Event class: team, curling, championship, championships, tournament, canadian, finished, final, third, played
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Events with high posterior probability
Georgina Wheatcroft | In 2005, she was picked up by that year's Hearts champion Jennifer Jones to replace Cathy Gauthier, and she moved to Winnipeg, Manitoba to play with the team. |
Jacqueline Harrison | Harrison's first World Curling Tour event was in 2003. |
Charlie Jacobs | In June 2013, Jacobs placed third in the Spruce Meadows'' National'' tournament in Calgary, Alberta. |
Brennen Jones | In 2006, playing third for Mitch Heidt, Jones won his first provincial junior championship qualifying him for the 2006 Canadian Junior Curling Championships. |
Darryl Prebble | His first Grand Slam was the 2010 Swiss Chalet National where the Epping rink missed the playoffs with a 2-3 record. |
Colleen Jones | After failing to qualify for the provincial 2012 Nova Scotia Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Jones and her senior team of Delahunt, Sobey and Sally Saunders, participated in the 2012 Nova Scotia Women's Senior Championships. |
Shannon Kleibrink | It was announced at the 2011 Canada Cup of Curling, that following the event, Bronwen Webster, who is pregnant, will sit out the rest of the season and be replaced by Carolyn McRorie, who had filled in for Kleibrink earlier in the season, and Matson, who did not participate in the Canada Cup for family obligations. |
Jim Boeheim | In 2001, during his seventh year as a USA basketball coach, Boeheim helped lead the Young Men's Team to a gold medal at the World Championship in Japan. |
Dawn Moses | In 2002 Moses would represent the Territories in the Canadian Mixed Curling Championship, playing third stones for Doug Bothamly. |
Cathy Cunningham | Cunningham returned again in 1991 as a skip but finished with a 2-9 record. |
Kerry Galusha | The 2001 Scott Tournament of Hearts, was the first time Galusha would represent the Territories as a skip. |
Valerie Sweeting | At the 2010 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, she skipped her province to a 4-7 record. |
Shawn Adams | 7 years later Adams came back to the scene winning the Nova Scotia championships for the right to go to the 2000 Labatt Brier, where he finished 3-8. |
Janet Newberry | After Frank's passing in 1991, she married Ralph Howe, the national grass court 60 & over singles champion, court tennis champion, Yale intercollegiate squash champion, North American singles squash chmpion, in 1991 and now is known as Janet Newberry Howe. |
Kevin Martin (curler) | Martin wrapped up his Olympic season by winning the 2010 Players' Championships, his second Grand Slam win of the year. |
Laine Peters | After a successful curling career in Nova Scotia, she moved to Alberta in 2009, and currently plays lead for Heather Nedohin. |
Shona Barbour | Barbour made her final junior appearance in 1998, playing third for Koe, and again failed to make the playoffs, finishing round robin with a 2-10 record. |
Sandra Reynolds | Sandra Reynolds Price (born 4 March 1934) is a former tennis player from South Africa who won four Grand Slam women's doubles championships and one Grand Slam mixed doubles championship. |
Pat McCallum | In 2000 he was Quarter-Finalist in World Curling Tour Championship in Winnipeg, Manitoba at the Max Bell Arena. |
Bogdan Wenta | During 2007 World Men's Handball Championship in Germany Wenta's team was a revelation of the tournament, and won the silver medal, having lost the final to host Germany 25:29. |
Dawn Moses | In 2009 Moses, playing third stones for Galusha, made history at the 2009 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, when they beat the defending champions Team Canada Jennifer Jones. |
Craig Wilson (curler) | Wilson would n't return to an international event until 2003 when he played third for David Murdoch and won a gold medal at the European Curling Championships. |
Nancy McConnery | She would once again return to the Scott in 1995 this time playing second for Heidi Hanlon, and would finish 4-7 in round robin play. |
Georgina Wheatcroft | In 2007, the team made their way back to the national championship, now called the Scotties Tournament of Hearts after winning the B. C. Provincial Championship on January 28, 2007 with her new team. |
Jennifer Jones (curler) | Winning the 2008 Manitoba provincial championship qualified her to represent the province at the 2008 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Regina, Saskatchewan. |
Pete Fenson | Fenson then participated in the 2012 Continental Cup of Curling, where Team World won a close tournament over Team North America. |
Sarah Wazney | On the World Curling Tour, Wazney played in her first Grand Slam event playing with Loder at the 2009 Manitoba Lotteries Women's Curling Classic. |
Rhona Martin | Awaiting them there was Kelley Law's Canadian rink, who three members of Martin's team had lost to while playing for Scotland at the same stage of the 2000 World Championships. |
Jessie Kaufman | Her team were also runners up at the 2010 Red Deer Curling Classic. |
Chris Tse | He placed second at the 2011 Poetry Slam World Cup and was the former captain of the Capital Slam team that won the Canadian Festival of Spoken Word championship. |
Rachel Homan | Up until this point, Muirhead's rink had Homan's number, having also defeated her team in the semi-finals of the 2013 Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic. |
