Indiv. podiums 4 Total podiums 4 Individual wins 1 Height 1.79 m | Seasons 2002–2008 Role Olympic athlete Full name Lars Kristian Bystol Name Lars Bystol | |
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Personal best 216.5 m (710 ft)Planica, 20 Mar 2005 Similar People Roar Ljokelsoy, Bjorn Einar Romoren, Tommy Ingebrigtsen, Sigurd Pettersen, Matti Hautamaki |
Olympic winter games 2006 exclusive lars byst l wins
Lars Kristian Bystøl (born 4 December 1978) is a Norwegian former ski jumper who competed from 2002 to 2008. His career highlights include an individual gold medal at the 2006 Winter Olympics, one individual World Cup victory, a gold medal in the Ski Flying World Championships, and two World Championship bronze medals in team competitions.
Contents
- Olympic winter games 2006 exclusive lars byst l wins
- F rste veksling mellom roar lj kels y og lars byst l
- Career
- Substance abuse
- References
F rste veksling mellom roar lj kels y og lars byst l
Career

Bystøl won his first and only World Cup event on 4 January 2006, by winning the third event of the 2005–06 Four Hills Tournament in Innsbruck. Eleven days later, Bystøl won a gold medal in the team event at the 2006 Ski Flying World Championships in Bad Mitterndorf.

He continued the World Cup season by placing between 10th and 20th in the next three individual events, before going to the 2006 Winter Olympics. He retained his top 15 position in the World Cup standings, which enabled him to qualify for the normal hill of the Olympics despite being disqualified in the qualifying run. Once there, he finished sixth in the first jump, but held on with a 103.5 metre second jump to win Olympic gold.

Bystøl finished 13th overall in the 2005/06 World Cup standings.
Substance abuse

In 2000, he was sent home from a Continental Cup competition in Innsbruck after a party on New Year's Eve. Later that year he was caught DUI with a 2.38‰ blood alcohol content. He was sentenced to 24 days in prison. In 2003, after some heavy drinking, he fell into the ocean during a fight. Bystøl's alcoholism became so bad that it caused him to be kicked off the national ski jumping team in 2004, though he later managed to reclaim his spot on the team.

In early 2009, he admitted to having tested positive for tetrahydrocannabinol, a derivative of cannabis. The sample was delivered in November 2008 in a Norwegian Cup race in Vikersund.