Gara a squadre maschile
1924-1984: non disputata
Calgary 1988
1. Finlandia 634.4
(Matti Nykänen, Ari-Pekka Nikkola, Jari Puikkonen, Tuomo Ylipulli)
2. Jugoslavia 625.5
(Matjaž Zupan, Matjaž Debelak, Primož Ulaga, Miran Tepeš)
3. Norvegia 596.1
(Erik Johnsen, Ole Gunnar Fidjestøl, Ole Christian Eidhammer, Jon Inge Kjørum)
4. Cecoslovacchia 586.8
(Pavel Ploc, Jiří Malec, Jiří Parma, Ladislav Dluhoš)
5. Austria 577.6
(Günther Stranner, Heinz Kuttin, Ernst Vettori, Andreas Felder)
6. Repubblica Federale Tedesca 559.0
(Thomas Klauser, Josef Heumann, Andi Bauer, Peter Rohwein)
7. Svezia 539.7
(Jan Boklöv, Staffan Tällberg, Anders Daun, Per-Inge Tällberg)
8. Svizzera 516.1
(Gérard Balanche, Christian Hauswirth, Fabrice Piazzini, Christoph Lehmann)
Albertville 1992
1. Finlandia 644.4
(Ari-Pekka Nikkola, Mika Laitinen, Risto Laakkonen, Toni Nieminen)
2. Austria 642.9
(Heinz Kuttin, Ernst Vettori, Martin Hoellwarth, Andreas Felder)
3. Cecoslovacchia 620.1
(Tomáš Goder, František Jež, Jaroslav Sakala, Jiří Parma)
4. Giappone 571.0
(Jiro Kamiharako, Masahiko Harada, Noriaki Kasai, Kenji Suda)
5. Germania 544.6
(Heiko Hunger, Dieter Thoma, Christof Duffner, Jens Weissflog)
6. Slovenia 543.3
(Primož Kopač, Matjaž Zupan, Franci Petek, Samo Gostiša)
7. Norvegia 538.0
(Rune Olijnyk, Magne Johansen, Lasse Ottesen, Espen Bredesen)
8. Svizzera 537.9
(Markus Gähler, Martin Trunz, Sylvain Freiholz, Stefan Zünd)
13. Italia 472.2
(Ivo Pertile, Roberto Cecon, Ivan Lunardi)
Lillehammer 1994
1. Germania 970.1
(Hansjörg Jäkle, Christof Duffner, Dieter Thoma, Jens Weissflog)
2. Giappone 956.9
(Jinya Nishikata, Takanobu Okabe, Noriaki Kasai, Masahiko Harada)
3. Austria 918.9
(Heinz Kuttin, Christian Moser, Stefan Horngacher, Andreas Goldberger)
4. Norvegia 898.8
(Øyvind Berg, Lasse Ottesen, Roar Ljøkelsøy, Espen Bredesen)
5. Finlandia 889.5
(Raimo Ylipulli, Janne Väätäinen, Janne Ahonen, Jani Soininen)
6. Francia 822.1
(Steve Delaup, Nicolas Jean-Prost, Nicolas Dessum, Didier Mollard)
7. Repubblica Ceca 800.7
(Ladislav Dluhoš, Zbyněk Krompolc, Jiří Parma, Jaroslav Sakala)
8. Italia 782.3
(Ivo Pertile, Andrea Cecon, Roberto Cecon, Ivan Lunardi)
Nagano 1998
1. Giappone 933.0
(Takanobu Okabe, Hiroya Saito, Masahiko Harada, Kazuyoshi Funaki)
2. Germania 897.4
Sven Hannawald, Martin Schmitt, Hansjörg Jäkle, Dieter Thoma)
3. Austria 881.5
(Reinhard Schwarzenberger, Martin Höllwarth, Stefan Horngacher, Andreas Widhoelzl)
4. Norvegia 870.6
(Henning Stensrud, Lasse Ottesen, Roar Lioekelsoey, Kristian Brenden)
5. Finlandia 833.9
(Ari-Pekka Nikkola, Mika Laitinen, Janne Ahonen, Jani Soininen)
6. Svizzera 735.0
(Sylvain Freiholz, Marco Steinauer, Simon Ammann, Bruno Reuteler)
7. Repubblica Ceca 710.3
(Jakub Sucháček, František Jež, Michal Doležal, Jaroslav Sakala)
8. Polonia 684.2
(Adam Malysz, Lukasz Kruczek, Wojciech Skupień, Robert Mateja)
Salt Lake City 2002
1. Germania 974.1
(Sven Hannawald, Stephan Hocke, Michael Uhrmann, Martin Schmitt)
2. Finlandia 974.0
(Matti Hautamäki, Veli-Matti Lindström, Risto Jussilainen, Janne Ahonen)
3. Slovenia 946.3
(Damjan Fras, Primož Peterka, Robert Kranjec, Peter Žonta)
4. Austria 926.8
(Stefan Horngacher, Andreas Widhoelzl, Wolfgang Loitzl, Martin Höllwarth)
5. Giappone 926.0
(Masahiko Harada, Hiroki Yamada, Hideharu Miyahira, Kazuyoshi Funaki)
6. Polonia 848.1
(Robert Mateja, Tomislaw Tajner, Tomasz Pochwala, Adam Malysz)
7. Svizzera 818.3
(Marco Steinauer, Sylvain Freiholz, Andreas Küttel, Simon Ammann)
8. Corea del Sud 801.6
(Choi Heung-Chul, Choi Seo, Hyunki Kim, Gang Chil-Gu)
