Charlotte Clemmensen | |
---|---|
♀ | |
Born | 29 September 1992 |
Team | |
Curling club | Hvidovre CC, Hvidovre |
Curling career | |
Member Association | Denmark |
World Championship appearances | 3 (2015, 2016, 2017) |
European Championship appearances | 3 (2014, 2015, 2016) |
Other appearances | World Junior Championships: 3 (2009, 2013, 2014), European Junior Challenge: 3 (2011, 2012, 2013) |
Medal record |
Charlotte T. Clemmensen (born 29 September 1992 in Copenhagen) is a Danish female curler. [1]
At the national level, she is a two-time Danish women's champion (2016, 2017) and a three-time junior champion (2009, 2013, 2014).
Season | Skip | Third | Second | Lead | Alternate | Coach | Events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2008–09 | Mette de Neergaard | Marie de Neergaard | Natasha Hinze Glenstrøm | Charlotte Clemmensen | Christine Svensen (WJCC) | Ole de Neergaard | DJCC 2009 [2] WJCC 2009 (8th) |
2010–11 | Stephanie Nielsen | Jannie Gundry | Christine Svensen | Cecilie Hygom | Charlotte Clemmensen | Kirsten Jensen | EJCC 2011 (4th) |
2011–12 | Stephanie Nielsen | Jannie Gundry | Christine Svensen | Natasha Hinze Glenstrøm | Charlotte Clemmensen | Michael Harry | EJCC 2012 |
2012–13 | Stephanie Risdal Nielsen | Jannie Gundry | Isabella Clemmensen | Charlotte Clemmensen | Julie Høgh | Ulrik Schmidt (EJCC) Helena Blach Lavrsen (WJCC) | DJCC 2013 EJCC 2013 WJCC 2013 (6th) |
2013–14 | Stephanie Risdal Nielsen | Jannie Gundry | Charlotte Clemmensen | Julie Høgh | Isabella Clemmensen | DWCC 2014 (4th) | |
Christine Svensen | Isabella Clemmensen | Julie Høgh | Charlotte Clemmensen | Sara Rasmussen (WJCC) | Ulrik Schmidt | DJCC 2014 WJCC 2014 (10th) | |
2014–15 | Lene Nielsen | Jeanne Ellegaard | Stephanie Risdal Nielsen | Charlotte Clemmensen | Isabella Clemmensen | Ulrik Schmidt | ECC 2014 (4th) WCC 2015 (8th) |
2015–16 | Lene Nielsen | Stephanie Risdal | Isabella Clemmensen | Charlotte Clemmensen | Madeleine Dupont | Ulrik Schmidt | ECC 2015 (4th) WCC 2016 (8th) |
Lene Nielsen | Stephanie Risdal | Charlotte Clemmensen | Isabella Clemmensen | DWCC 2016 | |||
2016–17 | Lene Nielsen | Madeleine Dupont | Stephanie Risdal | Charlotte Clemmensen | Denise Dupont | Ulrik Schmidt | ECC 2016 (5th) DWCC 2017 WCC 2017 (12th) |
Her younger sister Isabella is also a curler and Charlotte's teammate. [3]
Cassandra "Cassie" Potter is an American curler best known for skipping the United States Women's Curling Team at the 2006 Winter Olympics and the 2005 Women's World Curling Championships. Her sister is fellow curler and long-time teammate Jamie Haskell.
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.
Eve Muirhead is a Scottish former curler from Perth and the skip of the British Olympic Curling team. Muirhead and the GB team became Olympic champions at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, having previously won the bronze medal at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.
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.
Lene Nielsen is a Danish curler. She was the skip of the 2014 Danish Olympic Curling Team.
Rasmus Stjerne Hansen is a retired Danish curler. He is a former world junior champion and world men's silver medalist. He curls out of the Hvidovre Curling Club.
Jamie Ann Sinclair is an American-Canadian curler from Osgoode, Ontario and is a three-time U.S. National Champion. Her United States Curling Association membership is through the Charlotte Curling Association in Charlotte, North Carolina where she has a number of personal connections. She grew up in Manotick, Ontario, a suburb of Ottawa.
Victoria Elizabeth "Vicki" Chalmers is a Scottish former curler who was the long time second for Eve Muirhead. Representing Scotland, they won the 2013 World Championships and the European Championships in 2011 and 2017. Representing Great Britain, they are the 2014 Olympic bronze medallists and finished fourth at the 2018 Winter Olympics.
Cory Thiesse is an American curler from Duluth, Minnesota. She currently plays third on Team Tabitha Peterson. She is a three-time defending U.S. women's champion, winning titles in 2021, 2023 and 2024. Thiesse was one of the top junior women's curlers in the United States, playing in six national junior championships and winning four of them. She was the alternate on Nina Roth's 2018 United States Olympic team.
Tabitha Skelly Peterson is an American curler from Minneapolis, Minnesota. She was a bronze medalist at the 2010 World Junior Championships and is a three-time women's national champion. She currently is skip of her own team, having traded positions with Nina Roth during the 2020 off-season.
Mary Fay is a Canadian curler from Chester, Nova Scotia.
Oliver Dupont is a Danish curler. He won a gold medal at the 2009 World Junior Curling Championships.
Dorottya Palancsa is a Hungarian female curler.
György Nagy is a Hungarian male curler.
Taylor Anderson-Heide is an American curler from Minneapolis, Minnesota. She is currently the alternate on Team Tabitha Peterson. Along with her twin sister Sarah, she was United States National Champion in 2019 and World Junior silver medalist in 2016.
Briar Schwaller-Hürlimann is a Swiss curler from Recherswil. She won a World Women's Championship for Switzerland playing lead for Team Silvana Tirinzoni in 2023.
Christine Grønbech is a Danish female curler.
Isabella Clemmensen is a Danish female curler.
Gert Munch Larsen is a Danish curler and curling coach.
Bernt Sjöberg is a Swedish wheelchair curler.