Andrea Crawford | She would meet veteran Heidi Hanlon in the final, where the team would win 8-7 and the right to represent New Brunswick at the 2006 Scott Tournament of Hearts. |
Amber Holland | Holland's new lineup finished 3rd at the 2013 Saskatchewan Scotties Tournament of Hearts and did not advance to the final 8 in any of the 4 Grand Slam events entered. |
Jason Gunnlaugson | However, he did play second for Manitoba (skipped by Carruthers) at the 2008 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship. |
Darcy Robertson | Two years later, Robertson, her sister Barb, Fetch and Faye Irwin would win the provincial women's championship and would be given the right to represent Manitoba at the 1986 Scott Tournament of Hearts. |
Brent Pierce | Pierce last represented BC at the Brier in 2009 with the Sean Geall team. |
Martin de Knijff | Outside of poker, Martin is an avid bridge player, having finished second in the 2008 Blue Ribbon Pairs, one of the two major North American pairs bridge championships. |
Warwick Smith | Smith made his international debut at the 1996 World Curling Championships as the skip for the Scotland team. |
Nancy McConnery | McConnery would n't return to the Scotties until 2009, again skipping her own team where she finished round robin with a 2-9 record. |
Ulrik Schmidt | Schmidt did n't return to international competition until the 1999 Ford World Men's Curling Championship, where he placed 6th. |
Marie-France Larouche | In her fifth consecutive, and final Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Larouche and her team would represent Quebec at the 1999 championship. |
Slimane Saoudi | Saoudi was a member of the Algeria Davis Cup team until 2009, posting a 5-11 record in singles and a 3-6 record in doubles. |
Sherman Greenfeld | Greenfeld last played for Canada at the 1999 Pan American Games in his hometown of Winnipeg, where he finished fourth. |
Gay Brewer | He went on to become a member of the 1967 Ryder Cup winning team, going 3-2 in his five matches, including a win (4 and 3 over Hugh Boyle) and a loss (2 and 1 to Peter Alliss) in singles play. |
Norbert Murphy | He competed in the 2003 IPC World Archery Championships in Madrid, Spain in the Men's Recurve Bow W2. |
David Murdoch | Murdoch and his team represented Scotland again at the 2008 World Men's Curling Championship, where he lost to Canada in the final. |
Kim Ji-sun | Kim was a member of the silver medal winning Korean team that won a silver medal at the 2007 Pacific Junior Curling Championships. |
Ty Nurse | He also won a bronze medal with Canada at the 2009 FIBA world qualifier in Argentina as well as leading Canada to the 2009 Douai World Tournament title in Northern France. |
Rebecca Jean MacDonald | MacDonald and team would finish round robin with a 3-8 record at the 2012 Scotties Tournament of Hearts. |
Pete Knight (rodeo) | Knight entered the Calgary Stampede in 1933, again winning both the North American Open Bucking Championship and the Canadian Championship Bucking event, and was presented with the Prince of Wales' Cup for perpetuity. |
Cathy Cunningham | At the 2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts, Cunningham finished 6-5 once again but did not qualify for the playoffs. |
Laura Strong | At the 2010 Newfoundland and Labrador Scotties Tournament of Hearts, the Strong sisters were both looking to capture a sixth consecutive provincial title, but this was not to be. |
Alison Goring | At the 2008 Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Goring and her team would finish with a 6-3 record, and advance to the semifinal, where she once again would lose to Sherry Middaugh. |
Sebastian Stock | In 2002 Stock and his German team captured their first European Curling Championships after three previous tries. |
Carol Whitaker | In 2002, she played second for Suzanne Gaudet on Team Prince Edward Island. |
Rasmus Stjerne | Stjerne returned the next year at the 2011 European Curling Championships and again made the playoffs, but lost in an extra end in the page 3 vs. 4 game to the Czech Republic's Jiri Snítil, relegating him to the bronze medal game. |
Chelsea Carey | In December 2011 Carey emerged victorious in the Manitoba Curling Tour (MCT) Championships in Morris, Manitoba. |
Michelle Englot | At the 2001 Scott Tournament of Hearts she was no longer a favourite, and she finished 4 -- 7. |
Lene Nielsen | She skipped Denmark at the 2013 European Curling Championships, where they finished in 4th place for the third time in her career. |
Jill Brothers | Brothers won her first provincial women's championship in 2007 and represented Nova Scotia at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Lethbridge, Alberta with team mates Meredith Harrison, Teri Lake, and Hayley Clarke. |
Breanne Meakin | The new team went on to win the 2011 Autumn Gold Grand Slam title, Meakin's first, in the fall of that year. |
Heather Nedohin | This earned her, and her Grande Prairie rink of third Carmen Whyte, second Kristie Moore and lead Terelyn Bloor the right to represent Alberta at the 1996 Canadian Junior Championship in Edmonton. |
David Murdoch | In 2009, Murdoch once again won a gold medal for Scotland at the World Mens Curling Championship, which was held in Moncton, NB. |
Jessica Schultz | Brown and her team won the 2013 United States Women's Curling Championship and went on to represent the United States at the 2013 World Women's Curling Championship, finishing in fourth after losing the bronze medal game to Canada's Rachel Homan. |
