2005 World Women's Curling Championship

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The 2005 World Women's Curling Championship was held from March 19-27, 2005 at the Lagoon Leisure Centre in Paisley, Scotland. The tournament was the first since the 1988 event to be held separately from the 2005 Ford World Men's Curling Championship.

The tournament was plagued with problems from the start. Ice conditions were not the best, due to a number of factors, including the arena being located adjacent to a swimming pool. Also, de-ionized water, a standard at major events was not used for the first draws, due to a refusal by the organising committee to pay for it. These ice issues led to the postponement of the fourth draw. Also, ticket prices were very expensive, leading to poor attendance numbers. Due to a dispute with volunteers who wanted to be paid, time clocks were not used. This meant that the on-ice umpire was allowed to pull rocks out of a game as a penalty for slow play. This arguably cost the Russian team a loss in one game.

In the end, it was Sweden, skipped by Anette Norberg who won her first championship, and Sweden's first since 1999, with a win in the final over the United States, skipped by Cassandra Johnson. Norway, skipped by Dordi Nordby won bronze.

Contents

[edit] Teams

The 2005 World Women's Curling Championship was contested between teams from three continents: Asia, Europe, and North America. The list of teams differed from the Men's Curling Championship. Teams included 1990 and 1991 World Champion Dordi Nordby of Norway and 2001 Silver medalist Anette Norberg of Sweden. Joining them in their 4th trip to the worlds was Olga Jarkova's Russian team, in their 3rd appearance were Yumie Hayashi of Japan and Diana Gaspari of Italy, making their 2nd appearance were Mirjam Ott of Switzerland, Madeleine Dupont of Denmark, Kirsi Nykanen of Finland and Kelly Wood of Scotland. Making their first appearance at the worlds were Jennifer Jones of Canada, Wang Bingyu of China and Cassandra Johnson of the United States.

Flag of Canada Canada Flag of the People's Republic of China China Flag of Denmark Denmark
St. Vital CC, Winnipeg

Skip: Jennifer Jones
Third: Cathy Overton-Clapham
Second: Jill Officer
Lead: Cathy Gauthier
Alternate: Trisha Eck

Harbin CC

Skip: Wang Bingyu
Third: Yue Qingshuang
Second: Liu Yin
Lead: Zhou Yan
Alternate: Yu Xinna

Hvidovre CC

Skip: Madeleine Dupont
Third: Denise Dupont
Second: Lene Nielsen
Lead: Maria Poulsen
Alternate: Helle Simonsen

Flag of Finland Finland Flag of Italy Italy Flag of Japan Japan
Hyvinkää CC

Skip: Kirsi Nykänen*
Fourth: Tiina Kautonen
Second: Sari Laakkonen
Lead: Minna Malinen
Alternate: Riikka Louhivuori
(*Throws third rocks)

New Wave CC, Cortina d'Ampezzo

Skip: Diana Gaspari
Third: Giulia Lacedelli
Second: Rosa Pompanin
Lead: Violetta Caldart
Alternate: Eleonora Alvera

Aomori CC

Skip: Yumie Hayashi
Third: Ayumi Onodera
Second: Mari Motohashi
Lead: Sakurako Terada
Alternate: Ai Kobayashi

Flag of Norway Norway Flag of Russia Russia Flag of Scotland Scotland
Snarøen CC, Oslo

Skip: Dordi Nordby
Third: Linn Githmark
Second: Marianne Haslum
Lead: Camilla Holth
Alternate: Marianne Rørvik

Moskvitch CC, Moscow

Skip: Ludmila Privivkova
Third: Nkeiruka Ezekh
Second: Yana Nekrosova
Lead: Ekaterina Galkina
Alternate: Olga Jarkova

Dun CC

Skip: Kelly Wood
Third: Lorna Vevers
Second: Sheila Swan
Lead: Lindsay Wood
Alternate: Claire Milne

Flag of Sweden Sweden Flag of Switzerland Switzerland Flag of the United States United States
Härnösands CCK, Härnösand

Skip: Anette Norberg
Third: Eva Lund
Second: Cathrine Lindahl
Lead: Anna Bergström
Alternate: Ulrika Bergman

