Canadian Mixed Curling Championship

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Canadian Mixed Curling Championship
Established1964
2020 host citySaguenay, Quebec
2020 arena
2020 champion Quebec
Current edition

The Canadian Mixed Curling Championship is the national curling championship for mixed curling in Canada. The winners of the tournament will represent Canada at the World Mixed Curling Championship.

In mixed curling, the positions on a team must alternate between men and women. If a man throws last rocks, which is usually the case, the women must throw lead rocks and third rocks, while the other male member of the team throws second rocks. In 2004, Shannon Kleibrink became the only woman to skip a team and win a Canadian Mixed championship.

History[]

The Canadian Mixed Curling Championship was established in 1964, with Canadian Breweries as the event's sponsor and Frank Sargent as its committee chairman.[1][2] For the first two years it was held at the Royal Canadian Curling Club in Toronto. The first championship was won by Ernie Boushy of Winnipeg with a record of 9-1.[3][4]

In 1973, Seagram Distillers became the new official sponsor, until 1983.[citation needed]

Up until 1995, the event was typically held in March, but was bumped up to January that year when Unitel became a sponsor. That was also the year that the "Season of Champions" event series was implemented, and the Page playoffs began to be used.[citation needed]

Unitel's parent company AT&T became the sponsor in 1997, a partnership that only lasted until 1998. The event was dropped as a Season of Champions event in 2004, and was no longer shown on television. The 2005 event was bumped up to November of the previous year, and the event has been held in November ever since, and is why the event is never held in the year it is billed as. In 2005, the page playoff system was dropped and replaced by a 3-team playoff.[citation needed]

Starting with the 2008 Championships (held in November 2007), the Canadian Curling Association picked two curlers from the winning team to represent Canada at the World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship. This ended with the 2012 Mixed Championship, with the creation of the Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Trials.[citation needed]

Champions[]

The past champions of the event are listed as follows:[5]

