World Cup competition on 24 March 2013, Poland fielded Stoch, Kot, Żyła, and Kubacki. Żyła achieved the highest placement, finishing 5th with jumps of 201.5 m and 216 m. Stoch was 8th, Kot 18th, and Kubacki 21st. Stoch maintained third place in the 2012–13 overall World Cup standings, as his only rival,
Severin Freund, finished 9th in the final competition. Żyła's performance moved him to 15th, overtaking Kot, who dropped from 17th to 18th. In the ski flying standings, Żyła overtook Stoch to finish 8th, with Stoch in 9th and Kot in 16th.
Overall World Cup standings Ski flying World Cup standings Four Hills Tournament overall standings Podium finishes in World Cup competitions Continental Cup In the first
Continental Cup competition held on 8 December in
Almaty, five Polish ski jumpers participated. Klemens Murańka took 2nd place with jumps of 131.5 m and 128.5 m. Aleksander Zniszczoł finished 8th, while the other Polish representatives (
Jan Ziobro,
Stefan Hula, ) did not score points. The next day, Murańka again took 2nd place with jumps of 129.5 m and 133 m. Biela placed 28th, earning points, while Zniszczoł was disqualified. After the Kazakhstan events, Murańka was 2nd in the overall Continental Cup standings. For the competitions held on 27–28 December 2012 in
Engelberg, Switzerland, a different group of athletes was sent. Jan Ziobro took 3rd place in the first competition, moving up from 9th after a 115.5 m first jump with a 124 m second jump, the longest of the event. Stefan Hula and Łukasz Rutkowski also scored points, finishing in the 20s. Jan Ziobro, Stefan Hula, Łukasz Rutkowski, Andrzej Zapotoczny and Jakub Kot finished outside the top 30. In the second Engelberg competition, Hula took 2nd place with jumps of 132.5 m and 130 m. Rutkowski was 16th, while the other Poles did not advance to the second round. On 5 January 2013, Poland hosted the Continental Cup in
Zakopane. Only one round was held. Of the 13 Polish jumpers, four scored points: Murańka was 6th,
Marcin Bachleda 11th, Zniszczoł 14th, and Rutkowski 18th. The next day, the full competition was held. Zniszczoł, leading after the first round, was disqualified in the second for an irregular suit. Murańka placed 5th, Ziobro 7th, Bartłomiej Kłusek 11th, Rutkowski 15th, and Krzysztof Biegun 19th. After the home events, Murańka solidified his 2nd-place position in the overall standings, increasing his lead over the 3rd-placed jumper to 79 points while trailing leader
Stefan Kraft by 100 points. Hula dropped from 9th to 19th. For the Continental Cup events in
Sapporo from 11 to 13 January 2013, three Polish jumpers were sent. One competition was held on the normal hill and two on the large hill. Zapotoczny scored points in all three, finishing 20th, 11th, and 19th. Kot earned points with 30th and 27th places, while Biela scored in the final event with 30th. The next events took place on 19–20 January 2013 in
Bischofshofen, Austria. Ziobro was the highest-placed Pole in the first competition, finishing 7th. Hula was 10th, and Zapotoczny 26th. Other Poles placed in the 50s and 60s. In the second competition, Ziobro placed 5th, with Hula and Kot also scoring points. The following competitions were held in
Titisee-Neustadt. In the first, Hula finished 8th and Ziobro 26th. The second competition consisted of one round. Rafał Śliż was the highest-placed Pole at 13th (127 m), followed by Ziobro (26th, 124.5 m) and Rutkowski (30th, 123.5 m). Other Poles did not score points. In
Planica in early February 2013, the same group competed. Hula took 2nd place with jumps of 128.5 m and 125.5 m. Ziobro was 10th, Rutkowski 17th, Śliż 28th, with Kot and Zapotoczny in the 60s and 70s. Later that day, Hula won with jumps of 129 m and 130 m, beating
Stefan Kraft by 5.4 points. Ziobro, Rutkowski, and Kot also scored points. Hula's two podiums propelled him to 6th in the overall standings with 339 points, while Murańka dropped from the top 10 to 13th. Less than a week later, three competitions were held in
Iron Mountain on 9–10 February 2013. In the first, Zniszczoł placed 7th, moving up from 24th after the first round. Kłusek, Grzegorz Miętus, and Biegun finished in the 20s, with Murańka 21st. Biela did not score. In the second competition that day, Biegun was 7th, Murańka 14th, Kłusek 18th, and Zniszczoł 27th. Biela and Miętus were in the 40s. On 10 February 2013, Murańka placed 5th, Kłusek 12th, Biegun 17th, and Zniszczoł 27th, with Biela and Miętus in the 40s. Despite earning points, Murańka dropped from 13th to 14th in the overall standings, and Hula fell from the top 10 to 12th. In mid-February 2013, competitions were held in
Brotterode, Germany. In the first, only Rutkowski scored points, finishing 17th with two 109 m jumps. In the second, Rutkowski was 9th, with Zapotoczny and Miętus in the late 20s. On 23–24 February 2013, Continental Cup events were held in