Flims CC

Skip: Mirjam Ott
Third: Binia Beeli
Second: Brigitte Schori
Lead: Michèle Knobel
Alternate: Valeria Spälty

Bemidji CC

Skip: Cassandra Johnson
Third: Jamie Johnson
Second: Jessica Schultz
Lead: Maureen Brunt
Alternate: Courtney George

[edit] Standings

Locale Skip W L PF PA Ends
Won
Ends
Lost
Blank
Ends
Stolen
Ends
Shot
Pct.
Sweden Anette Norberg 11 0 89 53 56 39 11 25 75%
United States Cassandra Johnson 10 1 89 54 53 38 13 22 76%
Canada Jennifer Jones 8 3 94 70 48 45 3 21 68%
Norway Dordi Nordby 7 4 85 55 46 40 11 19 72%
Russia Olga Jarkova 7 4 78 66 47 45 17 10 70%
Scotland Kelly Wood 6 5 82 66 53 40 6 23 69%
People's Republic of China Wang Bingyu 4 7 63 74 42 45 14 13 68%
Switzerland Mirjam Ott 4 7 74 77 45 48 11 13 72%
Japan Ayumi Onodera 3 8 67 92 41 48 8 12 66%
Denmark Madeleine Dupont 3 8 52 88 36 50 10 12 63%
Italy Diana Gaspari 2 9 53 79 39 46 7 12 65%
Finland Kirsi Nykänen 1 10 48 102 32 55 3 9 58%

[edit] Results

Note: scorers count rocks in incomplete ends towards the final score

Draw 1 - March 19, 10:00

Draw 2 - March 19, 15:00

Draw 3 - March 19, 20:00

Draw 4 - postponed to March 25 at 09:30 due to poor ice conditions

Draw 5 - March 20, 14:00

Draw 6 - March 20, 19:00

Draw 7 - March 21, 09:30

Draw 8 - March 21, 14:00

Draw 9 - March 21, 19:00

Draw 10 - March 22, 09:30

Draw 11 - March 22, 14:00

Draw 12 - March 22, 19:00

Draw 13 - March 23, 09:30

Draw 14 - March 23, 14:00

Draw 15 - March 23, 19:00

Draw 16 - March 24, 09:30

Draw 17 - March 24, 14:00

Draw 4 - March 25, 09:30 (postponed from March 20)

[edit] Tie-breaker

March 25, 14:00

Flag of Russia Russia Flag of Norway Norway

[edit] Page playoffs

For the first time ever, the World championships used the page playoff system where the top four teams with the best records at the end of round-robin play meet in the playoff rounds. The first and second place teams play each other, with the winner advancing directly to the final. The winner of the other page playoff game between the third and fourth place teams plays the loser of the first/second playoff game in the semi-final. The winner of the semi-final moves on to the final.

The 1-2 game occurred before the 3-4 game.

1 vs. 2 game - March 26 09:30
After leading the entire game, the Swedes, skipped by Anette Norberg allowed the Americans, skipped by Cassandra Johnson back in the game, and Anette Norberg misses her last shot, giving up a steal of one, and the win for the United States. This gives the U.S. a bye to the finals, while the previously undefeated Swedish team is forced to play the winner of the 3-4 game in the sem-finals.

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Final
x-Flag of Sweden Sweden (Norberg) 1 0 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 5
Flag of the United States United States (Johnson) 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 6

Player percentages:

Flag of Sweden Sweden Flag of the United States United States

Anna Bergström 73%
Cathrine Lindahl 74%
Eva Lund 65%
Anette Norberg 68%
TOTAL: 70%

Maureen Brunt 76%
Jessica Schultz 73%
Jamie Johnson 70%
Cassandra Johnson 75%
TOTAL: 73%

3 vs. 4 game - March 26 14:00
After leading 5-2 after five ends, Canada skipped by Jennifer Jones let her lead evaporate, as Norway skipped by Dordi Nordby scores 10 unanswered points, including a steal of 3 in the 9th end to put it away, as Jennifer Jones' last shot against five Norwegian stones was too heavy. The result advances Norway to the semi-final against Sweden while eliminating Canada.