Torino 2006
1. Austria 984.0
(Andreas Widhoelzl, Andreas Kofler, Martin Koch, Thomas Morgenstern)
2. Finlandia 976.6
(Tami Kiuru, Janne Happonen, Janne Ahonen, Matti Hautamäki)
3. Norvegia 950.1
(Lars Bystøl, Bjørn Einar Romøren, Tommy Ingebrigtsen, Roar Ljøkelsøy)
4. Germania 922.6
(Michael Neumayer, Martin Schmitt, Michael Uhrmann, Georg Späth)
5. Polonia 894.4
(Stefan Hula, Kamil Stoch, Robert Mateja, Adam Malysz)
6. Giappone 893.1
(Daiki Ito, Tsuyoshi Ichinohe, Noriaki Kasai, Takanobu Okabe)
7. Svizzera 886.9
(Michael Möllinger, Simon Ammann, Guido Landert, Andreas Küttel)
8. Russia 856.8
(Denis Kornilov, Dmitry Ipatov, Dmitry Vasilyev, Ildar Fatkullin)
11. Italia 328.4
(Andrea Morassi, Sebastian Colloredo, Alessio Bolognani, Davide Bresadola)
Vancouver 2010
1. Austria 1107.9
(Wolfgang Loitzl, Andreas Kofler, Thomas Morgenstern, Gregor Schlierenzauer)
2. Germania 1035.8
(Michael Neumayer, Andreas Wank, Martin Schmitt, Michael Uhrmann)
3. Norvegia 1030.3
(Anders Bardal, Tom Hilde, Johan Remen Evensen, Anders Jacobsen)
4. Finlandia 1014.6
(Matti Hautamäki, Janne Happonen, Kalle Keituri, Harri Olli)
5. Giappone 1007.7
(Daiki Ito, Taku Takeuchi, Shohei Tochimoto, Noriaki Kasai)
6. Polonia 996.7
(Stefan Hula, Lukasz Rutkowski, Kamil Stoch, Adam Malysz)
7. Repubblica Ceca 981.8
(Antonín Hájek, Roman Koudelka, Lukáš Hlava, Jakub Janda)
8. Slovenia 958.8
(Primož Pikl, Mitja Mežnar, Peter Prevc, Robert Kranjec)
Sochi 2014
1. Germania 1041.1
(Andreas Wank, Marinus Kraus, Andreas Wellinger, Severin Freund)
2. Austria 1038.4
(Michael Hayboeck, Thomas Morgenstern, Thomas Diethart, Gregor Schlierenzauer)
3. Giappone 1024.9
(Reruhi Shimizu, Taku Takeuchi, Daiki Ito, Noriaki Kasai)
4. Polonia 1011.8
(Maciej Kot, Piotr Zyla, Jan Ziobro, Kamil Stoch)
5. Slovenia 995.6
(Jurij Tepeš, Robert Kranjec, Jernej Damjan, Peter Prevc)
6. Norvegia 990.7
(Anders Bardal, Anders Fannemel, Anders Jacobsen, Rune Velta)
7. Repubblica Ceca 967.8
(Jakub Janda, Antonín Hájek, Roman Koudelka, Jan Matura)
8. Finlandia 942.8
(Anssi Koivuranta, Jarkko Mæættæ, Olli Muotka, Janne Ahonen)
Pyeongchang 2018
1. Norvegia 1098.5
(Daniel Andre Tande, Andreas Stjernen, Johann Andre Forfang, Robert Johansson)
2. Germania 1075.7
(Karl Geiger, Stephan Leyhe, Richard Freitag, Andreas Wellinger)
3. Polonia 1072.4
(Maciej Kot, Stefan Hula, Dawid Kubacki, Kamil Stoch)
4. Austria 978.4
(Stefan Kraft, Manuel Fettner, Gregor Schlierenzauer, Michael Hayboeck)
5. Slovenia 967.8
(Jernej Damjan, Anze Semenic, Tilen Bartol, Peter Prevc)
6. Giappone 940.5
(Taku Takeuchi, Daiki Ito, Noriaki Kasai, Ryoyu Kobayashi)
7. Olympic Athlete from Russia 809.8
(Alexey Romashov, Denis Kornilov, Mikhail Nazarov, Evgeniy Klimov)
8. Finlandia 790.4
(Janne Ahonen, Andreas Alamommo, Jarkko Maeaettae, Antti Aalto)
11. Italia
(Federico Cecon, Davide Bresadola, Sebastian Colloredo, Alex Insam)
Pechino 2022
1. Austria 942,7
(Stefan Kraft, Jan Hoerl, Daniel Huber, Manuel Fettner)
2. Slovenia 934,4
(Cene Prevc, Timi Zajc, Lovro Kos, Peter Prevc)
3. Germania 922,9
(Constantin Schmid, Karl Geiger, Stephan Leyhe, Markus Eisenbichler)
4. Norvegia 922,1
(Halvor Egner Granerud, Daniel-Andre Tande, Marius Lindvik, Robert Johansson)
5. Giappone 882,8
(Naoki Nakamura, Ryoyu Kobayashi, Yukiya Sato, Junshiro Kobayashi)
6. Polonia 880,1
(Pawel Wasek, David Kubacki, Kamil Stoch, Piotr Zyla)
7. ROC 806,5
(Evgeniy Klimov, Mikhail Nazarov, Danil Sadreev, Roman-Sergeevich Trofimov)
8. Svizzera 791,5
(Gregor Deschwanden, Simon Ammann, Dominik Peter, Killian Peier)