Year Winning Locale Winning Team Host
1964 Manitoba , , , Toronto, Ontario
1965 Alberta , , , Toronto, Ontario
1966 Manitoba , , , Fort William, Ontario
1967 Saskatchewan , , , Québec City, Quebec
1968 Saskatchewan , , , Saint Boniface, Manitoba
1969  Alberta , , , Kitchener, Ontario
1970  Alberta , , , Vancouver, British Columbia
1971  Saskatchewan , , , Saint John, New Brunswick
1972  British Columbia , , , Thunder Bay, Ontario
1973  Manitoba Barry Fry, , , Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island
1974  Saskatchewan Rick Folk, , Tom Wilson, Winnipeg, Manitoba
1975  Alberta , , , Kitchener, Ontario
1976  British Columbia , , , Lethbridge, Alberta
1977  Manitoba , , , Debbie Orr Halifax, Nova Scotia
1978  Saskatchewan , , , Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
1979  Northern Ontario , , , Prince George, British Columbia
1980  Manitoba , , , St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador
1981  Northern Ontario Rick Lang, , , Lorraine Edwards Winnipeg, Manitoba
1982  British Columbia , , , Timmins, Ontario
1983  Saskatchewan Rick Folk, , Tom Wilson, Saint John, New Brunswick
1984  Saskatchewan Randy Woytowich, , , Jan Betker Prince Albert, Saskatchewan
1985  British Columbia , Pat Sanders, , Louise Herlinveaux Toronto, Ontario
1986  Ontario , , Hugh Millikin, Kamloops, British Columbia
1987  Prince Edward Island Peter Gallant, , , Summerside, Prince Edward Island
1988  Manitoba Jeff Stoughton, , Rob Meakin, North Bay, Ontario
1989  Prince Edward Island Robert Campbell, , Mark O'Rourke, Kathy O'Rourke Brandon, Manitoba
1990  Alberta , , , Rimouski, Quebec
1991  Manitoba Jeff Stoughton, , , Thunder Bay, Ontario
1992  Alberta Kurt Balderston, , , Grande Prairie, Alberta
1993  Nova Scotia , Colleen Jones, , Swift Current, Saskatchewan
1994  New Brunswick Grant Odishaw, Heather Smith, Rick Perron, Leduc, Alberta
1995  Nova Scotia , Mary Mattatall, , Sarnia, Ontario
1996  Saskatchewan Randy Bryden, , , Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island
1997  Northern Ontario , , , Kindersley, Saskatchewan
1998  Nova Scotia , Mary Mattatall, , Owen Sound, Ontario
1999  Nova Scotia Paul Flemming, Colleen Jones, , Victoria, British Columbia
2000  Alberta Kevin Koe, Susan O'Connor, , Lethbridge, Alberta
2001  Quebec Jean-Michel Ménard, , Marco Berthelot, Joëlle Sabourin Weyburn, Saskatchewan
2002  Nova Scotia Mark Dacey, Heather Smith-Dacey, Rob Harris, Laine Peters Halifax, Nova Scotia
2003  Nova Scotia Paul Flemming, Kim Kelly, , Abbotsford, British Columbia
2004  Alberta Shannon Kleibrink, , , Timmins, Ontario
2005  Newfoundland and Labrador Mark Nichols, Shelley Nichols, , Prince Albert, Saskatchewan
2006  Ontario John Epping, Julie Reddick, , Whitehorse, Yukon
2007  New Brunswick Terry Odishaw, Becky Atkinson, , Jane Boyle Kitchener, Ontario
2008  Alberta Dean Ross, Susan O'Connor, , Calgary, Alberta
2009  Manitoba Sean Grassie, Allison Nimik, , Iqaluit, Nunavut
2010  Nova Scotia Mark Dacey, Heather Smith-Dacey, Andrew Gibson, Jill Mouzar Burlington, Ontario
2011  Prince Edward Island Robert Campbell, Rebecca Jean MacPhee, Robbie Doherty, Morris, Manitoba
2012  Saskatchewan , Chantelle Eberle, , Sudbury, Ontario
2013  Ontario Cory Heggestad, Heather Graham, Greg Balsdon, Mount Royal, Quebec
2014  Alberta Darren Moulding, Heather Jensen, , Ottawa, Ontario
2015  Saskatchewan , Jolene Campbell, , Teejay Haichert North Bay, Ontario
2016  Alberta Mick Lizmore, Sarah Wilkes, Brad Thiessen, Alison Kotylak[6] Toronto, Ontario
2017  Northern Ontario , , , Yarmouth, Nova Scotia
2018  Ontario Mike Anderson, Danielle Inglis, , Swan River, Manitoba
2019  Manitoba Colin Kurz, , , Winnipeg, Manitoba
2020  Quebec Jean-Sébastien Roy, , , Brenda Nicholls Saguenay, Quebec
2021 Cancelled due to COVID-19[7][8]

References[]

  1. ^ "History of the Mixed". Curling Canada. February 13, 2014. Archived from the original on February 13, 2014. Retrieved April 13, 2020.
  2. ^ "Dugie and champion rink named to Hall of Fame". Brandon Sun. Brandon, Manitoba. February 19, 1974. p. 6.Free to read
  3. ^ 14 Rinks Entered in Quebec Mixed Curling Playdowns, News and Eastern Townships Advocate, Feb 20, 1964.
  4. ^ "Curling News column", L'artisan. Nov 23, 1964.
  5. ^ "Past Champions of the Mixed". Canadian Curling Association. Archived from the original on February 13, 2014.
  6. ^ 2016 Canadian Mixed Curling Champions
  7. ^ "2020 events altered". Curling Canada. 2020-08-11. Retrieved 2021-05-08.
  8. ^ "More events cancelled". Curling Canada. 2020-09-10. Retrieved 2021-05-08.

External links[]

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