| 2019 World Women's Curling Championship |
|---|
 |
| Host city | Silkeborg, Denmark |
|---|
| Arena | Silkeborg Sportscenter |
|---|
| Dates | 16–24 March |
|---|
| Winner | Switzerland |
|---|
| Curling club | CC Aarau, Aarau |
|---|
| Skip | Silvana Tirinzoni |
|---|
| Fourth | Alina Pätz |
|---|
| Second | Esther Neuenschwander |
|---|
| Lead | Melanie Barbezat |
|---|
| Alternate | Marisa Winkelhausen |
|---|
| Coach | Manuela Netzer |
|---|
| Finalist | Sweden (Anna Hasselborg) |
|---|
« 2018 2020 (cancelled) » |
The 2019 World Women's Curling Championship (branded as the 2019 LGT World Women's Curling Championship for sponsorship reasons) was held from 16 to 24 March at the Silkeborg Sportscenter in Silkeborg, Denmark.
Qualification
The following nations qualified to participate in the 2019 World Women's Curling Championship:
Denmark (host country)
- Two teams from the Americas zone
- Six teams from the 2018 European Curling Championships[note 1]
- Two teams from the 2018 Pacific-Asia Curling Championships
- Two teams from the 2019 World Qualification Event
- Notes
- ^ As the zone with the automatically qualifying host country and the lowest-placed team in the 2018 World Women's Curling Championship, the European zone loses two guaranteed berths.
Teams
The teams are as follows:[1]
Canada
|
China
|
Denmark
|
Finland
|
Germany
|
| The Glencoe Club, Calgary
Skip: Chelsea Carey
Third: Sarah Wilkes
Second: Dana Ferguson
Lead: Rachelle Brown
Alternate: Jill Officer
|
Harbin CC, Harbin
Fourth: Wang Rui
Skip: Mei Jie
Second: Yao Mingyue
Lead: Ma Jingyi
Alternate: Zhang Lijun
|
Hvidovre CC, Hvidovre
Skip: Madeleine Dupont
Third: Denise Dupont
Second: Julie Høgh
Lead: Lina Knudsen
Alternate: Gabriella Qvist
|
Åland Curling, Eckerö
Skip: Oona Kauste
Third: Eszter Juhász
Second: Maija Salmiovirta
Lead: Lotta Immonen
Alternate: Marjo Hippi
|
CC Füssen, Füssen
Skip: Daniela Jentsch
Third: Emira Abbes
Second: Klara-Hermine Fomm
Lead: Analena Jentsch
Alternate: Mia Höhne
|
Japan
|
South Korea
|
Latvia
|
Russia
|
Scotland
|
| Karuizawa CC, Karuizawa
Fourth: Ikue Kitazawa
Third: Chiaki Matsumura
Skip: Seina Nakajima
Lead: Hasumi Ishigooka
Alternate: Emi Shimizu
|
Chuncheon CC, Chuncheon
Skip: Kim Min-ji
Third: Kim Hye-rin
Second: Yang Tae-i
Lead: Kim Su-jin
|
Jelgavas KK, Jelgava
Skip: Iveta Staša-Šaršūne
Third: Santa Blumberga
Second: Ieva Krusta
Lead: Evelīna Barone
Alternate: Tīna Siliņa
|
Adamant CC, Saint Petersburg
Skip: Alina Kovaleva
Third: Anastasia Bryzgalova
Second: Galina Arsenkina
Lead: Ekaterina Kuzmina
Alternate: Uliana Vasilyeva
|
Dumfries Curling, Dumfries
Skip: Sophie Jackson1
Third: Naomi Brown
Second: Mili Smith
Lead: Sophie Sinclair
Alternate: Lauren Gray1
|
Sweden
|
Switzerland
|
United States
|
|
|
| Sundbybergs CK, Sundbyberg
Skip: Anna Hasselborg
Third: Sara McManus
Second: Agnes Knochenhauer
Lead: Sofia Mabergs
Alternate: Johanna Heldin
|
CC Aarau, Aarau
Fourth: Alina Pätz
Skip: Silvana Tirinzoni
Second: Esther Neuenschwander
Lead: Melanie Barbezat
Alternate: Marisa Winkelhausen
|
Four Seasons CC, Blaine
Skip: Jamie Sinclair
Third: Sarah Anderson
Second: Taylor Anderson
Lead: Monica Walker
Alternate: Vicky Persinger
|
|
|
- Notes
- ^ Team Scotland's alternate Lauren Gray threw skip stones during Draws 4, 5, 7 and 8 as their skip Sophie Jackson had a back and knee injury.
