Caledonian Curling Club The Callie | |
---|---|
Location | 2225 Sandra Schmirler Way Regina, Saskatchewan S4W 1B6 |
Information | |
Established | 1915 |
Club type | Dedicated ice |
Curling Canada region | SCA Regina |
Sheets of ice | Twelve |
Rock colours | Red and yellow |
Website | http://www.callieclub.com/ |
The Caledonian Curling Club, also known as the Callie, is a curling club located in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. Established in 1915, the club is among the oldest in the province and has been the home of many championship teams, including the Sandra Schmirler rink, which won three provincial, national, and world championships in the 1990s and the gold medal at the 1998 Winter Olympics.
The Callie merged with the Tartan Curling Club in 2018, leaving it as one of two clubs in Regina, alongside the Highland Curling Club.
On 7 October 1915, curlers gathered in Slater and Finlayson's store to discuss prospects for the formation of a second curling club in Regina; it was agreed that a second club would prove beneficial to the interests of curling in the city, and that the additional rink would provide better accommodation for the provincial bonspiel. The club was officially established on 14 October 1915, when it was christened the Caledonian Curling Club of Regina. C. J. Watson, who had chaired the meetings, was named the first president of the club.[ citation needed ]
The club was originally situated on the Regina Fair Grounds, moving between various buildings before settling in the Grain Show Building by 1933. In November 1978, the club moved to its current location next to the Regina International Airport. [1]
In 2015, the club marked its 100th anniversary with a multi-day 100-end curling match. [2]
In 2018, the Callie absorbed the former Tartan Curling Club when it closed. [3]
In 2023, the Callie began hosting the Queen City Curling League, the province's second LGBT curling league after the Prairie Lily Curling League was established at Saskatoon's Nutana Curling Club in 2014. [4] [5]
The Callie is noted for being the home of Sandra Schmirler's world championship team. [1] Schmirler, along with third Jan Betker, second Joan McCusker, and lead Marcia Gudereit, won three national and World Championships in the 1990s before winning the first Olympic gold medal in women's curling in 1998. In 2019, the team was voted first in a national ranking of the best ever women's curling teams. [6] After Schmirler died in 2000, Betker skipped two more provincial championship teams.
Long before the Schmirler team's success, the Callie produced the first women's team to win an inter-provincial competition when Janet Perkin's rink won the 1953 Western Canadian Ladies' Championship, which was hosted in Regina. [7] In 1980, Marj Mitchell's team won Canada's first Women's World Championship in the second ever edition of the event in Perth, Scotland. [8] In 1990, the Atina Ford rink won the Canadian Junior Championship, while Nancy Kerr's team won the 2003 Canadian and World Seniors titles. [9] Overall, the Callie has been the home of fifteen women's provincial champions.
On the men's side, the Callie has been home to four Canadian Junior Champions, as well as the 2005 World Junior Champion Kyle George rink. [10] In 1998, Gary Bryden's rink won the Canadian Senior Championship. [11] Altogether, Caledonian rinks have claimed six men's provincial championships.
