Brenda Bohmer | |
---|---|
Born | March 30, 1957 Camrose, Alberta, Canada |
Team | |
Curling club | Ottewell CC, Edmonton, Avonair CC, Edmonton |
Career | |
Member Association | Alberta |
Hearts appearances | 5 (1997, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2003) |
World Championship appearances | 1 (1998) |
Brenda Lea Bohmer [1] (born March 30, 1957 in Camrose, Alberta, Canada) is a Canadian curler.
She is a 1998 World women's bronze medallist. [2]
Season | Skip | Third | Second | Lead | Alternate | Coach | Events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1987–88 | Lil Werenka | Simone Handfield | Bev Karasek | Kathy Bacon | Brenda Bohmer-Cassidy | STOH 1988 (9th) | |
1996–97 | Cathy Borst | Heather Godberson | Brenda Bohmer | Kate Horne | Lauren Rouse | Darryl Horne | STOH 1997 (4th) |
1997–98 | Cathy Borst | Heather Godberson | Brenda Bohmer | Kate Horne | Rona McGregor | Darryl Horne | COCT 1997 (5th) STOH 1998 WCC 1998 |
1998–99 | Cathy Borst | Heather Godberson | Brenda Bohmer | Kate Horne | Rona McGregor | STOH 1999 | |
2001–02 | Cathy King | Lawnie MacDonald | Brenda Bohmer | Kate Horne | Marcy Balderston | Darryl Horne | COCT 2001 (8th) STOH 2002 (5th) |
2002–03 | Deb Santos | Jackie-Rae Greening | Brenda Bohmer | Kate Horne | Shannon Orsini | Darryl Horne | STOH 2003 (6th) |
2004–05 | Deb Santos | Jackie-Rae Greening | Brenda Bohmer | Kate Horne | |||
2005–06 | Deb Santos | Heather Nedohin | Brenda Bohmer | Kate Horne |
Curling is a sport in which players slide stones on a sheet of ice toward a target area which is segmented into four concentric circles. It is related to bowls, boules and shuffleboard. Two teams, each with four players, take turns sliding heavy, polished granite stones, also called rocks, across the ice curling sheet toward the house, a circular target marked on the ice. Each team has eight stones, with each player throwing two. The purpose is to accumulate the highest score for a game; points are scored for the stones resting closest to the centre of the house at the conclusion of each end, which is completed when both teams have thrown all of their stones. A game usually consists of eight or ten ends.
Cathy King, formerly Cathy Borst is a Canadian curler from St. Albert, Alberta. She is a former Canadian champion skip and world championship bronze medallist, and 2013 world senior champion.
Robert Wayne Middaugh is a Canadian curler. Born in Brampton, Ontario, Middaugh resides in Victoria Harbour, Ontario. He is the only player to have won the Canadian Men's Curling Championship at three different positions: skip (1998), third (2012), and second (1993). He was inducted into the Canadian Curling Hall of Fame in 2020. He currently coaches the Anna Hasselborg rink from Sweden.
The World Junior Curling Championships are an annual curling bonspiel featuring the world's best curlers who are 21 years old or younger. The competitions for both men and women occur at the same venue. The men's tournament has occurred since 1975 and the women's since 1988. Since curling became an Olympic sport in 1998, the World Junior Curling Championship of the year preceding the Olympic Games have been held at the site of the curling tournament for the upcoming Games.
Craig Edward Savill is a Canadian curler from Manotick, Ontario, Canada. He currently coaches the Czech men's national team.
The World Senior Curling Championships is an annual curling tournament featuring curlers from around the world who are at least 50 years old. Matches at the World Senior Championships are played in 8 ends played instead of the 10 played in most international events.
David Smith is a Scottish curler. He is the brother of curler Peter Smith and the father of curlers Kyle Smith and Cameron Smith.
The curling competition of the 2010 Olympics was held at Vancouver Olympic/Paralympic Centre in Vancouver. It is the fifth time that curling was on the Olympic program, after having been staged in 1924, 1998, 2002 and 2006. For the 2010 Winter Olympics the competition followed the same format that was used during the 2006 Turin Winter Olympics, with 10 teams playing a round robin tournament, from which the top four teams advance to the semi-finals.
Joan McCusker is a Canadian curler and Olympic gold medallist.
Nancy Bélanger is a Canadian curler from Charny, Quebec.
Patrick Hürlimann is a Swiss curler, Olympic champion, and Vice-President of the World Curling Federation (WCF). He received a gold medal at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano. He has received three medals at the World Curling Championships as skip for the Swiss team.
Karin Elisabet Gustafson is a retired Swedish curler, world champion and Olympic medalist. She has won four World Championships, more World Championships than any other women's curler.
Rachel Catherine Homan is a Canadian international curler. Homan is a former Canadian junior champion, a three-time Canadian national champion, and the 2017 world champion, all as a skip. She was also the skip of the Canadian women's curling team at the 2018 Winter Olympics.
Adam Enright is a Canadian curler from Edmonton, Alberta. He is a former alternate for Kevin Martin's rink with whom he won a gold medal at the 2010 Winter Olympics as well as wins at the 2008 Tim Hortons Brier and the 2008 World Men's Curling Championship. Currently, Enright plays third for Kurt Balderston's rink.
The WCF Hall of Fame is an international curling Hall of Fame that was established by the World Curling Federation (WCF) in 2012. The induction is given as an honor that recognizes outstanding contributions to the sport of curling, and is awarded annually. Inductees are also awarded the World Curling Freytag Award, an award which predated the WCF Hall of Fame as the highest honor given by the WCF. Previous Freytag Award winners have been inducted into the WCF Hall of Fame.
Kate Horne is a Canadian curler.
David Carruthers is a Canadian curler.
Jacques Gauthier is a Canadian curler from Winnipeg, Manitoba. He currently skips his own team on the World Curling Tour.
Stephen "Steve" Hewitt is an Australian curler from Glen Waverley, Victoria.
Stephanie Enright is a Canadian curler from Rosalind, Alberta. She represented the University of Alberta at the University Nationals twice, and in 2017 she was part of the team which won the Canadian Open as a member of Team Casey Scheidegger.
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