WCT ranking
Year to date World Curling Tour order of merit ranking for each team prior to the event.[2]
Round-robin standings
Final round-robin standings
| Country
|
Skip
|
W
|
L
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sweden |
Anna Hasselborg |
11 |
1 |
– |
92 |
60 |
50 |
41 |
7 |
11 |
85% |
22.30
|
South Korea |
Kim Min-ji |
9 |
3 |
1–0 |
89 |
74 |
52 |
49 |
5 |
15 |
78% |
57.45
|
Russia |
Alina Kovaleva |
9 |
3 |
0–1 |
91 |
74 |
55 |
44 |
6 |
13 |
83% |
35.55
|
Switzerland |
Silvana Tirinzoni |
8 |
4 |
– |
84 |
71 |
49 |
46 |
8 |
15 |
81% |
38.22
|
China |
Mei Jie |
7 |
5 |
– |
95 |
78 |
49 |
48 |
9 |
9 |
80% |
41.20
|
Japan |
Seina Nakajima |
6 |
6 |
2–0 |
81 |
77 |
48 |
52 |
3 |
10 |
79% |
43.87
|
United States |
Jamie Sinclair |
6 |
6 |
1–1 |
88 |
85 |
53 |
53 |
4 |
16 |
76% |
50.91
|
Canada^ |
Chelsea Carey |
6 |
6 |
0–2 |
73 |
81 |
44 |
51 |
11 |
7 |
81% |
34.95
|
Germany |
Daniela Jentsch |
5 |
7 |
– |
83 |
90 |
51 |
49 |
5 |
10 |
73% |
62.05
|
Scotland |
Sophie Jackson |
4 |
8 |
– |
69 |
87 |
45 |
49 |
12 |
8 |
79% |
35.64
|
Denmark |
Madeleine Dupont |
3 |
9 |
1–0 |
67 |
85 |
48 |
51 |
4 |
12 |
76% |
64.18
|
Finland |
Oona Kauste |
3 |
9 |
0–1 |
68 |
90 |
45 |
52 |
7 |
10 |
73% |
57.01
|
Latvia |
Iveta Staša-Šaršūne |
1 |
11 |
– |
70 |
98 |
50 |
54 |
3 |
10 |
73% |
51.13
|
|
^ This was the first time the Canadian women's team failed to reach the playoffs at the World Championships in twenty years.[3]
Round-robin results
All draw times are listed in Central European Standard Time (UTC+1:00).[4]
Draw 1
Saturday, 16 March, 14:00
Draw 2
Saturday, 16 March, 19:30
^Finland ran out of time, and therefore forfeited the match.[5]
Draw 3
Sunday, 17 March, 09:00
Draw 4
Sunday, 17 March, 14:00
Draw 5
Sunday, 17 March, 19:00
Draw 6
Monday, 18 March, 09:00
Draw 7
Monday, 18 March, 14:00
Draw 8
Monday, 18 March, 19:00
Draw 9
Tuesday, 19 March, 09:00
Draw 10
Tuesday, 19 March, 14:00
Draw 11
Tuesday, 19 March, 19:00
Draw 12
Wednesday, 20 March, 09:00
Draw 13
Wednesday, 20 March, 14:00
Draw 14
Wednesday, 20 March, 19:00
Draw 15
Thursday, 21 March, 09:00
Draw 16
Thursday, 21 March, 14:00
Draw 17
Thursday, 21 March, 19:00
Draw 18
Friday, 22 March, 09:00
^Highest-scoring end of the event.