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Final
x-Flag of Canada Canada (Jones) 2 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 5
Flag of Norway Norway (Nordby) 0 0 2 0 0 3 0 1 3 3 12

Player percentages:

Flag of Canada Canada Flag of Norway Norway

Cathy Gauthier 79%
Jill Officer 86%
Cathy Overton-Clapham 68%
Jennifer Jones 60%
TOTAL: 74%

Camilla Holth 72%
Marianne Haslum 68%
Linn Githmark 73%
Dordi Nordby 64%
TOTAL: 69%

Semi-final - March 26 19:00
Three point ends in the first and sixth ends helped give Sweden, skipped by Anette Norberg a berth into the finals in a 10-4 victory of Norway, skipped by Dordi Nordby. With the loss, Nordby and her team win the bronze medal.

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Final
x-Flag of Sweden Sweden (Norberg) 3 1 0 1 0 3 2 0 X X 10
Flag of Norway Norway (Nordby) 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 X X 4

Player percentages:

Flag of Sweden Sweden Flag of Norway Norway

Anna Bergström 63%
Cathrine Lindahl 75%
Eva Lund 92%
Anette Norberg 60%
TOTAL: 73%

Camilla Holth 53%
Marianne Haslum 52%
Linn Githmark 50%
Dordi Nordby 55%
TOTAL: 52%

Final - March 27 15:00
Sweden's skip, Anette Norberg's last shot of the tenth end was an easy hit for a 4 point end giving her a 10-4 victory over the United States, skipped by Cassandra Johnson. The win gives Sweden their first ever women's title since Elisabet Gustafsson won it in 1999.

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Final
x-Flag of Sweden Sweden (Norberg) 0 0 0 1 0 0 3 0 2 4 10
Flag of the United States United States (Johnson) 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 4

Player percentages:

Flag of Sweden Sweden Flag of the United States United States

Anna Bergström 89%
Cathrine Lindahl 70%
Eva Lund 83%
Anette Norberg 78%
TOTAL: 80%

Maureen Brunt 88%
Jessica Schultz 78%
Jamie Johnson 73%
Cassandra Johnson 64%
TOTAL: 76%

[edit] Round-robin player percentages, by position

Minimum 8 games at position

Leads

  1. Anna Bergström, Sweden 78%
  2. Maureen Brunt, U.S. 78%
  3. Michèle Knobel, Switz. 77%
  4. Ekaterina Galkina, Russia 76%
  5. Lindsay Wood, Scotland 76%
  6. Zhou Yan, P.R.C. 76%

Seconds

  1. Jessica Schultz, U.S. 78%
  2. Cathrine Lindahl, Sweden 76%
  3. Brigitte Schori, Switz. 74%
  4. Marianne Haslum, Norway 70%
  5. Iana Nekrassova, Russia 69%
  6. Liu Yin, P.R.C. 69%

Thirds

  1. Jamie Johnson, U.S. 75%
  2. Linn Githmark, Norway 74%
  3. Eva Lund, Sweden 73%
  4. Nkeirouka Ezekh, Russia 69%
  5. Lorna Vevers, Scotland 69%

Skips

  1. Anette Norberg, Sweden 74%
  2. Cassandra Johnson, U.S. 74%
  3. Dordi Nordby, Norway 70%
  4. Jennifer Jones, Canada 68%
  5. Kelly Wood, Scotland 68%
  6. Mirjam Ott, Switz. 68%

[edit] Qualifying

Teams qualified for the World Curling Championship in a series of different tournaments depending on their location.

European teams qualified through the Le Gruyère European Curling Championships 2004, held in Sofia, Bulgaria, December 4-11, 2004. Eight of the twelve qualifying teams (Sweden, Switzerland, Norway, Russia, Scotland, Italy, Finland, and Denmark) were selected from Europe.

Australian and Asian teams qualified through the 2004 Pacific Curling Championships in Chuncheon, South Korea. Two teams (Japan and China) qualified for the World Curling Championship.

The Canadian women's team was selected through the 2005 Scott Tournament of Hearts. The U.S. team was selected through the 2006 U.S. Olympic Team Trials.