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FIS Moves to Overhaul Ski Jumping Measurements After Soft‑Tissue Loophole Exposed

Officials signal a shift to bone-based manual checks with a decision targeted before next season.

Overview

  • FIS chief material controller Mathias Hafele says the federation is developing a new method that prioritizes bone-point, manual measurements to eliminate soft-tissue manipulation advantages.
  • Options under review include radiographic DEXA scanning as officials evaluate available technologies and practical feasibility.
  • The process involves coordination with national teams and the medical committee, a World Cup closing meeting in March, and a summer full assembly vote, with implementation aimed for next season.
  • The push follows reports that the once-per-season 3-D body scan can be gamed by enlarging genital tissue, a scenario German team doctors said could be influenced by procedures such as hyaluronic injections.
  • Several nations have proposed collecting and sealing suits between events to deter tampering, though insurance and logistics pose hurdles, and separate Olympic checks recently flagged equipment noncompliance, according to BILD.