Draw 19
Friday, 22 March, 14:00
^U.S. skip Jamie Sinclair was unable to play in this draw due to an injury sustained when she fell at the conclusion of her team's game earlier that day. Vice-skip Sarah Anderson moved-up to skip and alternate Vicky Persinger played vice. Anderson's twin sister Taylor played her usual position of second as did lead Monica Walker.[6]
Draw 20
Friday, 22 March, 19:00
Playoffs
Qualification games
Saturday, 23 March, 9:00
| Player percentages
|
Switzerland
|
China
|
| Melanie Barbezat |
74%
|
Ma Jingyi |
93%
|
| Esther Neuenschwander |
88%
|
Yao Mingyue |
69%
|
| Silvana Tirinzoni |
79%
|
Mei Jie |
83%
|
| Alina Pätz |
83%
|
Wang Rui |
75%
|
| Total |
81%
|
Total |
80%
|
| Player percentages
|
Russia
|
Japan
|
| Ekaterina Kuzmina |
81%
|
Hasumi Ishigooka |
78%
|
| Galina Arsenkina |
88%
|
Seina Nakajima |
72%
|
| Anastasia Bryzgalova |
81%
|
Chiaki Matsumura |
95%
|
| Alina Kovaleva |
59%
|
Ikue Kitazawa |
92%
|
| Total |
77%
|
Total |
84%
|
Semifinal 1
Saturday, 23 March, 14:00
| Player percentages
|
South Korea
|
Switzerland
|
| Kim Su-jin |
92%
|
Melanie Barbezat |
93%
|
| Yang Tae-i |
78%
|
Esther Neuenschwander |
76%
|
| Kim Hye-rin |
74%
|
Silvana Tirinzoni |
83%
|
| Kim Min-ji |
67%
|
Alina Pätz |
85%
|
| Total |
78%
|
Total |
84%
|
Semifinal 2
Saturday, 23 March, 19:00
| Player percentages
|
Sweden
|
Japan
|
| Sofia Mabergs |
83%
|
Hasumi Ishigooka |
93%
|
| Agnes Knochenhauer |
95%
|
Seina Nakajima |
74%
|
| Sara McManus |
89%
|
Chiaki Matsumura |
88%
|
| Anna Hasselborg |
89%
|
Ikue Kitazawa |
78%
|
| Total |
89%
|
Total |
83%
|
Bronze medal game
Sunday, 24 March, 10:00
| Player percentages
|
Japan
|
South Korea
|
| Hasumi Ishigooka |
84%
|
Kim Su-jin |
86%
|
| Seina Nakajima |
81%
|
Yang Tae-i |
69%
|
| Chiaki Matsumura |
80%
|
Kim Hye-rin |
84%
|
| Ikue Kitazawa |
86%
|
Kim Min-ji |
78%
|
| Total |
83%
|
Total |
79%
|
Final
Sunday, 24 March, 16:00
| Player percentages
|
Sweden
|
Switzerland
|
| Sofia Mabergs |
86%
|
Melanie Barbezat |
89%
|
| Agnes Knochenhauer |
91%
|
Esther Neuenschwander |
82%
|
| Sara McManus |
81%
|
Silvana Tirinzoni |
73%
|
| Anna Hasselborg |
78%
|
Alina Pätz |
94%
|
| Total |
84%
|
Total |
84%
|
Final standings
| Key
|
|
|
Zone loses one guaranteed berth in 2020 World Championship
|
Statistics
Top 5 player percentages
Final round robin percentages; minimum 9 games[7]
| Leads |
%
|
Sofia Mabergs |
88
|
Melanie Barbezat |
86
|
Sophie Sinclair |
86
|
Ekaterina Kuzmina |
84
|
Ma Jingyi |
84
|
Monica Walker |
84
|
|
| Seconds |
%
|
Galina Arsenkina |
86
|
Agnes Knochenhauer |
86
|
Dana Ferguson |
82
|
Seina Nakajima (skip) |
82
|
Esther Neuenschwander |
82
|
|
| Thirds |
%
|
Sara McManus |
87
|
Sarah Wilkes |
83
|
Anastasia Bryzgalova |
82
|
Mei Jie (skip) |
82
|
Chiaki Matsumura |
80
|
Silvana Tirinzoni (skip) |
80
|
|
| Skips |
%
|
Anna Hasselborg |
80
|
Alina Kovaleva |
78
|
Daniela Jentsch |
77
|
Kim Min-ji |
76
|
Chelsea Carey |
75
|
Alina Pätz (Fourth) |
75
|
Wang Rui (Fourth) |
75
|
|
Awards
The awards and all-star team are as follows:
All-Star Team[8]
- Skip:
Anna Hasselborg, Sweden
- Third:
Sara McManus, Sweden
