Briane Meilleur | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Born | March 11, 1992 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Team | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Curling club | Gimli CC, Gimli, MB Petersfield CC [1] Petersfield, MB | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Skip | Kerri Einarson | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Third | Val Sweeting | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Second | Shannon Birchard | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lead | Briane Meilleur | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Alternate | Krysten Karwacki | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mixed doubles partner | Mark Nichols | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Career | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Member Association | Manitoba | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hearts appearances | 5 (2016, 2018, 2020, 2021, 2022) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
World Championship appearances | 2 (2021, 2022) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Top CTRS ranking | 1st (2019–20) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Grand Slam victories | 3 (2019 Players', 2021 Players', 2022 Champions Cup) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Briane Meilleur (born March 11, 1992) is a Canadian curler from Petersfield, Manitoba. [2] She currently plays lead for Team Kerri Einarson who have won back to back Scotties Tournament of Hearts, in 2020 and 2021.
Meilleur had a fairly successful junior career playing third for Breanne Knapp, winning the Manitoba junior title in 2010 and 2011 and competing in the 2010 and 2011 Canadian Junior Curling Championships. She won the bronze medal in 2011. [3]
She began her senior career as a skip in the 2011–12 season, and played in her first Grand Slam, the 2011 Manitoba Lotteries Women's Curling Classic.
After playing for several different teams, she began to skip her own rink again in the 2016–17 and 2017–18 season. [4] She competed in the 2017 Road to the Roar Canadian Olympic Curling Pre-Trials with Breanne Knapp, Janelle Vachon, and Sarah Neufeld, but the team missed out on a chance to qualify for the trials following losses to Julie Tippin and Krista McCarville. [5]
For the 2018–19 season, Meilleur joined Kerri Einarson's new team as the lead. The team gained some attention for being made up entirely of former skips. [6] They began the season by winning three straight World Curling Tour events in three weeks: the 2018 Stu Sells Oakville Tankard, the inaugural Morris SunSpiel and then the Mother Club Fall Curling Classic [7] with a fourth win at the Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Classic in October. [8] In December, the team lost in the finals of the 2018 Canada Cup and 2018 National. Their strong play during the early part of the season earned them enough points to put team Einarson in the Wild Card game at the 2019 Scotties Tournament of Hearts. However the team lost to the lower ranked Casey Scheidegger rink. The team would rebound to have a strong finish at the end of the season, winning the 2019 Players' Championship and losing in the final of the 2019 Champions Cup.
Team Einarson had two playoff finishes at the first two Slams of the 2019–20 season, losing to Anna Hasselborg in the quarterfinal of the Masters and once again to Hasselborg in the final of the Tour Challenge. The team did not have the same success at the Canada Cup as they did in 2018, finishing with a 2–4 record. However, at the 2020 Manitoba Scotties Tournament of Hearts, her team succeeded. They finished the round robin and championship round with a 7–1 record which qualified them for the final. In the final, they defeated Jennifer Jones. It was Meilleur's first Manitoba Scotties Tournament of Hearts provincial title. Team Einarson represented Manitoba at the 2020 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, where they continued their success. They finished first in the round robin with a 9–2 record and then won the 1 vs. 2 page playoff game, qualifying them for the final. Meilleur would win her first Canadian Championship when they defeated Rachel Homan 8–7 in and extra end. [9] The team was set to represent Canada at the 2020 World Women's Curling Championship before the event got cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. [10] [11] The Scotties would be their last event of the season as both the Players' Championship and the Champions Cup Grand Slam events were also cancelled due to the pandemic. [12]
Team Einarson returned to the Scotties Tournament of Hearts in 2021 as Team Canada. They went 7–1 in the round robin, with their only loss coming against Ontario's Rachel Homan. This qualified them for the championship round. There, they won three games and lost one to Manitoba's Jennifer Jones. [13] They advanced to the playoffs as the second seed, defeating Alberta's Laura Walker 9–3 in the semifinal. In the final, they defeated Homan to win their second consecutive Scotties gold. [14] A month later, Meilleur was back in the Calgary bubble to compete with Mark Nichols at the 2021 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship. The pair failed to qualify for the playoffs, posting a 3–3 round robin record. Meilleur returned to the bubble for a third time in April 2021, along with her women's team to play in the two only Grand Slam events of the abbreviated season. The team made it to the semifinals of the 2021 Champions Cup where they lost to Team Homan, but got their revenge at the 2021 Players' Championship a week later, where they beat Homan in the final. [15] The following week, Team Einarson represented Canada at the 2021 World Women's Curling Championship. The team had a slow start to the event, falling to 1–5 after their first six games. [16] They turned things around, however, winning six of their seven remaining round robin games to qualifying for the playoffs. [17] They then faced Sweden's Anna Hasselborg in the qualification game, which they lost 8–3. [18]
Meilleur currently works as a CAD Technician for EuroCraft Office Furnishings. [2]
Season | Skip | Third | Second | Lead |
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2011–12 [19] | Briane Meilleur | Krysten Karwacki | Amy Agnew | Meagan Grenkow |
2012–13 | Selena Kaatz | Briane Meilleur | Kristin MacCuish | Katherine Doersken |
2013–14 | Breanne Knapp | Katherine Doersken | Briane Meilleur | Krysten Karwacki |
2014–15 | Jill Thurston | Brette Richards | Briane Meilleur | Krysten Karwacki |
2015–16 | Cathy Overton-Clapham | Briane Meilleur | Katherine Doersken | Krysten Karwacki |
2016–17 | Briane Meilleur | Rhonda Varnes | Janelle Vachon | Sarah Neufeld |
2017–18 | Briane Meilleur | Breanne Knapp | Janelle Vachon | Sarah Neufeld |
2018–19 | Kerri Einarson | Val Sweeting | Shannon Birchard | Briane Meilleur |
2019–20 | Kerri Einarson | Val Sweeting | Shannon Birchard | Briane Meilleur |
2020–21 | Kerri Einarson | Val Sweeting | Shannon Birchard | Briane Meilleur |
2021–22 | Kerri Einarson | Val Sweeting | Shannon Birchard | Briane Meilleur |
Jennifer Judith Jones OM is a Canadian curler. She was the Olympic champion in curling as skip of the Canadian team at the 2014 Sochi Games. Jones is the first female skip to go through the Games undefeated. The only male skip to achieve this was fellow Canadian Kevin Martin in 2010. Jones and her squad were the first Manitoba based curling team to win an Olympic gold medal. They won the 2008 World Women's Curling Championship, and were the last Canadian women's team to do so until Rachel Homan in 2017. She won a second world championship in 2018. Jones represented Canada at the 2022 Winter Olympics.
Dawn Kathleen McEwen is a Canadian retired curler from Winnipeg, Manitoba. She was the long-time lead for the Jennifer Jones rink, who became Olympic champions, winning gold for Canada at the 2014 Winter Olympics. McEwen is a two-time world champion in curling having won with Jones at the 2008 World Championships and again at the 2018 World Championships. In 2019, McEwen was named the greatest Canadian female lead in history in a TSN poll of broadcasters, reporters and top curlers.
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.
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Lesley Kaitlyn Lawes is a Canadian curler. Lawes was the long time third for the Jennifer Jones team that represented Canada at the 2014 Winter Olympics where they won the gold medal. They were the first women's team to go through the Olympics undefeated and the first Manitoba based curling team to win at the Olympics. Lawes curled with John Morris in the mixed doubles event at the 2018 Winter Olympics where they won gold. This win made her and Morris the first Canadian curlers to win two Olympic gold medals, and Lawes was the first to win gold in two consecutive Olympics.
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Valerie Sweeting is a Canadian curler from Lottie Lake, Alberta She currently plays third for Team Kerri Einarson. Sweeting skipped Alberta to a silver medal at the 2014 and 2015 Scotties Tournament of Hearts and won the tournament in 2020, 2021, and 2022 with Team Kerri Einarson.
Lisa Colleen Weagle is a Canadian curler from Ottawa, Ontario. Weagle was the lead on the Rachel Homan team from 2010 until March 12, 2020 when the team announced they would be parting ways with her. Weagle is known for her ability to make the eponymous "Weagle" shot, which the Homan rink had used in high frequency while she was a member of the team.
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