Wisła, Poland. In the first competition, Biegun led after a 124.5 m first jump, 0.1 points ahead of . His 124 m second jump earned him 3rd place. Ziobro was 6th, Miętus 9th, and Kłusek 18th. The next day, Ziobro took 3rd with jumps of 124.5 m and 126.5 m. Biegun was 10th, Rutkowski 15th, Miętus 23rd, and Zniszczoł 24th. Ziobro's podium moved him from 22nd to 17th in the overall standings, while Biegun climbed from 55th to 30th. The next Continental Cup round was held in
Liberec in early March. In the first competition, all Poles scored points, a first for the season. Rutkowski was 4th with jumps of 96.5 m and 98 m, 0.5 points off the podium. Biegun was 5th, Ziobro 13th, Murańka 15th, Kłusek 22nd, and Zniszczoł 23rd. In the single-round second competition, four Poles scored: Ziobro was 8th, Zniszczoł 9th, Murańka 18th, and Rutkowski 28th. Kłusek and Biegun placed in the 60s. Ziobro's points returned him to 15th in the overall standings. For the events on the normal hill in
Vikersund, Norway, on 8–9 March 2013, eight Poles competed. In the first, Ziobro took 2nd with jumps of 115 m and 119.5 m, Biegun was 6th, and Biela 20th. The others (Murańka, Zniszczoł, Kłusek, Kot) placed between the 50s and 70s, except Miętus, who was disqualified. In the second competition, only Biegun (12th) and Miętus (25th) scored points. After Norway, Ziobro advanced from 15th to 11th in the overall standings. The final Continental Cup events were held in
Nizhny Tagil, Russia, on 16–17 March 2013, without Kot. Ziobro took 3rd place with jumps of 93.5 m and 94 m. Biegun was 9th, Kłusek 18th, Miętus 23rd, and Biela 30th. In the last competition, Kłusek placed 6th, dropping from second after the first round. Ziobro was 8th, Biegun 9th, Miętus 11th, and Zniszczoł 26th. Biela did not score. Ziobro's performance earned him 8th place in the final 2012–13 Continental Cup standings with 548 points, the only Pole in the top 20. Murańka dropped from 20th to 21st.
Continental Cup overall standings World Championships The Polish team at the
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2013 included 6 ski jumpers: Kamil Stoch, Maciej Kot, Piotr Żyła, Dawid Kubacki, Krzysztof Miętus, and Stefan Hula. The first official jumps took place on Wednesday, February 20, during the training sessions ahead of the individual competition on the normal hill. In all three sessions, the best result among the Poles was achieved by Dawid Kubacki. In the first series, after a jump of 99.5 m, he placed 5th out of 58 competitors. Miętus was 12th (97 m), Stoch 16th (96 m), Żyła 19th (93.5 m), Kot 26th (89 m), and the lowest-ranked Pole was Hula in 32nd (93 m). Maciej Kot commented that the conditions during this training were "changeable and difficult". In the second series, Kubacki was the only athlete to surpass 100 m (by 5.5 m), finishing 1st on the leaderboard. Also in the top 10 were Miętus (99.5 m, 8th place) and Kot (96 m, 10th place). Żyła improved, placing 15th with a 97 m jump. Stoch finished 19th (95 m), and Hula 21st (94 m). In the third training session, Kubacki came in 4th with 98.5 m. One spot behind him was Stoch (100 m). Żyła placed 8th (96.5 m), followed by Kot with the same distance. Hula (95.5 m) and Miętus (93.5 m) placed 20th and 21st. Kot admitted that he used a different suit in each session, while Kubacki, after his good training performances, told the
Polish Press Agency: Coach Łukasz Kruczek selected the following 4 jumpers for the qualification: Piotr Żyła, Maciej Kot, Dawid Kubacki, and Kamil Stoch. The latter, due to his position in the overall World Cup standings, was automatically qualified, but still produced a 99.5 m jump. The other three all placed in the top 10 of the qualifying round: Kubacki was 5th (99.5 m), Kot 6th (101.5 m), and Żyła 10th (100.5 m). In the trial round before the individual competition, the best result belonged to
Kamil Stoch, who landed at 103 m. Kot was 6th (99 m), Kubacki 11th (101.5 m), and Żyła 20th (94.5 m). In the competition itself, Kubacki jumped first among the Poles. His 93.5 m jump did not qualify him for the final round, and he finished 31st. Piotr Żyła, after a 95.5 m jump, was briefly ranked 6th, but at the end of the round was placed 26th. Maciej Kot, with 101.5 m, was 3rd, and after the first series he sat in 11th place. Kamil Stoch, starting from the 11th gate after the jury raised the inrun, landed at 102 m. He became the leader. Only four jumpers followed him, and he was surpassed solely by
