Dale Johnston (curler)

Last updated
Dale Johnston
Team
Curling club Medicine Hat CC, Medicine Hat, AB
Career
Member AssociationFlag of Alberta.svg  Alberta
Brier appearances1 (1978)
World Championship
appearances
1 (1978)

Dale R. Johnston [1] [2] is a Canadian curler.

He is a 1978 World Men's bronze medallist [3] and a 1978 Brier champion.

Contents

Teams

SeasonSkipThirdSecondLeadEvents
1977–78 Ed Lukowich (fourth) Mike Chernoff (skip)Dale Johnston Ron Schindle Brier 1978 Gold medal icon.svg
WCC 1978 Bronze medal icon.svg

Related Research Articles

Stephen "Steve" Gould is a Canadian retired curler from Headingley, Manitoba. As a lead for Jeff Stoughton, he won 2 World Championships and 3 Briers. He is currently the coach of the Tanner Horgan rink.

Craig Edward Savill is a Canadian curler from Manotick, Ontario, Canada. He currently coaches the Czech men's national team.

Donald Gordon Duguid is a Canadian champion curler. A three-time winner of the Canadian Brier and two-time World Curling champion, Duguid won the Brier in 1965, 1970 and 1971, and the Worlds in 1970 and 1971. He was inducted into the Canadian Curling Hall of Fame in 1974, Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1991, and the WCF Hall of Fame in 2013. In 2014, he was made a member of the Order of Manitoba. In 1981, his 1970 & 1971 teams were inducted into the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame.

Edward R. "Ed" Lukowich is a former Canadian champion curler. Lukowich is a two-time Brier champion, having won the Brier Tankard for Alberta as skip of both the 1978 and 1986 Canadian championship teams. His team won the 1986 World Curling Championship and placed third at 1988 Olympics when curling was a demonstration sport.

Robert (Bob) "Bobby" Ursel is a Canadian curler and curling coach. Born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Ursel curls out of Kelowna, British Columbia.

Richard Dale “Rick” Folk is a Canadian curler and former Member of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan, where he represented the Progressive Conservative Party for one term from 1982 until 1986. He is a two-time world curling champion, representing Canada. When curling in Canada, Folk represented both Saskatchewan and British Columbia.

Colin Alexander "Collie" Campbell was a Canadian mining engineer, politician and curling administrator. Campbell was the president of the International Curling Federation from 1968 to 1978 and served as a Liberal Party member of the House of Commons of Canada. He was born in Shedden, Ontario.

Brett Gallant Canadian curler

Brett Philip Gallant is a Canadian curler from St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador. He currently plays second for the Brad Gushue rink.

Geoff Walker (curler) Canadian curler

Geoff Walker is a Canadian curler, currently living in Edmonton, Alberta. He currently plays lead for the Brad Gushue rink. He was the Men's World Champion in 2017 and won silver again the following year in 2018. A three-time national champion, he won the Brier in 2017, 2018, and 2020. Walker was a two-time World Junior Champion, when he won gold in 2006 and 2007.

Michael C. Kennedy is a Canadian curler from Edmundston, New Brunswick.

Jeffrey Ryan is a Canadian curler.

Robert Meakin is a Canadian curler and curling coach.

Daniel P. Petryk is a Canadian curler.

Patrick C. Perroud is a Canadian curler, a two-time World Men's champion and a two-time Tim Hortons Brier champion.

Murray R. Ursulak is a Canadian curler, 1989 World Men's champion and 1989 Brier champion.

James Spencer is a Canadian curler. He is a 1981 World Men's bronze medallist and a 1981 Brier champion.

Michael N. Chernoff is a Canadian curler and geologist from West Vancouver, British Columbia. He is a 1978 World Men's bronze medallist and a 1978 Brier champion.

Ronald E. Schindle is a Canadian curler.

Dale A. Dalziel is a former Canadian-American curler, 1971 World Men's bronze medallist and a 1971 United States men's curling champion.

The Fort William Curling Club is a curling club located in the Downtown Fort William neighbourhood of Thunder Bay, Ontario. The club hosted the Canadian men's curling championship in 1960 and the Canadian women's curling championship in 1969. It is also the home club of World Men's curling champions Al Hackner, Rick Lang, Bob Nicol, Bruce Kennedy, Ian Tetley, and Pat Perroud.

References

  1. 2017 Tim Hortons Brier Media Guide: Previous Rosters
  2. "Dave Johnston" - wrong writing in World Curling Federation database.
  3. Dave Johnston on the World Curling Federation database OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg