Hub International Crown of Curling

The Hub International Crown of Curling (formerly the Kamloops Crown of Curling, Valley First Crown of Curling, Strauss Crown of Curling, Labatt's Crown of Curling, Labatt Crown of Curling, Thompson Crown of Curling, Thompson Hotel Crown of Curling, and Barton Insurance Crown of Curling) is an annual bonspiel, or curling tournament, held in October at the Kamloops Curling Club in Kamloops. The purse for the event is CAD$30,000 each for the men's and women's events.

Past champions

Men

Year Winning skip Runner-up skip Purse (CAD)
1994 Ontario Al Hackner British Columbia Sandy MacDonald $36,000
1996 Sweden Peja Lindholm
1997 British Columbia Bert Gretzinger
1998 Alberta Randy Ferbey British Columbia Greg McAulay
1999 British Columbia Greg McAulay British Columbia Brent Giles
2000 Alberta Dennis Graber British Columbia Barry McPhee
2001 Alberta Adrian Bakker British Columbia Bert Gretzinger $57,700
2002 British Columbia Mike Wood British Columbia Bert Gretzinger $35,800
2003 British Columbia Bert Gretzinger British Columbia Rick Folk $40,700
2004 British Columbia Bob Ursel British Columbia Brian Windsor $40,700
2005 British Columbia Bert Gretzinger United States Pete Fenson $48,000
2006 Manitoba Kerry Burtnyk British Columbia Bob Ursel $50,000
2007 British Columbia Bryan Miki British Columbia Greg McAulay $50,000
2008 British Columbia Rick Folk Alberta Kevin Koe $50,000
2009 Alberta Ted Appelman Alberta Chris Schille $34,000
2010 British Columbia Bob Ursel Alberta Steve Petryk $34,000
2011 British Columbia Andrew Bilesky British Columbia Grant Olsen $34,000
2012 British Columbia Brent Pierce Alberta Jamie King $34,000
2013 British Columbia Grant Dezura British Columbia Dean Joanisse $32,000
2014[1] British Columbia Brent Pierce British Columbia Sean Geall $30,000
2015 British Columbia Sean Geall British Columbia Dean Joanisse $26,000

Women

Year Winning skip Runner-up skip Purse (CAD)
1996 British Columbia Pat Sanders
1997 British Columbia Sue Garvey
1998 Alberta Sheila Heath
1999 British Columbia Allison MacInnes
2000 Alberta Shannon Kleibrink
2001 British Columbia Shelley MacDonald
2002 British Columbia Kelly Scott
2003 British Columbia Kelly Scott
2004 Japan Moe Meguro British Columbia Colleen Hannah
2005 British Columbia Toni Wells Japan Ayumi Onodera $24,000
2006 British Columbia Pat Sanders China Wang Bingyu $34,000
2007 British Columbia Kelly Scott British Columbia Marla Mallett $34,000
2008 South Korea Kim Mi-Yeon British Columbia Marla Mallett $34,000
2009 British Columbia Colleen Hannah Alberta Faye White $34,000
2010 British Columbia Allison MacInnes British Columbia Marla Mallett $34,000
2011 Switzerland Michèle Jäggi Russia Olga Zyablikova $34,000
2012 China Wang Bingyu Denmark Lene Nielsen $34,000
2013 Minnesota Allison Pottinger Japan Ayumi Ogasawara $34,000
2014[2] Japan Ayumi Ogasawara Alberta Crystal Webster $30,000
2015 South Korea Gim Un-chi Japan Satsuki Fujisawa $26,000

External links

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, October 27, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.