Anders Bardal. The Pole trailed Bardal by 2.8 points, while leading 3rd-placed Schlierenzauer by 1.3 points. The second series began from a gate five positions higher than the first. Żyła, after landing at 95 m, temporarily placed 2nd and ultimately finished 23rd, gaining three positions compared to the first round. Kot jumped two meters farther, and though he did not lead after his attempt, he maintained his 11th place. Stoch's second jump was 97 m, five meters shorter than his first. He also struggled at the landing – all three style judges gave him 17 points. After his attempt, he dropped to 7th place and ultimately finished 8th. In post-competition interviews, he admitted to being very dissatisfied with the result – despite being relaxed, he made a mistake during the jump:Right now, I feel really terrible and don't know what to say. I don't want to say something I'll later regret. I keep messing up competitions, and these are some of the most important in my life. There was a huge chance to do something great here, and I just let it slip away. That's what makes me the most angry.On 25 February, the official trainings on the large hill began. In the classification of the first one, Stoch placed highest – he was 7th after a jump of 118.5 m. Two places lower was Kot, who jumped one metre farther. Miętus was 16th (115.5 m), and the other Poles were in the 30s (Żyła – 22nd, Hula – 24th, and Kubacki – 26th). In the next series, Stoch was 2nd, improving by 10 metres, Żyła was 6th (126 m), Kot 7th (126.5 m), Kubacki 16th (124 m), Miętus 20th (123.5 m), and Hula 31st (120 m). In the third series, Stoch was the best competitor among all 55 starters. He was the only one to exceed the 130-metre mark, by half a metre. Kot was 4th (124.5 m), Kubacki 5th (128.5 m), Żyła 12th (122 m), Miętus 15th (124.5 m), and once again the weakest of the Poles was Hula, who placed 23rd with 117.5 m. In the trial round before qualifications, the furthest Pole was Kot, who, after reaching 121.5 m, placed 8th. Kubacki was 12th, Stoch 17th, and Żyła 31st.In the trial round before the main competition, Stoch was 2nd after reaching 127.5 m. Kubacki was the first Pole to jump in the competition itself. His 126.5 m attempt placed him 2nd at that moment, but after the first round he dropped to 19th. Piotr Żyła finished two places lower after a 124 m jump, while Maciej Kot was 18th after going one metre farther. Kamil Stoch delivered the longest jump of the first series – 131.5 m – for which he received three style marks of 19.5, one 19, and one perfect 20. This allowed him to overtake then-leader
Peter Prevc by 5.1 points and lead after the first round. In the second series, Żyła jumped 126.5 m and, after his attempt, was in 2nd place, eventually finishing 19th. Kubacki managed 126 m and slipped to 20th, while Kot fell to 27th after a 122.5 m jump. The last competitor of the contest was Kamil Stoch, defending his lead from the first series. He landed at 130 m, in less favourable wind conditions than Prevc. He did not receive any style mark below 19. After all adjustments, he overtook the Slovenian by 6.1 points and claimed the world championship title.This is my second victory in Predazzo, after last year's World Cup. It's hard to describe how I feel after this success. It was an incredible day for me; I won the gold medal. I always dreamed of a world championship gold, maybe even an Olympic one – now I know dreams can come true! You just need the right motivation, effort, and hard work. On 2 March, the team event was held. Poland competed with the lineup: Maciej Kot, Piotr Żyła, Dawid Kubacki, and Kamil Stoch. Kot's first jump measured 123 m and placed the team 5th. They held that position after Żyła's 122 m and Kubacki's 126 m. In the final group, Stoch achieved the best distance of the first round – 134 m – moving Poland up to 4th, just two points behind Norway, although initially the results incorrectly showed them five points behind Germany. In the final round, Kot managed 126 m and the position remained unchanged. After Żyła repeated that distance, Poland advanced to 3rd place. Kubacki landed two metres farther, but the team dropped back to 4th. The final jump for Poland was by Stoch, who reached 130 m from a shortened inrun, as requested by the coach. Initially, Poland was ranked 4th, 0.8 points behind Germany. However, after verification it turned out Norway's score had been miscalculated, and as a result the Polish team secured the bronze medal with a 3.7-point advantage over Norway. It was the first team medal in the history of the Polish national ski jumping team.We believed in the medal only when it was hanging around the athletes' necks, but indeed, the scenario life prepared for us was like something from a good thriller (...) Everything worked perfectly, and as we predicted, it was very tight, with details deciding the medal positions. In the second competition, Kantyka finished on the podium in 3rd place with jumps of 91.5 m and 93 m. Podżorski was 5th (89.5 m and 93.5 m), Okas 10th (87.5 m and 92 m), Ruda 11th, Leja 14th, and Milczanowski 20th. After these competitions, remained the highest-ranked Pole in the overall FIS Cup standings (15th position), followed by Kantyka (30th position). In total, 16 Polish athletes were ranked in the standings. == Women's competitions ==