Yu Jiaxin

Last updated
Yu Jiaxin
 
Born (1998-03-26) March 26, 1998 (age 26)
Team
Skip Han Yu
Third Wang Meini
Second Tian Linyuan
Lead Yu Jiaxin
Curling career Curling pictogram.svg
Member AssociationFlag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China
Pacific-Asia Championship
appearances
1 (2019)
Pan Continental Championship
appearances
1 (2023)
Other appearances World Junior Championships: 1 (2018)
Medal record
Women's Curling
Pacific-Asia Championships
Gold medal icon (G initial).svg 2019 Shenzhen
World Junior Championships
Bronze medal icon (B initial).svg 2018 Aberdeen

Yu Jiaxin [1] (born March 26, 1998, in Inner Mongolia) is a Chinese female curler from Changchun. [2] [3] She currently plays lead on Team Han Yu. At the international level, she is a 2019 Pacific-Asia champion.

Contents

Career

Yu was the alternate for the Chinese team at the 2018 World Junior Curling Championships where they won the bronze medal. She also was the alternate on the Chinese team skipped by Han Yu at the 2019 Pacific-Asia Curling Championships. They placed third after the round robin before defeating South Korea's Gim Un-chi in the semifinal and Japan's Seina Nakajima in the final.

Teams

Women's

SeasonSkipThirdSecondLeadAlternateCoachEvents
2017–18 Dong Ziqi (fourth) Wang Zixin (skip) Wang Meini Sun Chengyu Yu Jiaxin Zhu Yu WJCC 2018 Bronze medal icon.svg
2018–19 Han Siyu Liu Tong Ding Yuexin Yu Jiaxin [4]
2019–20 Han Yu Zhang Lijun Jiang Xindi Zhao Ruiyi Yu Jiaxin Marco Mariani, Sören Grahn PACC 2019 Gold medal icon.svg
Han Siyu Fan Suyuan Yu Jiaxin Yan Hui Zhang Di [5]
Han YuZhang LijunJiang XindiYu JiaxinDong ZiqiMarco Mariani WCC 2020
2023–24Han YuWang Meini Tian Linyuan Yu Jiaxin Wang Rui (PCCC) PCCC 2023

Mixed doubles

SeasonMaleFemaleCoachEvents
2018–19 Wang Xiangkun Yu Jiaxin Xu Xiaoming CWC/1 (7th)

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mari Motohashi</span> Japanese curler (born 1986)

Mari Motohashi is a Japanese curler. She currently plays third on Team Honoka Sasaki.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kim Eun-jung (curler)</span> South Korean curler (born 1990)

Kim Eun-jung, nicknamed "Annie" is a South Korean curler from Uiseong. She currently skips her own team on the World Curling Tour. Kim skipped the national team from 2016 to 2018 and represented Korea on home ice at the 2018 Winter Olympics, where her team won a silver medal.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Satsuki Fujisawa</span> Japanese curler (born 1991)

Satsuki Fujisawa is a Japanese curler from Kitami, Hokkaido. As a skip, she has won the Japanese national championship six times. Fujisawa skipped the bronze medal-winning Japanese team at the 2018 Winter Olympic Games and the silver medal-winning team at the 2022 Winter Olympics. She is currently the skip of the Loco Solare curling team.

Kaho Onodera is a Japanese curler from Sapporo, Hokkaido. She is the second on the FORTIUS curling team, which won the Japan Curling Championships in both 2015 and 2021. At the international level, she has represented Japan at three World Women's Curling Championship and three Pacific-Asia Curling Championships in 2013, 2014 and 2021, winning the gold medal in 2021.

Um Min-ji is a South Korean curler from Uijeongbu. She was the alternate on the Kim Ji-sun team that represented South Korea at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia.

Zou Qiang is a Chinese curler from Harbin. He currently plays third on the Chinese men's curling team skipped by Xu Xiaoming.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tokoro Curling Club</span> Curling club in Tokoro Town, Hokkaido, Japan

The Tokoro Curling Club (常呂カーリング倶楽部) is a curling club in Tokoro Town, Kitami City, Hokkaido Island, Japan. The club has about 40 teams, including a team "Loco Solare" (ロコ・ソラーレ).

Chiaki Matsumura is a Japanese curler from Nagano. She was a longtime member of the Chubu Electric Power curling team from 2012 to 2023. With the team, she won five Japan Curling Championships in 2012, 2013, 2014, 2017 and 2019. At the international level, she has represented Japan three times at the World Women's Curling Championship and three times at the Pacific-Asia Curling Championships, winning a silver medal in both 2012 and 2019.

The 2018–19 curling season began in August 2018 and ended in May 2019.

Jiang Xindi, nicknamed "Cindy" is a Chinese female curler. She was part of the Chinese women's curling team on 2018 Winter Olympics.

Seina Nakajima is a Japanese curler from Nagano. She is the third on the Chubu Electric Power curling team, which won the Japan Curling Championships in both 2017 and 2019. At the international level, she has represented Japan twice at the World Women's Curling Championship and the 2019 Pacific-Asia Curling Championships, where she won a silver medal.

Yao Mingyue is a Chinese curler.

Ikue Kitazawa is a Japanese curler from Saku, Nagano. She is the skip of the Chubu Electric Power curling team, which won the Japan Curling Championships in both 2017 and 2019. At the international level, she has represented Japan twice at the World Women's Curling Championship and the 2019 Pacific-Asia Curling Championships, where she won a silver medal.

Han Yu is a Chinese female curler. She currently plays third on Team Wang Rui.

Zhang Lijun is a Chinese female curler. She is a 2019 Pacific-Asia champion.

Hasumi Ishigooka is a Japanese curler from Nagano. She is currently the alternate on the Chubu Electric Power curling team, which won the Japan Curling Championships in both 2017 and 2019. At the international level, she has represented Japan twice at the World Women's Curling Championship and the 2019 Pacific-Asia Curling Championships, where she won a silver medal.

Lee Jeong-jae is a South Korean male curler from Gyeonggi Province

Jeong Byeong-jin is a South Korean male curler from Namyangju-si

Dong Ziqi is a Chinese female curler. She currently plays second on Team Wang Rui. She is a 2018 Pacific-Asia bronze medallist at the international level.

Fan Suyuan is a Chinese curler from Dunhua. She lives in Beijing.

References

  1. Other writings: Jiaxin Yu.
  2. "2020 World Women's Curling Championship Media Guide" (PDF). Curling Canada. Retrieved 2020-03-09.
  3. Yu Jiaxin on the World Curling database OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
  4. Han1-3 at 2018 Gord Carroll Curling Classic - Curlingzone
  5. Han at 2020 International Bernese Ladies Cup - Curlingzone