The Grand Prix Bern Inter, also known as the Grand Prix Bern Inter Curling Challenge, is an annual tournament on the men's World Curling Tour.[1] It is held annually on the last weekend of October or the first weekend of November at the Curlingbahn Allmend Bern in Bern, Switzerland.[2]
The purse for the event is CHF 18,100, with the winning team receiving CHF 5,500.[2]
The event has been held since 1997, and has been part of the World Curling Tour since 2018.
Although it's a men's event, Andrea Schöpp won the event in 2010.
Champions
The champions for this event are as follows:[2]
Year
|
Winning team
|
1997 |
Stefan Karnusian, Richard Baumer, Kurt Reichenbach, Martin Stähli
|
1998 |
Bernhard Werthemann, Raphael Brütsch, Thomas Lips, Philipp Raspe
|
1999 |
Patrick Hürlimann, Dominic Andres, Martin Romang, Diego Perren
|
2000 |
Johnny Frederiksen, Henrik Jakobsen, Lars Vilandt, Bo Jensen
|
2001 |
Sebastian Stock, Stephan Knoll, Markus Messenzehl, Patrick Hoffman
|
2002 |
Werner Attinger, Stephan Rüdisühli, Markus Foitek, Maurus Müller
|
2003 |
Andreas Östreich, Markus Eggler (skip), Damian Grichting, Rouven Welschen
|
2004 |
Ralph Stöckli, Claudio Pescia, Pascal Sieber, Simon Strübin, Marco Battilana
|
2005 |
Joel Retornaz, Fabio Alverà, Gianpaolo Zandegiacomo, Alessandro Zisa, Antonio Menardi
|
2006 |
Sebastian Stock, Daniel Herberg, Markus Messenzehl, Patrick Hoffman
|
2007 |
Stefan Karnusian, Christof Schwaller, Robert Hürlimann, Rolf Iseli
|
2008 |
Pascal Hess, Yves Hess, Florian Zürrer, Felix Attinger
|
2009 |
David Bärtschiger, Marc Pfister, Roger Meier, Enrico Pfister, Marianne Zürcher
|
2010 |
Andrea Schöpp, Imogen Oona Lehmann, Corinna Scholz, Stella Heiss
|
2011 |
Sven Michel, Claudio Pätz, Sandro Trolliet, Simon Gempeler
|
2012 |
Manuel Ruch, Jean-Nicolas Longchamp, Daniel Graf, Mathias Graf
|
2013 |
Jean-Nicolas Longchamp, Manuel Ruch, Renato Hächler, Mathias Graf, Christian Moser
|
2014 |
Marc Pfister, Enrico Pfister, Roger Meier, Raphael Märki, Michael Bösiger
|
2015 |
Christian Haller, Yves Hess (skip), Rainer Kobler, Fabian Schmid
|
2016 |
Kevin Wunderlin, Reto Gribi, Mike Wenger, Mats Perret
|
2017 |
Martin Rios, Christof Schwaller (skip), Kevin Spychiger, Peju Hartmann, Henä Hügli
|
Year
|
Winning team
|
Runner up team
|
Purse (CHF)
|
Winner's share (CHF)
|
2018[3] |
Amos Mosaner, Sebastiano Arman, Daniele Ferrazza, Andrea Pilzer |
Robin Brydone, Craig Waddell, Gregor Cannon, Derrick Sloan, Fraser Davidson |
18,100 |
5,000
|
2019[4] |
Joel Retornaz, Amos Mosaner, Sebastiano Arman, Simone Gonin |
Ross Whyte, Robin Brydone, Duncan McFadzean, Euan Kyle |
18,100 |
5,000
|
2020
|
Not held
|
2021[5] |
Philipp Hösli (Fourth), Yves Stocker (Skip), Marco Hefti, Justin Hausherr |
Sixten Totzek, Marc Muskatewitz, Joshua Sutor, Dominik Greindl |
18,100 |
5,000
|
2022[6] |
Joel Retornaz, Amos Mosaner, Sebastiano Arman, Mattia Giovanella |
Wouter Gosgens, Jaap van Dorp, Laurens Hoekman, Tobias van den Hurk, Alexander Magan |
18,100 |
5,500
|
2023 |
James Craik, Mark Watt, Angus Bryce, Blair Haswell |
Marc Muskatewitz (Fourth), Benny Kapp (Skip), Felix Messenzehl, Johannes Scheuerl |
18,100 |
5,000
|
2024 |
Philipp Hösli (Fourth), Marco Hösli (Skip), Simon Gloor, Justin Hausherr |
Marco Hefti (Fourth), Jan Iseli (Skip), Max Winz, Sandro Fanchini |
18,100 |
5,000
|
References
External links
|
---|
Men's Tour | |
---|
Women's Tour | |
---|
Mixed Doubles Tour | |
---|