Selina Gafner | |||||||||||||||
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Born | July 6, 2003 | ||||||||||||||
Team | |||||||||||||||
Curling club | GC Zurich, Zurich, SUI [2] | ||||||||||||||
Skip | Xenia Schwaller | ||||||||||||||
Third | Selina Gafner | ||||||||||||||
Second | Fabienne Rieder | ||||||||||||||
Lead | Selina Rychiger | ||||||||||||||
Curling career | |||||||||||||||
Member Association | Switzerland | ||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Selina Gafner (born July 6, 2003) is a Swiss curler from Bern. [3] She currently plays third on Team Xenia Schwaller. Playing for Schwaller, Gafner won gold at the 2024 World Junior Curling Championships.
Gafner won back-to-back bronze medals at the Swiss Junior Curling Championships in 2019 and 2020 as third for Fabienne Rieder. [4] [5] For the 2020–21 season, she joined the Sarah Müller rink out of the Grasshopper Club Zurich. With most of the season cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the team only played in one event, finishing winless at the 2020 Women's Masters Basel. [6]
For the 2021–22 season, Xenia Schwaller joined the team as their new skip with Müller moving to alternate and Gafner moving to lead. [7] In September 2021, the team, also including Malin Da Ros and Marion Wüest, won the Swiss junior trials, qualifying the team for the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships in Jönköping, Sweden. [8] Before Worlds, the team won the Swiss junior championship, securing their spot as the Swiss national team for the 2023 world championship the following season. [9] They also finished third at the 2022 Swiss Women's Curling Championship. At World Juniors, the team had mixed results. Sitting 3–4 with two games left, they stole in an extra end to defeat Japan's Sae Yamamoto and then beat Latvia's Evelīna Barone in their final round robin game. This left the team tied for fourth in the standings with Sweden and Latvia. As all the teams held 1–1 head-to-head records against each other, draw to the button was used to decide the final qualifier. [10] Sweden advanced to the playoffs with a 40.56 draw while Switzerland finished fifth with a total of 47.42. Malin Da Ros stepped back from competitive curling following the season and Sarah Müller aged out of juniors. They were replaced by Fabienne Rieder and Selina Rychiger respectively. [11]
Team Schwaller began competing in more women's events during the 2022–23 season while still junior eligible. The team played in the 2022 Women's Masters Basel where they went undefeated until the quarterfinals where they narrowly lost to the Silvana Tirinzoni rink 4–3. [12] They continued their momentum into the rest of the season, going undefeated to claim the Match Town Trophy in October and the St. Galler Elite Challenge in the new year. [13] [14] They also won the OVCA U21 Junior Superspiel in Ottawa, Ontario, defeating many of the top ranked Canadian junior teams in the process. In February, the team represented Switzerland at the 2023 World Junior Curling Championships where they were dominant through the round robin, qualifying for the playoffs with an undefeated 9–0 record. In the semifinal, they faced Japan. After controlling most of the match, the gave up three points in the tenth end to lose 7–5. They could not recover in the bronze medal game, finishing fourth after an 8–5 loss to Norway. [15] The next month, the team turned things around by once again going undefeated to capture the 2023 Swiss junior championship, qualifying for the 2024 World Junior Curling Championships the following season. [16]
Throughout the 2023–24 season, Team Schwaller became a dominant force on the women's tour, defeating many of the top teams in the world. Their triumphant run began at the 2023 AMJ Campbell Shorty Jenkins Classic where they advanced to the semifinals after previous victories over Ha Seung-youn, Laurie St-Georges and Kim Eun-jung. [17] The team then won four straight tour events. On the Nordic Curling Tour, they defended their title at the Match Town Trophy before also claiming the Sundbyberg Open and the Danish Open. [18] [19] They then won the DeKalb Superspiel in Canada, defeating the likes of Krista McCarville, Delaney Strouse and Selena Sturmay in the process. [20] In the final, they won 6–5 over Serena Gray-Withers. [21] At the 2023 Western Showdown, they defeated 2018 Olympic gold medalist Anna Hasselborg in their round robin meeting, eventually losing to Korea's Gim Eun-ji in a qualification game. [22]
To begin the 2024 part of their season, they went undefeated until the final of the 2024 Cortina Curling Cup, falling 6–4 to Turkey's Dilşat Yıldız. [23] They then played in the 2024 International Bernese Ladies Cup where after a 3–2 round robin record, they defeated the world number one ranked Team Silvana Tirinzoni in the quarterfinals before losing out to Korea's Gim in the semifinals. [24] Next for Team Schwaller was the 2024 Swiss Women's Curling Championship where they again beat Tirinzoni in the round robin, along with Corrie Hürlimann and Roxane Héritier to finish 3–1 and qualifying directly for the final. There, they could not beat Tirinzoni for a third time, losing the match 5–4 and settling for silver. [25] Their success throughout the season made them the highest ranked team headed into the World Junior championships in Lohja, Finland. For the second straight year, they finished 9–0 through the round robin, again earning the top spot in the playoff round. [26] They then beat Canada's Myla Plett in the semifinal before securing the gold medal with a dominant 10–3 win against Japan's Momoha Tabata. [27] With the amount of points cumulated throughout the season, Team Schwaller became the first junior team to qualify outright for a Grand Slam of Curling event. [28] At the year-end 2024 Players' Championship, the team finished with a 1–4 record, defeating four-time Canadian champion Kerri Einarson 6–4 in their sole win. [29]
Gafner and her teammates are employed as soldier athletes. [30]
Season | Skip | Third | Second | Lead | Alternate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2018–19 [31] | Fabienne Rieder | Selina Gafner | Nadine Rieder | Larissa Rubin | Selina Rychiger |
2019–20 | Fabienne Rieder | Selina Gafner | Tina Zürcher | Nadine Rieder | Selina Rychiger |
2020–21 | Sarah Müller | Malin Da Ros | Marion Wüest | Eveline Matti | Selina Gafner |
2021–22 | Xenia Schwaller | Malin Da Ros | Marion Wüest | Selina Gafner | Sarah Müller |
2022–23 | Xenia Schwaller | Fabienne Rieder | Marion Wüest | Selina Gafner | Selina Rychiger |
2023–24 | Xenia Schwaller | Selina Gafner | Fabienne Rieder | Selina Rychiger | Marion Wüest |
2024–25 | Xenia Schwaller | Selina Gafner | Fabienne Rieder | Selina Rychiger |
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