Philipp Raimund of Germany claimed gold in his Winter Olympics debut with a final ski jump of 106.5 meters, shaking off pressure and the fear of heights.
Germany's Philipp Raimund won the gold medal in the men's normal hill ski jumping event as he soared ahead of Poland's Kacper Tomasiak at the Milano Cortina Olympics on Tuesday, Philippine time.
The Pole had to settle for silver, while Japan's Ren Nikaido and Switzerland's Gregor Deschwanden shared bronze.
Favourite Domen Prevc of Slovenia only managed sixth place.
Raimund claimed the title with a final jump of 106.5 metres as he reached 274.1 points, 3.4 points ahead of Tomasiak, while Nikaido and Deschwanden finished 8.1 points back.
The 25-year-old Raimund fired an early warning on a dark but clear night in the Italian Alps, soaring 102 metres in the first round to earn the final jump of the competition and then handled the pressure to fly to his first Olympic gold.
The ski jumper had previously admitted to a fear of heights, even withdrawing from a ski flying event in March, but this performance proved he could deliver under pressure when it mattered most.
"I know there's a lot of pressure from the media and outside but my coach, the whole staff, my girlfriend ... they were taking all that off my shoulders so I could just concentrate on myself. I want to say thank you to everybody," he said.
"I'm extremely proud of myself that I could do two amazing jumps and stand on top at the end."
The 19-year-old Tomasiak was delighted with second place.
"It is a dream coming true. I wasn't really expecting that at my first Olympics. I'm a little surprised, but very happy. I jumped really good," he said.
Gold medal favourite Prevc endured a shaky start, finishing eighth in the opening round after a 100-metre jump, with the World Cup leader looking disappointed as he realised he had landed too short to mount an early challenge for gold.
His 105-metre second-round jump bumped him briefly into first place but he ended up out of the medal positions.
"Already the small (normal) hill is difficult for me and there was a bit of back wind but, honestly, after yesterday's training I did not expect too much," he told Reuters.
Prevc added that he had approached the competition with the mindset that he would be satisfied with a top 10 finish.
"It's on one hand success for me, but on the other hand I of course came here to win medals and, yeah, it's a little bit (of a) salty feeling."
(Reporting by Tommy Lund and Liz Hampton in Predazzo; Editing by Ken Ferris)