2012–13 curling season

2012–13 curling season
SportCurling

The 2012–13 curling season began at the end of August 2012 and ended in April 2013.

Note: In events with two genders, the men's tournament winners is listed before the women's tournament winners.

CCA-sanctioned events

This section lists events sanctioned by and/or conducted by the Canadian Curling Association (CCA). The following events in bold have been confirmed by the CCA as are part of the 2012–13 Season of Champions programme.[1]

Event Winning team Runner-up team
Canadian Mixed Curling Championship
Montreal, Quebec, Nov. 15–24
Ontario Nova Scotia
The Dominion Curling Club Championship
Toronto, Ontario, Nov. 19–24
Alberta Manitoba
Ontario Quebec
Canada Cup of Curling
Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, Nov. 28 – Dec. 2
Jeff Stoughton Glenn Howard
Stefanie Lawton Kaitlyn Lawes
Continental Cup of Curling
Penticton, British Columbia, Jan. 10–13
North America World
Canadian Junior Curling Championships
Fort McMurray, Alberta, Jan. 31 – Feb. 10
Manitoba Alberta
British Columbia Manitoba
Tournament of Hearts
Kingston, Ontario, Feb. 16–24
Ontario Manitoba
Tim Hortons Brier
Edmonton, Alberta, Mar. 2–10
Northern Ontario Manitoba
World Women's Curling Championship
Riga, Latvia, Mar. 16–24
 Scotland  Sweden
Canadian Senior Curling Championships
Summerside, Prince Edward Island, Mar. 16–24
New Brunswick Ontario
Nova Scotia Alberta
CIS/CCA University Curling Championships
Kamloops, British Columbia, Mar. 20–24
Waterloo Warriors Alberta Golden Bears
Manitoba Bisons Alberta Pandas
Canadian Wheelchair Curling Championship
Ottawa, Ontario, Mar. 24–31
Quebec British Columbia
World Men's Curling Championship
Victoria, British Columbia, Mar. 30 – Apr. 7
 Sweden  Canada
Canadian Masters Curling Championships
Thunder Bay, Ontario, Apr. 8–14
Alberta Ontario
Ontario Alberta
World Senior Curling Championships
Fredericton, New Brunswick, Apr. 13–20
 Canada  New Zealand
 Canada  Austria
World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship
Fredericton, New Brunswick, Apr. 13–20
 Hungary  Sweden

Other events

Note: Events that were not placed on the CCA's list of CCA-sanctioned events are listed here.

Event Winning team Runner-up team
European Mixed Curling Championship
Erzurum, Turkey, Sep. 30 – Oct. 6
 Scotland  Sweden
European Curling Championships — Group C
Erzurum, Turkey, Oct. 5–10
C  Turkey  Croatia
 Belarus  Turkey
World Wheelchair Curling Championship Qualification
Lohja, Finland, Nov. 3–8
 Norway  Finland
Pacific-Asia Curling Championships
Naseby, New Zealand, Nov. 18–25
 China  Japan
 China  Japan
European Curling Championships
Karlstad, Sweden, Dec. 7–15
A  Sweden  Norway
 Russia  Scotland
B  Finland  Latvia
 Latvia  Norway
European Junior Curling Challenge
Prague, Czech Republic, Jan. 3–8
 Italy  Denmark
 Denmark  Hungary
Pacific-Asia Junior Curling Championships
Tokoro, Kitami, Japan, Jan. 10–16
 China  South Korea
 Japan  China
The Dominion All-Star Curling Skins Game
Rama, Ontario, Jan. 19–20
Team Glenn Howard Team Kevin Koe
World Wheelchair Curling Championship
Sochi, Russia, Feb. 16–23
 Canada  Sweden
World Junior Curling Championships
Sochi, Russia, Feb. 28 – Mar. 10
 Scotland  Russia
 Russia  Scotland
Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Trials
Leduc, Alberta, Mar. 14–17
Desjardins/Néron Kalthoff/Martin
Karuizawa International Curling Championship
Karuizawa, Japan, Apr. 18–21
Kim Chang-min Yusuke Morozumi
Binia Feltscher-Beeli Ayumi Ogasawara

Grand Slam events in bold.[2][3]

