1988 World Junior Curling Championships Host city Men: Füssen , West Germany Women: Chamonix , France Dates Men: March 13–19Women: March 19–25Men's winner Canada (6th title) Skip James "Jim" Sullivan Third Charles Sullivan Second Lead Finalist Sweden (Peter Lindholm )Women's winner Canada (1st title) Skip Julie Sutton Third Second Lead Marla Geiger Finalist Switzerland ()
The 1988 World Junior Curling Championships were held from March 13 to 19 in Füssen , West Germany for the men's competition and from March 19[1] to 25 in Chamonix , France for the women's competition. While it was the 14th junior men's competition, this was the inaugural year for the junior women's competition.[2] [3] It has also been the only year that the men's and women's competitions were held separately.
The men's event (sponsored by Uniroyal ) was won by Canada, skipped by Jim Sullivan and his rink from Fredericton, New Brunswick .[4]
The women's event was won also won by Canada, skipped by University of Victoria student Julie Sutton 's Kelowna, British Columbia rink.[5]
Men [ ]
Teams [ ]
Country
Skip
Third
Second
Lead
Alternate
Canada
Jim Sullivan
Charles Sullivan
Denmark
Torben Nielsen
Julich Wiberg
Brian Enggaard
Christian Petri
France
Thierry Mercier
Lionel Tournier
Christian Cossetto
René-Georges Wohlfei
Jan Henri Ducroz
West Germany
Bernhard Mayr
Mark Sarty
Ralph Schwarzwalder
Andreas Feldenkirchen
Italy
Stefano Ferronato
Gianluca Lorenzi
Elio Maran
Marco Alberti
Norway
Thomas Ulsrud
Thomas Due
Scotland
Alistair Scott
Peter Loudon
Derek Brown
Douglas Taylor
Sweden
Peter Lindholm
Magnus Swartling
Switzerland
Christof Schwaller
Christoph Kaiser
Beat Wyler
Peter Hostettler
United States
Will Marquardt
Jim Falk
Jeff Falk
Kurt Marquardt
Round Robin Standings [ ]
Country
Wins
Losses
Canada
8
1
Switzerland
8
1
Sweden
6
3
Norway
5
4
Denmark
4
5
Scotland
4
5
United States
4
5
West Germany
3
6
France
3
6
Italy
0
9
Playoffs [ ]
Semifinals
Gold Medal Game
1
Canada
6
4
Norway
4
1
Canada
4
2
Sweden
2
2
Switzerland
5
3
Sweden
7
Bronze Medal Game
4
Norway
5
2
Switzerland
2
Gold medal final [ ]
[6]
Team
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Final
Canada (Sullivan)
2
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
X
4
Sweden (Lindholm)
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
X
2
Player percentages
Sweden
Canada
81%
76%
83%
91%
Magnus Swartling
81%
Charlie Sullivan
88%
Peter Lindholm
68%
Jim Sullivan
90%
Total
Total
[7]
Bronze medal final [ ]
Team
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Final
Norway (Ulsrud)
1
0
2
1
0
0
1
0
0
X
5
Switzerland (Schwaller)
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
X
2
All Stars [ ]
Skip: Jim Sullivan
Third: Charlie Sullivan
Second:
Lead: Peter Hostettler
Additionally, Derek Brown of Scotland won the sportsmanship award.[8]
Women [ ]
Teams [ ]
Country
Skip
Third
Second
Lead
Canada
Julie Sutton
Marla Geiger
Denmark
Lene Bidstrup
Avijaja Petri
France
Karine Caux
Géraldine Girod (skip)
Chrystelle Fournier
Véronique Girod
West Germany
Simone Vogel
Kerstin Jüders
Angelika Schaffer
Sabine Belkofer
Norway
Nina Grimmer
Bettina Graham
Scotland
Carolyn Hutchinson
Rhona Howie
Joan Robertson
Tara Brown
Sweden
Elisabeth Hansson
Annika Lööf (skip)
Catharina Eklund
Malin Lundberg
Switzerland
Franziska von Känel
United States
Tracy Zeman
Erika Brown
Marni Vaningan
Shellie Holerud
Round Robin Standings [ ]
Country
Wins
Losses
Canada
7
1
Switzerland
6
2
Denmark
5
3
Scotland
4
4
Norway
4
4
Sweden
3
5
France
3
5
United States
2
6
West Germany
2
6
Tiebreaker [ ]
For 4th place
Scotland
10
Norway
1
Playoffs [ ]
Semifinals
Gold Medal Game
1
Canada
7
4
Scotland
3
1
Canada
6
2
Switzerland
4
2
Switzerland
6
3
Denmark
5
Bronze Medal Game
4
Scotland
2
3
Denmark
5
Gold medal final [ ]
[9]
Team
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Final
Switzerland (Amstutz)
0
0
2
0
0
0
1
0
1
X
4
Canada (Sutton)
1
0
0
1
1
2
0
1
0
X
6
[10]
Bronze medal final [ ]
Team
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Final
Denmark (Bidstrup)
0
1
0
1
1
0
1
0
1
X
5
Scotland (Hutchinson)
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
X
2
References [ ]
^ Victoria Times Colonist , 20 Mar 1988, pg M11, "B.C. quartet overcomes early jitters"
^ "History of Curling" . Grand Forks Curling Club . Archived from the original on January 2, 2020. Retrieved Jan 1, 2020 .
^ Mott, Morris Kenneth; Allardyce, John (1989). Curling Capital: Winnipeg and the Roarin' Game, 1876 to 1988 . University of Manitoba Press. p. 89. ISBN 0887553176 .
^ Victoria Times Colonist , 20 Mar 1988, pg M11, "N.B. juniors bring back world crown to Canada"
^ Montreal Gazette , 26 Mar 1988, pg H4, "B.C.'s Sutton captures junior women's curling"
^ Ottawa Citizen , 21 Mar 1988, pg B4
^ 1988-89 Curling Fact Book. Page 45. Canadian Curling Association /Canadian Ladies Curling Association.
^ 1988-89 Curling Fact Book. Page 46. Canadian Curling Association /Canadian Ladies Curling Association.
^ Calgary Herald , 26 Mar 1988, pg E2
^ 1988-89 Curling Fact Book. Page 47. Canadian Curling Association /Canadian Ladies Curling Association.
External links [ ]