Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Representing Norway | ||
Women's Curling | ||
World championships | ||
2004 Gävle | Team | |
2002 Bismark | Team | |
2005 Paisley | Team | |
European championships | ||
2000 Oberstdorf | ||
2002 Grindelwald | ||
2004 Sofia |
Camilla Holth (born 25 December 1978) is a Norwegian curler. She won a silver medal at the 2004 World Curling Championships. [1]
Madeleine Kanstrup Dupont is a Danish curler from Copenhagen. She won the Frances Brodie Award in 2004. She currently skips her own team with teammates Mathilde Halse, Jasmin Holtermann, My Larsen, and Denise Dupont.
The European Curling Championships are annual curling tournaments held in Europe between various European nations. The European Curling Championships are usually held in early to mid December. The tournament also acts as a qualifier for the World Championships, where the top eight nations qualify.
Norway sent 74 athletes to the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. At the 2002 Winter Olympics Norway won the most gold medals, and before the Turin games, Norwegian sports officials were aiming for more than the 25 medals they won in Salt Lake City — the president of the Norwegian Skiing Federation Sverre Seeberg was quoted saying he thought Norway would win 25 medals in the skiing events alone. The Norwegian Olympic Committee aimed for Norway to be the best nation measured in the number of gold medals. However, Norway won only two gold medals in the games, the lowest amount since 1988.
The 2004 Continental Cup of Curling was held in Medicine Hat, Alberta from November 25 to 28. North America won its second title, defeating Team Europe 228–172.
Angelina Camilla Jensen is a Danish curler from Kastrup.
Denise Kanstrup Dupont is a Danish curler. She is currently the alternate on the Danish National Women's Curling Team skipped by her sister Madeleine Dupont.
Camilla Louise Skaarberg Jensen is a Danish curler. She currently plays on a team skipped by sister Angelina Jensen.
The 2003 Continental Cup of Curling was held at Fort William Gardens in Thunder Bay, Ontario November 27–30. Europe won its first title, 208-179.
Oskar Ingemar Eriksson is a Swedish curler from Karlstad. He currently plays third for the Niklas Edin rink. He is the first curler in history to win four Olympic medals – gold, silver, and two bronze – and the first to secure two Olympic medals in different curling disciplines in the same Olympic Games. He is also a seven-time World Men's Curling Champion, seven-time European Men's Curling Champion, and the first curler in history to win three gold medals in major international curling championships in a single calendar year – the World Men's Curling Championship, the European Curling Championship, and the World Mixed Doubles Championship. Having also won two World Mixed Doubles Championship medals, he is the first and the only curler to win eight World Curling Championship gold medals in the senior men's division and has won thirteen World Curling Championship medals overall in that division. He also holds the record for most gold medals in international competitions as recognized by the World Curling Federation. He is the only member of Team Sweden to have competed in all of the World Men's Curling Championships from 2011 to 2024. He won medals in all but two of these championships, as well as playing in multiple positions – as skip, third, second, and as an alternate. In 2022, Eriksson and his teammates also became the first men's team in history to win four consecutive World Men's Curling Championships. In 2024, Eriksson and Niklas Edin became the first and only two curlers in history to have seven career gold World Men's Curling Championship medals.
Ane Håkansson Hansen is an internationally elite curler from Denmark. She has an MSc in biology and is currently a PhD student in Exercise and Sport Sciences at the University of Copenhagen.
Marianne Haslum is a Norwegian curler.
The World Curling Championships are the annual world championships for curling, organized by the World Curling Federation and contested by national championship teams. There are men's, women's and mixed doubles championships, as well as men's and women's versions of junior and senior championships. There is also a world championship for wheelchair curling. The men's championship started in 1959, while the women's started in 1979. The mixed doubles championship was started in 2008. Since 2005, the men's and women's championships have been held in different venues, with Canada hosting one of the two championships every year: the men's championship in odd years, and the women's championship in even years. Canada has dominated both the men's and women's championships since their inception, although Switzerland, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Scotland, the United States, Norway and China have all won at least one championship.
Đorđe Nešković is a Serbian curler. He is the captain of the Serbian national curling team. Nešković represented Serbia at the 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 European Championship. At the 2013 European Curling Championships Group C with his teammates Bojan Mijatović, Goran Ungurović and Filip Stojanović, he won a bronze medal, first ever Serbian curling medal. He and his teammates are coached by Danish Olympian Camilla Jensen.
The 2014 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship were held from April 23 to 30 at the Dumfries Ice Bowl in Dumfries, Scotland. The event was held in conjunction with the 2014 World Senior Curling Championships.
Camilla Noréen is a Swedish curler.
Per Wilhelm Noréen is a Swedish curler and curling coach.
Karolina Legaard Jensen is a Danish female curler from Kastrup.
Holth is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Ingrid Camilla Claussen is a Norwegian female curler and coach.
Kirsten Jensen is a Danish curler and curling coach.