Teams

Men's events

Week Event Winning skip Runner-up skip
3 Baden Masters
Baden, Switzerland, Aug. 31 – Sept. 2
Sven Michel Peter de Cruz
5 AMJ Campbell Shorty Jenkins Classic
Brockville, Ontario, Sept. 13–16
John Epping Jeff Stoughton
The Shoot-Out
Edmonton, Alberta, Sept. 13–16
Jamie King Charley Thomas
Cloverdale Cash Spiel
Surrey, British Columbia, Sept. 14–16
Brent Pierce Sean Geall
6 Radisson Blu Oslo Cup
Oslo, Norway, Sept. 20–23
Niklas Edin Markku Uusipaavalniemi
Point Optical Curling Classic
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Sept. 21–24
John Epping Kevin Koe
7 Horizon Laser Vision Center Classic
Regina, Saskatchewan, Sept. 28 – Oct. 1
Zou Dejia Brent Gedak
Prestige Hotels & Resorts Curling Classic
Vernon, British Columbia, Sept. 28 – Oct. 1
Jim Cotter Jamie King
8 Swiss Cup Basel
Basel, Switzerland, Oct. 4–7
Oskar Eriksson Sven Michel
StuSells Toronto Tankard
Toronto, Ontario, Oct. 5–8
Jeff Stoughton Joe Frans
Westcoast Curling Classic
New Westminster, British Columbia, Oct. 5–8
Kevin Martin Andrew Bilesky
Shamrock Shotgun
Edmonton, Alberta, Oct. 5–7
Danny Sherrard Thomas Scoffin
9 Meyers Norris Penny Charity Classic
Medicine Hat, Alberta, Oct. 12–15
David Nedohin Randy Bryden
St. Paul Cash Spiel
St. Paul, Minnesota, Oct. 12–14
John Shuster Todd Birr
10 Valley First Crown of Curling
Kamloops, British Columbia, Oct. 19–22
Brent Pierce Jamie King
Canad Inns Prairie Classic
Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, Oct. 19–22
Kevin Koe Kevin Martin
The Flatiron Challenge at Lacombe
Lacombe, Alberta, Oct. 19–21
Robert Schlender Parker Konschuh
11 Cactus Pheasant Classic
Brooks, Alberta, Oct. 25–28
Kevin Koe Mike McEwen
Challenge Chateau Cartier de Gatineau
Gatineau/Buckingham, Quebec, Oct. 25–28
Mark Dacey Brad Gushue
Curling Masters Champéry
Champéry, Switzerland, Oct. 26–28
Marcus Hasselborg Peter de Cruz
Bernick's Miller Lite Open
Bemidji, Minnesota, Oct. 26–28
Al Hackner Pete Fenson
12 Red Deer Curling Classic
Red Deer, Alberta, Nov. 2–5
Brendan Bottcher Kevin Koe
13 Edinburgh International
Edinburgh, Scotland, Nov. 8–10
Tom Brewster John Jahr
Whites Drug Store Classic
Swan River, Manitoba, Nov. 9–12
Mike McEwen Randy Bryden
Vancouver Island Shootout
Victoria, British Columbia, Nov. 9–12
Jay Wakefield Neil Dangerfield
Courtesy Freight Northern Ontario Superspiel
Thunder Bay, Ontario, Nov. 9–11
Al Hackner Craig Kochan
Original 16 WCT Bonspiel
Calgary, Alberta, Nov. 9–11
Steve Petryk Robert Schlender
14 The Masters Grand Slam of Curling
Brantford, Ontario, Nov. 14–18
Kevin Koe Jim Cotter
Wainwright Roaming Buffalo Classic
Wainwright, Alberta, Nov. 16–19
Mark Johnson Jamie King
Dauphin Clinic Pharmacy Classic
Dauphin, Manitoba, Nov. 16–19
Randy Bryden Scott Bitz
15 Challenge Casino de Charlevoix
Clermont, Quebec, Nov. 22–25
Peter de Cruz Brad Jacobs
DEKALB Superspiel
Morris, Manitoba, Nov. 22–25
William Lyburn Alexander Attinger
Seattle Cash Spiel
Seattle, Washington, Nov. 23–25
Todd Birr Brady Clark
Coors Light Cash Spiel
Duluth, Minnesota, Nov. 23–25
Bryan Burgess John Shuster
Spruce Grove Cashspiel
Spruce Grove, Alberta, Nov. 23–25
Les Rogers Greg Keith
16 Madison Cash Spiel
Madison, Wisconsin, Nov. 30 – Dec. 2
Pete Fenson John Shuster
18 Canadian Open of Curling
Kelowna, British Columbia, Dec. 12–16
Glenn Howard Brad Jacobs
Iron Trail Motors Shoot-Out
Eveleth, Minnesota, Dec. 13–16
Tyler George Todd Birr
Vic Open
Quebec City, Quebec, Dec. 14–16
Simon Dupuis Philippe Lemay
21 Mercure Perth Masters
Perth, Scotland, Jan. 3–6
Thomas Ulsrud Mike McEwen
24 The National
Port Hawkesbury, Nova Scotia, Jan. 23–27
Jeff Stoughton Mike McEwen
German Masters
Hamburg, Germany, Jan. 25–27
David Murdoch Rasmus Stjerne
30 Pomeroy Inn & Suites Prairie Showdown
Grande Prairie, Alberta, Mar. 14–17
Liu Rui Mike McEwen
33 Victoria Curling Classic
Victoria, British Columbia, Mar. 21–24
Niklas Edin Mike McEwen
36 The Players' Championship
Toronto, Ontario, Apr. 16–21
Glenn Howard Mike McEwen
European Masters
St. Gallen, Switzerland, Apr. 17–20
Oskar Eriksson Sven Michel

