Tate Frantz

Tate Frantz
Personal information
Born (2005-03-28) March 28, 2005
Sport
Country United States
SportSki jumping
ClubNew York Ski Ed Foundation
World Cup career
Seasons2023–present
Indiv. starts59
Team starts12
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s)231.5 m (760 ft)
Planica, 30 March 2025
Medal record
Men's ski jumping
Representing  United States
Junior World Championship
Silver medal – second place 2025 Lake Placid Individual NH
Silver medal – second place 2025 Lake Placid Mixed team NH
Bronze medal – third place 2025 Lake Placid Team NH
Updated on 16 February 2026

Tate Frantz (born March 28, 2005) is an American ski jumper.[1]

Career

On February 11, 2023, he made his World Cup home debut at Lake Placid, but got stuck in the qualification round.

He reached his first World Cup points in Ruka at the 2023/24 season opening with 30th place individual. He improved that result later in the season at Vikersund (Vikersundbakken) with 16th place, a career best.[2]

Together with Erik Belshaw, he took 7th place at the Super Team World Cup event in Wisła.[3]

In the Men's normal hill individual event at the 2026 Winter Olympics, Frantz finished 21st.

Major tournament results

Winter Olympics

Year Place Individual Team
Normal Large Super Mixed
2026 Italy Milano Cortina 21 19 8 7

FIS Nordic World Ski Championships

Year Place Individual Team
Normal Large Men Mixed
2025 Norway Trondheim 16 14 8 6

FIS Ski Flying World Championships

Year Place Individual Team
2024 Austria Tauplitz 20 9
2026 Germany Oberstdorf q 9

FIS Nordic Junior World Ski Championships

Year Place Individual Team NH
NH Men Mixed
2021 Canada Whistler 36 10 10
2023 Slovenia Planica DSQ 6 5
2025 United States Lake Placid 2nd place, silver medalist(s) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 2nd place, silver medalist(s)

World Cup

Standings

 Season  Overall 4H SF RA P7
2022–23
2023–24 42 42 34 35 43
2024–25 22 14 20 19 31
2025–26 57 66 N/A

Individual starts

winner (1); second (2); third (3); did not compete (–); failed to qualify (q); disqualified (DQ)
Season 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Points
2022–23 Wisła Wisła Kuusamo Kuusamo Titisee-Neustadt Titisee-Neustadt Engelberg Engelberg Oberstdorf Garmisch-Partenkirchen Innsbruck Bischofshofen Zakopane Sapporo Sapporo Sapporo Tauplitz Tauplitz Willingen Willingen Lake Placid Lake Placid Râșnov Oslo Oslo Lillehammer Lillehammer Vikersund Vikersund Lahti Planica Planica 0
q q
2023–24 Kuusamo Kuusamo Lillehammer Lillehammer Klingenthal Klingenthal Engelberg Engelberg Oberstdorf Garmisch-Partenkirchen Innsbruck Bischofshofen Wisła Zakopane Willingen Willingen Lake Placid Lake Placid Sapporo Sapporo Oberstdorf Oberstdorf Lahti Lahti Oslo Oslo Trondheim Trondheim Vikersund Vikersund Planica Planica 71
q 30 q q 43 41 39 50 49 50 44 45 18 37 q 23 34 q 17 18 24 31 44 34 16 DQ
2024–25 Lillehammer Lillehammer Kuusamo Kuusamo Wisła Wisła Titisee-Neustadt Titisee-Neustadt Engelberg Engelberg Oberstdorf Garmisch-Partenkirchen Innsbruck Bischofshofen Zakopane Oberstdorf Oberstdorf Willingen Willingen Lake Placid Lake Placid Sapporo Sapporo Oslo Vikersund Vikersund Lahti Planica Planica 266
10 10 21 32 q 33 27 26 42 34 19 15 23 13 25 13 14 16 10 19 16 25 24 27 q q 21
2025–26 Lillehammer Lillehammer Falun Falun Ruka Wisła Wisła Klingenthal Klingenthal Engelberg Engelberg Oberstdorf Garmisch-Partenkirchen Innsbruck Bischofshofen Zakopane Sapporo Sapporo Willingen Willingen Bad Mitterndorf Bad Mitterndorf Lahti Oslo Oslo Vikersund Vikersund Planica Planica 9
34 37 28 q 38 37 34 30 30 37 q q 44 q q 34 43 42 27

References

  1. ^ "...Dreams Triumph over Adversity". orda.org. January 30, 2023.
  2. ^ "Skoki narciarskie. Puchar Świata w lotach narciarskich 2023/2024. Vikersund. 17.03.2024". skokinarciarskie.pl. March 17, 2024. Retrieved June 5, 2024.
  3. ^ "Slovenia wins Super-Team event in Wisla". International Ski Federation. January 13, 2024.