The club also secured a Canadian Mixed Curling title in 1996, with Randy Bryden's rink, featuring brother Russ and sisters Cathy Trowell (Inglis) and Karen Inglis, winning the championship. [12]
Year | Event | Skip | Third | Second | Lead | Nationals record |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2013 | SaskTel Tankard | Brock Virtue | Braeden Moskowy | Chris Schille | D. J. Kidby | 5–6 |
2011 | Canadian Junior Curling Championship | Braeden Moskowy | Kirk Muyres | Colton Flasch | Matt Lang | 13–0 |
2007 | Saskatchewan Scotties Tournament of Hearts | Jan Betker | Lana Vey | Nancy Inglis | Marcia Gudereit | 10–3 |
2005 | Canadian Junior Curling Championship World Junior Curling Championship | Kyle George | Justin Mihalicz | D. J. Kidby | Chris Hebert | 11–2 |
2003 | Canadian Senior Curling Championship World Senior Curling Championship | Nancy Kerr | Linda Burnham | Kenda Richards | Gertie Pick | 11–2 |
2003 | Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts | Jan Betker | Sherry Linton | Joan McCusker | Marcia Gudereit | 7–5 |
2002 | Saskatchewan Wheat Pool Tankard | Scott Bitz | Mark Lang | Brian McCusker | Kelly Moskowy | 7–5 |
2001 | Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts | Michelle Ridgway | Lorie Kehler | Roberta Materi | Joan Stricker | 4–7 |
2000 | Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts | June Campbell | Cathy Walter | Karen Daku | Leanne Whitrow | 8–4 |
1998 | Winter Olympics | Sandra Schmirler | Jan Betker | Joan McCusker | Marcia Gudereit | — |
1998 | Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts | Cathy Trowell | Kristy Lewis | Karen Daku | Keri-Lynn Schikowski | 6–6 |
1998 | Canadian Senior Curling Championship | Gary Bryden | Dale Graham | Wilf Foss | Jerry Zimmer | 10–2 |
1997 | Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts Scott Tournament of Hearts World Women's Curling Championship | Sandra Schmirler | Jan Betker | Joan McCusker | Marcia Gudereit | 11–2 |
1996 | Canadian Mixed Curling Championship | Randy Bryden | Cathy Trowell | Russ Bryden | Karen Inglis | 11–3 |
1994 | Scott Tournament of Hearts World Women's Curling Championship | Sandra Peterson | Jan Betker | Joan McCusker | Marcia Gudereit | 11–1 |
1993 | Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts Scott Tournament of Hearts World Women's Curling Championship | Sandra Peterson | Jan Betker | Joan McCusker | Marcia Gudereit | 10–2 |
1992 | Labatt Tankard | Brad Hebert | Warren Sharp | Bob Novakowski | Kerry Gudereit | 5–6 |
1991 | Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts | Sandra Peterson | Jan Betker | Joan Inglis | Marcia Schiml | 8–5 |
1990 | Canadian Junior Curling Championship | Atina Ford | Darlene Kidd | Leslie Beck | Cindy Ford | 10–2 |
1984 | Labatt Tankard | Gary Bryden | Dale Graham | Wilf Foss | Jerry Zimmer | 7–5 |
1982 | Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts | Arleen Day | Shirley McKendry | Velva Squire | Dorthy Hepper | 8–4 |
1980 | Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts Canadian Ladies Curling Association Championship World Women's Curling Championship | Marj Mitchell | Nancy Kerr | Shirley McKendry | Wendy Leach | 9–4 |
1977 | Macdonald Tankard | Les Rogers | Greg Manwaring | Morris Tait | Vic Rogers | 5–6 |
1975 | Saskatchewan Lassies' Curling Championship | Marj Mitchell | Kenda Richards | Nancy Kerr | Florence Sanna | 7–3 |
1967 | Saskatchewan Ladies' Curling Championship | Betty Clarke | Enid Anderson | Jean Broeder | Beverly Langton | 5–4 |
1964 | Saskatchewan Ladies' Curling Championship | Janet Perkin | Kay Krug | Joyce Miller | Doreen Thomas | 5–4 |
1959 | Saskatchewan Ladies' Curling Championship | Janet Perkin | Win Rogers | Joyce Miller | B. Malesh | — |
1956 | National Schoolboys Championship | Bob Hawkins | Ted Clarke | Bruce Beveridge | Dave Williams | |
1953 | Saskatchewan Ladies' Curling Championship Western Canadian Ladies' Championship | Janet Perkin | Phyllis Day | Jean Graham | Joyce Miller | 3–1 |
1950 | National Schoolboys Championship | Bill Clarke | Gary Carlson | Ian Innes | Harold Grassie | |
1949 | Macdonald Tankard | Harold Horeak | Edward Richter | John Heaney | Ernest Kittleson | 4–5 |
Tartan Curling Club | |
---|---|
Location | 1464 Broadway Avenue Regina, Saskatchewan S4P 1E2 |
Information | |
Established | 1948 |
Club type | Dedicated ice |
Closed | 2018 |
