Mia Höhne
Mia Höhne | ||||||||||||||
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Born | September 29, 2000 Ludwigshafen am Rhein[1] | |||||||||||||
Team | ||||||||||||||
Curling club | CC Füssen, Füssen | |||||||||||||
Skip | Daniela Jentsch | |||||||||||||
Third | Emira Abbes | |||||||||||||
Second | Klara-Hermine Fomm | |||||||||||||
Lead | Analena Jentsch | |||||||||||||
Alternate | Mia Höhne | |||||||||||||
Career | ||||||||||||||
Member Association | Germany | |||||||||||||
World Championship appearances | 2 (2019, 2021) | |||||||||||||
European Championship appearances | 2 (2019, 2021) | |||||||||||||
Other appearances | World Junior-B Championships: 4 (2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 (Jan)) | |||||||||||||
Medal record
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Mia Höhne[2] (born September 29, 2000) is a German curler from Füssen.[1][3] She is currently the alternate on the German National Women's Curling Team skipped by Daniela Jentsch.
Career[]
Höhne skipped the German national junior women's curling team from 2016–2020. She never qualified for the World Junior Curling Championships through the World Junior B Curling Championships. She joined the women's rink of Daniela Jentsch as their alternate in 2019 and they went 5–7 at the 2019 World Women's Curling Championship.
Höhne was promoted to third on Team Jentsch when they represented Germany at the 2021 World Women's Curling Championship, which was played in a bio-secure bubble in Calgary, Canada due the ongoing pandemic. The team had to play with just three players as second Klara-Hermine Fomm and alternate Emira Abbes tested positive for COVID-19 upon their arrival, and had to be quarantined.[4] At the Worlds, the threesome of Daniela Jentsch, Höhne and Analena Jentsch finished in ninth place with a 6–7 record.[5]
Personal life[]
As of 2020, she is employed as a sports soldier.[1]
Teams[]
Season | Skip | Third | Second | Lead | Alternate | Coach | Events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2015–16 | Maike Beer | Emira Abbes | Mia Höhne | Klara-Hermine Fomm | WJBCC 2016 (11th) | ||
2016–17 | Maike Beer | Mia Höhne | Lena Kapp | Holger Höhne | WJBCC 2017 (5th) | ||
2017–18 | Mia Höhne | Lena Kapp | Laura Mayrhans | Holger Höhne | WJBCC 2018 (5th) | ||
2018–19 | Mia Höhne | Lena Kapp | Laura Mayrhans | Leonie Schöberl | Fiona Wunderlich | Holger Höhne | WJBCC 2019 (Jan) (5th) |
Daniela Jentsch | Emira Abbes | Klara-Hermine Fomm | Analena Jentsch | Mia Höhne | Uli Kapp, | WWCC 2019 (9th) | |
2019–20 | Daniela Jentsch | Emira Abbes | Klara-Hermine Fomm | Analena Jentsch | Mia Höhne | Keith Wendorf (ECC) | ECC 2019 (5th) |
Mia Höhne | Lena Kapp | ||||||
2020–21 | Daniela Jentsch | Mia Höhne | Klara-Hermine Fomm | Analena Jentsch | Emira Abbes | Uli Kapp | WWCC 2021 (9th) |
2021–22 | Daniela Jentsch | Emira Abbes | Klara-Hermine Fomm | Analena Jentsch | Mia Höhne | Holger Höhne | ECC 2021 |
References[]
- ^ a b c "2020 World Women's Curling Championship Media Guide" (PDF). Curling Canada. Retrieved 2020-03-09.
- ^ Other writing: Mia Hoehne.
- ^ Mia Höhne on the World Curling Federation database
- ^ George Karrys (April 30, 2021). "Let's Send Love to The Germans". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved May 1, 2021.
- ^ Jackie Spiegel (May 9, 2021). "World Women's Curling Championship 2021: Results, standings, schedule and TV channel". Sporting News. Retrieved May 9, 2021.
External links[]
- Mia Höhne at World Curling Federation
- "Die Spielgemeinschaft Füssen-Schwenningen mit Skip Mia Höhne wird Deutscher Meister 2017 bei den Curlingjuniorinnen - Füssen - Kreisbote" (in German). March 17, 2017. Retrieved January 25, 2020.
- "Erfolgreicher Curling-Nachwuchs - Füssen - Kreisbote" (in German). January 20, 2018. Retrieved January 25, 2020.
- Living people
- 2000 births
- German female curlers
- People from Ludwigshafen
- People from Füssen
- Sportspeople from Bavaria
- Sportspeople from Rhineland-Palatinate
- German curling biography stubs