- Second:
Galina Arsenkina, Russia
- Lead:
Sofia Mabergs, Sweden
Frances Brodie Sportsmanship Award
Wang Rui, China
References
- General
- Specific
External links
2018–19 curling season « 2017–18 2019–20 » |
|---|
Grand Slam events |
|---|
- Princess Auto Elite 10
- Canadian Beef Masters
- Tour Challenge
- Boost National
- Meridian Canadian Open
- Players' Championship
- Humpty's Champions Cup
|
|
Season of Champions |
|---|
- Canada Cup
- Continental Cup
- Canadian Junior Curling Championships
- Scotties Tournament of Hearts
- Tim Hortons Brier
- World Women's Curling Championship
- World Men's Curling Championship
|
|
Other Curling Canada sanctioned events |
|---|
- Canadian Mixed Curling Championship
- Travelers Curling Club Championship
- Canada Winter Games
- CCAA/Curling Canada Championships
- U Sports/Curling Canada University Curling Championships
- Mixed Doubles Curling Championship
- Everest Canadian Senior Curling Championships
- Canadian Wheelchair Curling Championship
- Canadian Under-18 Boys and Girls Curling Championship
|
|
Other international events |
|---|
- Audi quattro Winter Games NZ
- Curling World Cup First Leg
- World Mixed Curling Championship
- Pacific-Asia Curling Championships
- World Wheelchair-B Curling Championship
- Americas Challenge
- European Curling Championships
- Curling World Cup Second Leg
- World Junior-B Curling Championships
- World Qualification Event
- Curling World Cup Third Leg
- World Junior Curling Championships
- Winter Universiade
- World Wheelchair Curling Championship
- World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship
- World Senior Curling Championships
- Curling World Cup Grand Final
|
|
World championships in 2019 |
|---|
Summer sports & indoor sports |
- Aquatics
- artistic swimming
- diving
- high diving
- open water swimming
- swimming
- water polo
- Archery
- Association football (women)
- Athletics
- Badminton
- Basketball
- Beach soccer
- Beach volleyball
- Bowls
- Boxing
- Canoeing
- Cricket
- Cycling
- road
- track
- mountain bike
- cyclo-cross
- BMX
- Fencing
- Floorball (women)
- Futsal (AMF men)
- Gymnastics
- artistic
- rhythmic
- trampoline
- Handball
- Judo
- Korfball
- Minifootball
- Modern pentathlon
- Muaythai
- Netball
- Nine-pin bowling
- Orienteering
- Roller hockey
- Rowing
- Rugby union (men)
- Shooting (shotgun)
- Softball (men)
- Sport climbing
- Squash
- Surfing
- Table tennis
- Taekwondo
- Weightlifting
- Windsurfing
- Wrestling
- Wushu
|
|---|
| Winter sports |
- Alpine skiing
- Bandy (men)
- Biathlon
- Bobsleigh / skeleton
- Curling
- men
- women
- mixed
- mixed doubles
- wheelchair
- Figure skating
- Freestyle skiing / snowboarding
- Ice hockey
- Luge
- Nordic skiing
- Speed skating
- allround
- single distances
- sprint
- short track
|
|---|
| Cue & mind sports | |
|---|
| Motor sports |
- Air race
- Aquabike
- Endurance auto racing
- Endurance motorcycle racing
- F1 Powerboat
- Formula One
- Motocross
- MotoGP
- Radio-controlled
- Rally
- Rallycross
- Rally raid
- Auto
- Moto
- Bajas auto
- Bajas moto
- Speedway
- Sidecarcross
- Superbike
- Supersport
- Supersport 300
- Touring car
|
|---|