Sandra Ramstein-Attinger | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
♀ | |||||||||||
Born | Sandra Attinger | ||||||||||
Team | |||||||||||
Curling club | CC Dübendorf, Dübendorf, [1] Flims PurePower CC, Flims | ||||||||||
Career | |||||||||||
Member Association | Switzerland | ||||||||||
World Championship appearances | 3 (2006, 2007, 2010) | ||||||||||
Medal record
|
Sandra Ramstein-Attinger (born as Sandra Attinger, also known as Sandra Ramstein) is a Swiss curler. [2]
At the national level, she is a 2010 Swiss women's champion.
Season | Skip | Third | Second | Lead | Alternate | Coach | Events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2005–06 | Silvana Tirinzoni | Sandra Attinger | Anna Neuenschwander | Esther Neuenschwander | Carmen Schäfer | Erika Müller | WCC 2006 (10th) |
2006–07 | Silvana Tirinzoni | Esther Neuenschwander | Anna Neuenschwander | Sandra Attinger | Mirjam Ott | Silvia Moser | WCC 2007 (5th) |
2007–08 | Binia Feltscher-Beeli | Sandra Attinger | Yvonne Schlunegger | Corinne Bourquin | |||
2008–09 | Binia Feltscher-Beeli | Sandra Ramstein-Attinger | Sibille Buhlmann | Corinne Bourquin | |||
2009–10 | Binia Feltscher | Corinne Bourquin | Sibille Bühlmann | Sandra Ramstein | Yvonne Schlunegger, Heike Schwaller | Gaudenz Beeli | SWCC 2010 [3] |
Binia Feltscher-Beeli | Corinne Bourquin | Heike Schwaller | Sandra Ramstein-Attinger | Marisa Winkelhausen | Gaudenz Beeli, Lorne Hamblin | WCC 2010 (10th) | |
2010–11 | Binia Feltscher-Beeli | Marlene Albrecht | Franziska Kaufmann | Christine Urech | Sandra Ramstein, Heike Schwaller, Martina Baumann, A. Schlunegger | Gaudenz Beeli | SWCC 2011 (4th) [4] [5] |
2011–12 | Corinne Bourquin | Fabienne Fürbringer | Daniela Rupp | Sandra Ramstein | Janine Wyss | Björn Schröder | SWCC 2012 (6th) [6] [7] |
2012–13 | Melanie Wild | Sandra Ramstein-Attinger | Daniela Rupp | Janine Wyss | |||
Sandra Ramstein | Daniela Rupp | Melanie Wild | Janine Wyss | Lea Jauch, Corinne Bourquin | SWCC 2013 (6th) [8] [9] |
Sandra Attinger grew up in the Attinger family of Swiss curlers. Her father Bernhard with his brothers - Peter Jr., Werner, Ruedi and Kurt - won Swiss and European championships and Worlds medals when they played on Peter Jr.'s team. Her grandfather Peter Sr. is a 1972 Swiss men's champion (he was skip of a team where Bernhard played and won his first national men's gold in 1972). Peter Jr.'s son Felix is a skip of a team that won the Swiss men's silver in 2017 and bronze in 2016. Peter Jr. coached his team. [10] [11]
Oskar Ingemar Eriksson is a Swedish curler from Karlstad. He currently plays third for the Niklas Edin rink. He is a four-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 curling championships in a single calendar year – the World Men's Curling Championship, the European Curling Championship, and the World Mixed Doubles Championship. He is the only member of Team Sweden to have competed in all of the World Men's Curling Championships from 2011 to 2019. He won medals in all but one of these championships, as well as playing in multiple positions – as skip, third, second, and as an alternate. As of 2021, he has reached twenty-three playoffs at Grand Slam of Curling events, including winning three Grand Slam tournaments and the Pinty's Cup as part of Team Niklas Edin, the first non-Canadian men's team to do so. In 2019, Eriksson and his teammates also became the first men's team since 2003 to win back-to-back World Curling Championships.
Alexander Attinger is a Swiss curler from Dübendorf.
Felix Luchsinger is a former Swiss curler. He skipped the Swiss rink that won the 1986 European Curling Championship.
Thomas Grendelmeier is a former Swiss curler. He played third position on the Swiss rink that won the 1986 European Curling Championship.
Peter Attinger Jr. is a former Swiss curler and curling coach. He was the skip of the Swiss rink that won two European Curling Championships and medals at the World Men's Championships of 1979, and 1984 (silver) and 1974 (bronze).
Attinger is a surname.
Bernhard Attinger is a former Swiss curler. He played third position on the Swiss rink that won two European Curling Championships and medals at the World Men's Championships in 1979 and 1984 (silver) and 1974 (bronze).
Werner Attinger is a former Swiss curler. He played second position on the Swiss rink that won the 1984 European Curling Championships and a silver medal at the 1984 World Men's Championship.
Kurt Attinger was a Swiss curler. He played lead position on the Swiss rink that won the 1984 European Curling Championships and a silver medal at the 1984 World Men's Championship.
Ruedi Attinger is a former Swiss curler. He played lead position on the Swiss rink that won two 1976 European Curling Championships and a silver medal at the 1979 World Men's Championship.
Mattias "Matti" Neuenschwander is a former Swiss curler. He played lead position on the Swiss rink that won two 1976 European Curling Championships and a silver medal at the 1979 World Men's Championship.
Evi Rüegsegger is a former Swiss curler.
Martin Zürrer is a Swiss curler and curling coach.
Lucien Lottenbach is a Swiss curler.
Sandra Gantenbein is a Swiss curler.
Nicole Dünki is a Swiss female curler.
Corinne Bourquin is a Swiss curler and curling coach.
Jan Hess is a Swiss curler.
Bernhard Werthemann is a Swiss curler and curling coach.
The Swiss Junior Curling Championships are the national championships of men's and women's junior curling teams in Switzerland. Junior level curlers must be under the age of 21. The championships have been held annually since 1972 for junior men and since 1984 for junior women. The championships are organized by the Swiss Curling Association.