Sheets of ice | Ten |
Rock colours | Red and blue |
In 2018, the Callie absorbed the former Tartan Curling Club, which closed the doors at its Broadway Avenue location after 60 years of operating there. [3] [14] At the time of the closure, the two clubs proposed a merger to help stabilize curling in the city. [15] The Tartan was founded in 1948 as the Civil Service Curling Club, which later merged with the Community Co-operative Curling Association and changed its name to the Tartan. The club opened a ten-sheet artificial ice rink in 1958. In 2003, the Tartan absorbed the Wheat City Curling Club upon its closure. [16] The Tartan itself was the home of a number of provincial championship rinks, including Randy Woytowich's mixed rink that went undefeated en route to the 1984 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship. [17]
Year | Event | Skip | Third | Second | Lead | Nationals record |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2012 | Canadian Mixed Curling Championship | Jason Ackerman | Chantelle Eberle | Dean Hicke | Colleen Ackerman | 11–4 |
2012 | Saskatchewan Scotties Tournament of Hearts | Michelle Englot | Lana Vey | Roberta Materi | Sarah Slywka | 5–6 |
2011 | SaskTel Tankard | Steve Laycock | Pat Simmons | Brennen Jones | Dallan Muyres | 4–7 |
2008 | Saskatchewan Scotties Tournament of Hearts | Michelle Englot | Darlene Kidd | Roberta Materi | Cindy Simmons | 5–6 |
1993 | Labatt Tankard | Randy Woytowich | Brian McCusker | Wyatt Buck | John Grundy | 6–5 |
1992 | Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts | Michelle Schneider | Kathy Fahlman | Joan Stricker | Lorie Kehler | 7–4 |
1991 | Labatt Tankard | Randy Woytowich | Brian McCusker | Wyatt Buck | John Grundy | 8–4 |
1990 | Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts | Michelle Schneider | Kathy Fahlman | Joan Stricker | Lorie Kehler | 6–5 |
1989 | Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts | Michelle Schneider | Joan Stricker | Lorie Kehler | Leanne Eberle | 8–5 |
1988 | Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts | Michelle Schneider | Jan Herauf | Lorie Kehler | Leanne Eberle | 9–3 |
1987 | Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts | Kathy Fahlman | Sandra Schmirler | Jan Betker | Sheila Schneider | 7–5 |
1984 | Canadian Mixed Curling Championship | Randy Woytowich | Kathy Fahlman | Brian McCusker | Jan Betker | 12–0 |
Sandra Marie Schmirler was a Canadian curler who captured three Canadian Curling Championships and three World Curling Championships. Schmirler also skipped (captained) her Canadian team to a gold medal at the 1998 Winter Olympics, the first year women's curling was a medal sport. At tournaments where she was not competing, Schmirler sometimes worked as a commentator for CBC Sports, which popularized her nickname "Schmirler the Curler" and claimed she was the only person who had a name that rhymed with the sport she played. She died in 2000 at 36 of cancer, leaving a legacy that extended outside of curling. Schmirler was honoured posthumously with an induction into the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame and was awarded the World Curling Freytag Award, which later led to her induction into the World Curling Federation Hall of Fame.
Janice "Jan" Betker is a Canadian curler. Betker is best known for playing third on the Sandra Schmirler rink that won three world championships and an Olympic gold medal in the 1990s. Following Schmirler's death from cancer in 2000, Betker replaced her as the team's skip.
Kevin Martin, nicknamed "The Old Bear" and "K-Mart", is a Canadian retired curler from Edmonton, Alberta, an Olympic, World and four-time Canadian champion and a member of the World Curling Hall of Fame. He is considered by many commentators and former and current curlers to be the greatest curler of all time. He is also known for his rivalries with Randy Ferbey/David Nedohin, the best Alberta provincial rivalry ever as the two teams were generally regarded the best in the world from 2002 to 2006; his rivalry with Jeff Stoughton, perhaps the most famous all prairies rivalry ever which spanned over 2 decades from 1991 to 2014; with Glenn Howard from 2007 to 2014, perhaps the best two team rivalry in Canadian curling history, and his rivalry with Sweden's Peja Lindholm from 1997 to 2006, perhaps the best ever men's Canada-Europe rivalry.
