1994 World Junior Curling Championships

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Алексей Густов (talk | contribs) at 17:15, 13 July 2019. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

1994 World Junior Curling Championships
Host citySofia, Bulgaria
ArenaWinter Sports Palace
DatesApril 2–9
Men's winner Canada (7th title)
SkipColin Davison
ThirdKelly Mittelstadt
SecondScott Pfeifer
LeadSean Morris
AlternateRob Simpson
Finalist Germany (Daniel Herberg)
Women's winner Canada (3rd title)
SkipKim Gellard
ThirdCori Beveridge
SecondLisa Savage
LeadSandy Graham
AlternateHeather Crockett
Finalist United States (Erika Brown)
« 1993
1995 »

The 1994 World Junior Curling Championships were held from April 2 to 9 at Winter Sports Palace in Sofia, Bulgaria.

Men

Teams

Country Skip Third Second Lead Alternate Coach
 Bulgaria Ivaylo Petrov Kiril Kirilov Bojidar Momerin Ianakiev Evtimov Stanimir Petrov
 Canada Colin Davison Kelly Mittelstadt Scott Pfeifer Sean Morris Rob Simpson
 Denmark Johnny Frederiksen Kenneth Hertsdahl Lars Vilandt Bo Jensen Lars Nissen
 France Spencer Mugnier Thomas Dufour Sylvain Ducroz Philippe Caux Cyrille Prunet
 Germany Daniel Herberg Stephan Knoll Oliver Trevisiol Markus Rohrmoser Hans-Peter Kiess
 Japan Hiroshi Sato Nobumitsu Fujisawa Yoshihiro Kataoka Naoki Kudo Hidetaka Sunaga
 Scotland Craig Wilson Neil Murdoch Ricky Burnett Craig Strawhorn Euan Byers Robin Halliday
 Sweden Per Granqvist Emil Marklund Peter Hillbom Emil Nordkvist Joakim Carlsson
 Switzerland Yannick Renggli Chrislian Razafimahefa Gregory Renggli Patrick Tinembart Ralph Stöckli
 United States Mike Peplinski Craig Brown Ryan Braudt Cory Ward Ryan Quinn

Round Robin

Key
Teams to Playoffs
Place Country 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Wins Losses
1  United States * 7:0 7:5 7:1 7:3 8:6 4:10 6:2 10:4 8:2 8 1
2  Germany 0:7 * 4:6 5:2 10:7 6:3 5:3 1:7 5:4 8:5 6 3
3  Switzerland 5:7 6:4 * 3:8 10:4 8:3 5:7 5:3 10:1 10:3 6 3
4  Canada 1:7 2:5 8:3 * 6:4 5:7 9:4 8:2 10:5 7:4 6 3
5  Scotland 3:7 7:10 4:10 4:6 * W 6:5 6:4 12:3 11:4 5 4
6  Sweden 6:8 3:6 3:8 7:5 L * 6:3 6:3 5:4 7:1 5 4
7  France 10:4 3:5 7:5 4:9 5:6 3:6 * 8:10 6:4 10:2 4 5
8  Denmark 2:6 7:1 3:5 2:8 4:6 3:6 10:8 * 5:6 10:2 3 6
9  Japan 4:10 4:5 1:10 5:10 3:12 4:5 4:6 6:5 * 7:6 2 7
10  Bulgaria 2:8 5:8 3:10 4:7 4:11 1:7 2:10 2:10 6:7 * 0 9

(«W» — technical win; «L» — technical loss)

Playoffs

Semifinals Gold Medal Game
      
1  United States 5
4  Canada 8
4  Canada 6
2  Germany 2
2  Germany 7
3  Switzerland 2

Rankings

Place Country Games Wins Losses
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Canada 11 8 3
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Germany 11 7 4
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Switzerland 10 6 4
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  United States 10 8 2
5  Scotland 9 5 4
6  Sweden 9 5 4
7  France 9 4 5
8  Denmark 9 3 6
9  Japan 9 2 7
10  Bulgaria 9 0 9

Women

Teams

Country Skip Third Second Lead Alternate Coach
 Bulgaria Marina Karagiozova Zvetelina Karagiozova Rumiana Atanasova Anna Tzaneva Rousiana Rouskova
 Canada Kim Gellard Cori Beveridge Lisa Savage Sandy Graham Heather Crockett
 Denmark Angelina Jensen Dorthe Holm Kamilla Schack Helene Jensen Charlotte Hedegaard
 Germany Gerrit Müller Marion Klotz Anja Messenzehl Manon Stockhammar Britta Weddige
 Japan Hitomi Suzuki Mika Hori Fumiko Hirosawa Kozue Hasegawa Yumiko Abe
 Norway Marianne Haslum Kristin Løvseth Elisabeth Sandberg Hege Korstadshagen Ellen Kittelsen Thoralf Hognestad
 Scotland Gillian Howard Kirsty Hynd Alison Kinghorn Sandra Hynd Fiona Brown
 Sweden Ulrika Bergman (4th) Margaretha Lindahl (skip) Anna Bergström Maria "Mia" Zackrisson Maria Engholm
 Switzerland Manuela Kormann Sandra Zaugg Miriam Wymann Isabelle Zaugg Brigitte Portmann
 United States Erika Brown Debbie Henry Stacey Liapis Analissa Johnson Allison Darragh

Round Robin

Key
Teams to Playoffs
Place Country 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Wins Losses
1  Canada * 7:4 5:3 5:9 7:4 9:7 9:5 7:6 10:3 9:1 8 1
2  Denmark 4:7 * 9:3 4:6 10:5 10:4 6:3 10:4 7:5 14:3 7 2
3  United States 3:5 3:9 * 9:4 3:6 5:4 6:5 10:2 9:3 12:2 6 3
4  Sweden 9:5 6:4 4:9 * 8:9 3:5 9:3 10:2 9:5 14:3 6 3
5  Norway 4:7 5:10 6:3 9:8 * 5:3 4:12 12:7 3:6 12:6 5 4
6  Switzerland 7:9 4:10 4:5 5:3 3:5 * 8:7 8:4 7:5 11:3 5 4
7  Scotland 5:9 3:6 5:6 3:9 12:4 7:8 * 9:3 7:4 13:0 4 5
8  Germany 6:7 4:10 2:10 2:10 7:12 4:8 3:9 * 11:5 12:2 2 7
8  Japan 3:10 5:7 3:9 5:9 6:3 5:7 4:7 5:11 * 9:6 2 7
10  Bulgaria 1:9 3:14 2:12 3:14 6:12 3:11 0:13 2:12 6:9 * 0 9

Playoffs

Semifinals Gold Medal Game
      
1  Canada 8
4  Sweden 2
1  Canada 9
3  United States 7
2  Denmark 6
3  United States 7

Rankings

Place Country Games Wins Losses
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Canada 11 10 1
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  United States 11 7 4
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Sweden 10 6 4
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Denmark 10 7 3
5  Norway 9 5 4
6  Switzerland 9 5 4
7  Scotland 9 4 5
8  Germany 9 2 7
9  Japan 9 2 7
10  Bulgaria 9 0 9

Awards

WJCC All-Star Team:

Skip Third Second Lead
Men United States Mike Peplinski United States Craig Brown Scotland Ricky Burnett Sweden Emil Nordkvist
Women Canada Kim Gellard Denmark Dorthe Holm Sweden Anna Bergström Sweden Maria "Mia" Zackrisson

WJCC Sportsmanship Award:

Men Germany Daniel Herberg
Women Germany Gerrit Müller

Sources