Planica 1936

Planica 1936 was a ski jumping event, considered as the birth of ski flying, held on 15 March 1936 in Planica, Drava Banovina, Yugoslavia. Total of 16,000 people gathered to watch the competition.

Competition
Training was scheduled, on 13 March, however warm weather with warm wind caused it to be cancelled. A few jumpers did few training jumps on a smaller hill in Rateče, but encountered problems with the wind.

On 14 March, the only training was scheduled for the afternoon, after the weather finally cleared up. Birger Ruud made the longest jump at 93 metres.

The novel discipline of ski flying is considered to have been started by Josef Bradl on 15 March. The trial round began at 10:30 AM and continued with two rounds of international competition. After that, the second round was a non-competitive event with a goal of setting new world records. In the last round of the day, Sepp Bradl became the first man in history to jump over one hundred metres while standing, landing at 101.5 metres.

Official training
15:00 PM — 14 March 1936 — chronological order

Trial round
10:30 AM — 15 March 1936 — Trial jump — chronological order

International competition
11:00 AM — 15 March 1936 — Two rounds — chronological order

Non-competition record hunting event
13:45 PM — 15 March 1936 — Two rounds — chronological order World record and first recorded standing jump over 100 m  Fall or touch

Also applied this year
But non of them haven't jumped at all these days:
 * Norway — Sigmund Ruud, Gunnar. K. Hagen, Björn Karlson, Kaarby (four chosen boycott)
 * Austria — Walter Delle Karth Sr., Walter Weissenbacher, Erwin Ludescher
 * Switzerland — Marcel Raymond, Walter Kuster

Boycott by Norway
Four competitors from Norway who were chosen to compete boycotted the event. They objected because the hill was bigger than allowed at the time. They demanded a hill rearrangement to the K80 standard. When negotiation with the organizers failed, they left the event the middle of the trial round and under the leadership of Sigmund Ruud.