Cheryl Bernard | The Bernard team's success during this period qualified them for the 2009 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials. |
Mark Johnson (curler) | This qualified Johnson to represent Canada at the 2011 World Senior Curling Championships. |
Robert Allenby | After posting a 2 -- 2 -- 1 record in the 2009 Presidents Cup, Allenby accused Anthony Kim of being ill-prepared for his Sunday singles match, in which Allenby lost 5 and 3. |
Fran?ois Viens | He's won four Canadian Championships in doubles, three with Vincent Gagnon, with whom he also won the 2007 Pan American Championships and one with Corey Osborne. |
Kelley Law | Law would take a few years off from curling, and her team split up, with Wheatcroft going on to skip her own team to the 2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts. |
Rachel Homan | Prior to graduating from juniors in 2010, Homan's junior team was too young to participate in Scotties Tournament of Hearts playdowns, but this did not stop her from participating in Women's World Curling Tour events. |
Paul Pustovar | In 2012, Pustovar and a new team played in the Green Bay Qualifier, but placed fourth and missed the cutoff. |
Vladimir Nazlymov | His U. S. Junior Team finished in second place in the overall medal count at the Junior Worlds in 2001. |
Tiffany Steuber | Steuber's first World Curling Tour event came in 2008 at the Red Deer Curling Classic. |
Mar?a Carmen Rubio | She competed at the Italian hosted 2011 World Championships where she had a fourth and fifth place finish. |
Craig Boyce | The Pairs Championship was merged with the World Team Cup from 1994 with Boyce once again reaching the final, finishing in 4th with Adams. |
Kevin Martin (curler) | The Martin rink finished the 2007 -- 08 season with two more Grand Slam titles. |
Kevin Martin (curler) | After the Olympic Trials, Martin's rink failed to qualify for the playoffs at the 2010 Swiss Chalet National. |
Markku Uusipaavalniemi | Also in 2005, Uusipaavalniemi won the first ever European Mixed Curling Championships with team mates Kirsi Nykänen, Teemu Salo and Tiina Kautonen in Andorra. |
Amber Holland | At the 2012 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Holland and her team would have a difficult time, finishing round robin with a 6-5 record. |
Mark Dacey | Dacey is a former Canadian men's curling champion skip, having won the 2004 Nokia Brier. |
Craig Wilson (curler) | In 1993, Wilson won the World Junior Curling Championships for his Scotland team over Michel Ferland of Canada. |
Ludwig von Salm-Hoogstraeten | In 1931 he earned a second place at the veterans' singles of the French Championships granting a flawless two straight sets victory to Briton Leighton Crawford. |
Brady Clark (curler) | He won the 2013 United States Men's Curling Championship. |
David Murdoch | The team's fine run of form ensured all four members a place in the Great Britain men's squad for the 2006 Winter Olympics, with Murdoch in the position of skip. |
Suzanne Birt | The next year she failed expectations, and her team finished 2-9 at the 2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts. |
Ted Tinling | In 1983, Billie-Jean King wore a Tinling dress in a final for the last time, when she reached the Wimbledon Mixed Doubles final. |
Fran?ois Viens | His first appearance was at the 2003 Pan American Games, when he earned a bronze medal in doubles with Corey Osborne. |
Kevin Park | He also played for Canada at the 1992 Winter Olympics where curling was a demonstration sport - the team finished fourth. |
Andrew Gibson | At the 2010 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship, Gibson played second for Dacey and won the event. |
Kevin Martin (curler) | At the 1991 Brier, Martin finished the round robin with an 8 -- 3 win-loss record, tying Saskatchewan for first place. |
Kevin Martin (curler) | Due to the boycott, Martin's rink would not win another provincial title until 2006. |
Teemu Salo | In 2009, he played for Kalle Kiiskinen at the World Curling Championships. |
Garry Galley | He won silver (losing to the Czech Republic 4-2) in the World Men's Championship (IIHF) in 1996 under head coach Tom Renney. |
Peter Wilson (curler) | In 1981, Wilson skipped his native Scotland to a gold medal at the World Junior Curling Championships over Denis Marchand of Canada. |
Rebecca Jean MacDonald | MacDonald and Campbell would advance to the 2011 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship where they would finish with a 4-3 record, failing to qualify for the playoffs. |
Valerie Sweeting | Sweeting surprised many by skipping the winning team at the 2010 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts. |
Chantelle Eberle | Eberle and Dean Hicke, the second on that team traveled to Erzurum, Turkey to play at the 2012 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship to represent Canada. |
Ed Werenich | During the 1987 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials, Werenich was'' humiliated'' by the Canadian Curling Association threatening to disqualify him if he did n't'' shed a few pounds.'' |
Bill Stopera | That year Stopera and the team competed in the 2011 United States Men's Curling Championship, finishing fourth after a playoff loss to Todd Birr. |
Melissa Thomson | During 2007, the Comets played a difficult championship and although they finished in fourth place, Melissa's experience supported the team's younger players. |