Women's events

Week Event Winning skip Runner-up skip
5 AMJ Campbell Shorty Jenkins Classic
Brockville, Ontario, Sept. 13–16
Tracy Horgan Eve Muirhead
The Shoot-Out
Edmonton, Alberta, Sept. 13–16
Kaitlyn Lawes Crystal Webster
Cloverdale Cash Spiel
Surrey, British Columbia, Sept. 14–16
Wang Bingyu Allison MacInnes
6 Radisson Blu Oslo Cup
Oslo, Norway, Sept. 20–23
Sherry Middaugh Margaretha Sigfridsson
7 Prestige Hotels & Resorts Curling Classic
Vernon, British Columbia, Sept. 28 – Oct. 1
Heather Nedohin Anna Sidorova
8 Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic
Calgary, Alberta, Oct. 5–8
Sherry Middaugh Rachel Homan
Shamrock Shotgun
Edmonton, Alberta, Oct. 5–7
Satsuki Fujisawa Kim Eun-jung
9 Atkins Curling Supplies Women's Classic
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Oct. 12–15
Kate Cameron Kerri Einarson
Meyers Norris Penny Charity Classic
Medicine Hat, Alberta, Oct. 12–15
Chantelle Eberle Lisa Eyamie
Women's Masters Basel
Basel, Switzerland, Oct. 12–14
Margaretha Sigfridsson Silvana Tirinzoni
St. Paul Cash Spiel
St. Paul, Minnesota, Oct. 12–14
Patti Lank Margie Smith
10 Manitoba Lotteries Women's Curling Classic
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Oct. 19–22
Stefanie Lawton Rachel Homan
Valley First Crown of Curling
Kamloops, British Columbia, Oct. 19–22
Wang Bingyu Lene Nielsen
11 Challenge Chateau Cartier de Gatineau
Gatineau/Buckingham, Quebec, Oct. 25–28
Julie Reddick Cathy Auld
12 Royal LePage OVCA Women's Fall Classic
Kemptville, Ontario, Nov. 1–4
Rachel Homan Allison Nimik
Stockholm Ladies Cup
Stockholm, Sweden, Nov. 1–4
Anette Norberg Anna Hasselborg
Red Deer Curling Classic
Red Deer, Alberta, Nov. 2–5
Chelsea Carey Kaitlyn Lawes
13 Colonial Square Ladies Classic
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Nov. 9–12
Stefanie Lawton Chelsea Carey
Vancouver Island Shootout
Victoria, British Columbia, Nov. 9–12
Roberta Kuhn Heather Jensen
Courtesy Freight Northern Ontario Superspiel
Thunder Bay, Ontario, Nov. 9–11
Krista McCarville Ashley Kallos
14 The Masters Grand Slam of Curling
Brantford, Ontario, Nov. 14–18
Rachel Homan Chelsea Carey
15 DEKALB Superspiel
Morris, Manitoba, Nov. 22–25
Darcy Robertson Barb Spencer
Molson Cash Spiel
Duluth, Minnesota, Nov. 23–25
Krista McCarville Becca Hamilton
Spruce Grove Cashspiel
Spruce Grove, Alberta, Nov. 23–25
Tiffany Steuber Holly Whyte
16 Boundary Ford Curling Classic
Lloydminster, Alberta, Nov. 30 – Dec. 3
Renée Sonnenberg Casey Scheidegger
International ZO women's tournament
Wetzikon, Switzerland, Nov. 30 – Dec. 2
Michèle Jäggi Mirjam Ott
Madison Cash Spiel
Madison, Wisconsin, Nov. 30 – Dec. 2
Erika Brown Jill Mouzar
18 Iron Trail Motors Shoot-Out
Eveleth, Minnesota, Dec. 14–16
Jessie Kaufman Allison Pottinger
22 International Bernese Ladies Cup
Bern, Switzerland, Jan. 11–13
Silvana Tirinzoni Lene Nielsen
23 Glynhill Ladies International
Glasgow, Scotland, Jan. 18–20
Binia Feltscher Heather Nedohin
30 Pomeroy Inn & Suites Prairie Showdown
Grande Prairie, Alberta, Mar. 14–17
Mirjam Ott Tracy Horgan
36 The Players' Championship
Toronto, Ontario, Apr. 16–21
Eve Muirhead Margaretha Sigfridsson