The 1998 Scott Tournament of Hearts, the Canadian women's national curling championship, was held from February 21 to March 1 at the Agridome in Regina, Saskatchewan. This was the last major tournament in which Sandra Schmirler participated in prior to her death in 2000. The total attendance for the week set a record 154,688 which broke the previous mark set in 1993 by exactly 66,666. As of 2023, this remains the attendance record for the event.
Sports in Saskatchewan consist of a wide variety of team and individual games, and include summer, winter, indoor, and outdoor games. Saskatchewan's cold winter climate has ensured the popularity of sports including its official sport, curling, as well as ice hockey, ice skating, and cross-country skiing. The province also has warm summers and popular summer sports include baseball, football, soccer, basketball, track and field, rodeo, horse-racing, and golf.
Amber Holland is a Canadian curler from Loreburn, Saskatchewan. Holland skipped Saskatchewan's team to a national women's championship in 2011 by defeating defending champion Jennifer Jones in the Scotties Tournament of Hearts and won a silver medal at the 2011 Capital One World Women's Curling Championship. She also won a national championship at the junior level in 1992, and captured a silver medal at the World Junior Curling Championships in 1993 after losing in the final.
Joan McCusker is a Canadian curler and Olympic gold medallist.
The SaskTel Tankard is the annual provincial championship for men's curling in Saskatchewan, with the winner representing the province at the Montana's Brier, the national men's championship. The bonspiel, which is organized by CURLSASK, the provincial curling association, is also known as the SaskTel Provincial Men's Curling Championship. SaskTel became the title sponsor in 2004; the Tankard was previously known as the Macdonald Tankard (1927–1979), the Labatt Tankard (1980–1994), the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool Tankard (1995–2003), and the SaskTel Mobility Tankard (2004–2006).
Atina Ford-Johnston is a Canadian curler originally from Gray, Saskatchewan.
The Viterra Saskatchewan Scotties Tournament of Hearts is the annual Saskatchewan provincial women's curling championship. The winning team represents Saskatchewan at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts, the national women's championship. The bonspiel is organized by CURLSASK, the provincial curling association.
The Sutherland Curling Club is an historic curling club located in the Sutherland Industrial sector of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. The club was established in 1910 in the village of Sutherland, which became part of Saskatoon in 1956. Today, the Sutherland is the oldest curling club in the city and one of three overall, alongside the Nutana Curling Club and the CN Curling Club.
Jolene Campbell is a Canadian curler from Regina, Saskatchewan. She currently skips her own team out of Winnipeg.
The Nutana Curling Club is a curling club located in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. Established in 1929 and first opening its doors in 1930, the club was originally located in the city's historic Nutana neighbourhood. The club relocated to the south-central Nutana Suburban Centre neighbourhood in 1966. Once one of six curling clubs in Saskatoon, Nutana is one of three clubs still operating along with the Sutherland Curling Club and the CN Curling Club.
Emily Blanche Farnham was a Canadian curler. She and her team of Linda Saunders, Pat McBeath and Donna Collins from the Nutana Curling Club in Saskatoon dominated the women's curling scene during the 1973-74 season, capping the year off by winning the 1974 Macdonald Lassies Championship, Canada's national women's curling championship.
Randy Woytowich is a Canadian curler from Saskatchewan. He is a former Canadian mixed champion and two-time provincial men's champion.
Anita Ford is a Canadian curler and curling coach from Regina, Saskatchewan. She is known as the alternate and later coach of the Sandra Schmirler team.
Nancy Kerr is a Canadian curler.
The 1996 Unitel Canadian Mixed Curling Championship was held January 6-14 at the Charlottetown Curling Club in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island.
Dorenda Alene Bailey better known as Dorenda Schoenhals is a Canadian curler. She is a former Canadian women's, mixed and university champion.
The Highland Curling Club is a curling club located in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. It is one of two clubs in the city, along with the Caledonian Curling Club.