WCT Order of Merit rankings

Men[4]

as of Week 36
# Skip Points
1 Glenn Howard 502.540
2 Mike McEwen 435.985
3 Niklas Edin 397.980
4 Kevin Koe 377.200
5 Kevin Martin 372.930
6 Jeff Stoughton 364.587
7 Brad Jacobs 301.379
8 John Epping 296.070
9 Brad Gushue 250.371
10 Thomas Ulsrud 224.564

Women[5]

as of Week 36
# Skip Points
1 Jennifer Jones 402.150
2 Stefanie Lawton 334.785
3 Eve Muirhead 302.870
4 Heather Nedohin 298.665
5 Margaretha Sigfridsson 273.640
6 Rachel Homan 268.595
7 Sherry Middaugh 258.735
8 Mirjam Ott 248.555
9 Anna Sidorova 238.505
10 Chelsea Carey 231.700

WCT Money List

Men[6]

as of Week 36
# Skip $ (CAD)
1 Kevin Koe 110,700
2 Mike McEwen 108,861
3 Jeff Stoughton 95,400
4 Glenn Howard 72,000
5 Kevin Martin 70,000
6 Niklas Edin 58,815
7 Brad Jacobs 57,100
8 Brad Gushue 47,726
9 Jim Cotter 43,000
10 John Epping 35,400

Women[6]

as of Week 36
# Skip $ (CAD)
1 Rachel Homan 60,800
2 Stefanie Lawton 46,400
3 Chelsea Carey 39,300
4 Eve Muirhead 38,582
5 Jennifer Jones 32,200
6 Margaretha Sigfridsson 32,033
7 Shannon Kleibrink 31,900
8 Anna Sidorova 31,556
9 Sherry Middaugh 31,243
10 Silvana Tirinzoni 30,011

The Dominion MA Cup

The Dominion MA Cup (presented by TSN) was contested in the 2012–13 season.[7][8] The Cup was awarded to the Canadian Curling Association Member Association (MA) who has had the most success during the season in CCA-sanctioned events. Events included the Canadian mixed championship, men's and women's juniors championships, the Scotties, the Brier, the men's and women's senior championships and the national wheelchair championship. Points were awarded based on placement in each of the events, with the top association receiving 14 points, the 2nd place team with 13, etc.

Standings

Final standings

Rank Member Association CMCC CWJCC CMJCC Scotties Brier CWSCC CMSCC CWhCC Total Pts. Avg. Pts.
1 Ontario 14 12 11 14 12 5 13 8 89 11.125
2 Manitoba 5 13 14 13 13 12 8 10 88 11.000
3 Nova Scotia 13 8 12 8 4 14 10 7 76 9.500
3 Alberta 8 5 13 3 10 13 12 12 76 9.500
5 Quebec 12 7 7 6 9 11 9 14 75 9.375
6 New Brunswick 11 9 9 9 7 9 14 5 73 9.125
7 British Columbia 7 14 8 12 3 6 7 13 70 8.750
8 Saskatchewan 10 10 10 10 6 7 6 6 65 8.125
9 Northern Ontario 9 3 5 n/a 14 10 4 11 56 8.000
10 Newfoundland and Labrador 1 6 4 4 11 8 5 9 48 6.000
11 Prince Edward Island 6 2 3 7 5 3 11 n/a 37 5.286
12 Northwest Territories 4 4 2 5 8 4 3 n/a 30 4.286
13 Yukon 3 11 6 2 2 2 2 n/a 28 4.000
14 Nunavut 2 1 1 n/a n/a 1 1 n/a 6 1.200

References

  1. ^ "Penticton awarded 2013 WFG Continental Cup". Canadian Curling Association. 4 November 2011.
  2. ^ "Men's Schedule". World Curling Tour. Archived from the original on April 24, 2013. Retrieved August 13, 2020.
  3. ^ "Women's Schedule". World Curling Tour. Archived from the original on March 30, 2013. Retrieved August 13, 2020.
  4. ^ "World Curling Team Ranking: Men". CurlingZone. July 22, 2013. Retrieved August 13, 2020.
  5. ^ "World Curling Team Ranking: Women". CurlingZone. July 22, 2013. Retrieved August 13, 2020.
  6. ^ a b "World Curling Tour: Men's Ranking". World Curling Tour. June 28, 2015. Archived from the original on May 26, 2020. Retrieved August 13, 2020.
  7. ^ "The Dominion MA Cup". Canadian Curling Association. Archived from the original on 5 June 2014. Retrieved 27 November 2012.
  8. ^ "The Dominion MA Cup presented by TSN". TSN Curling. Retrieved 27 November 2012.