2019 World Wheelchair-B Curling Championship Explained

2019 World Wheelchair-B Curling Championship
Host City:Lohja, Finland
Arena:Kisakallio Sports Institute[1]
Dates:November 27 – December 2
Winner:
Skip:Mark Ideson
Third:Ina Forrest
Second:Marie Wright
Alternate:Dennis Thiessen
Coach:Wayne Kiel
Finalist: (Petersson-Dahl)
Prev:2018
Next:2020

The 2019 World Wheelchair-B Curling Championship were held from November 27 to December 2 in Lohja, Finland. The championship was used to qualify three teams for the 2020 World Wheelchair Curling Championship in Wetzikon, Switzerland.[2] [3]

In the final, Canada defeated Sweden by a score of 6-1. This meant Canada, Sweden and bronze medal winners Czech Republic all qualified for the 2020 World Championships.[4]

Teams

width=250width=250width=250width=250
Fourth: Jon Thurston
Third: Ina Forrest
Second: Marie Wright
Skip: Mark Ideson
Alternate: Dennis Thiessen
Coach: Wayne Kiel
Fourth: Radek Musílek
Skip: Dana Selnekovičová
Second: Martin Tluk
Lead: Jana Břinčilová
Alternate: Štěpán Beneš
Coach: Helena Barkmanova, Kateřina Urbanová
Skip: Kenneth Ørbæk
Third: Helle Christiansen
Second: Jack Brendle
Lead: Michael Jensen
Alternate: Sussie Nielsen
Coach: Per Christensen
Fourth: Stewart Pimblett
Skip: Rosemary Lenton
Second: Edward Bidgood
Lead: Paul Simmons
Coach: Tony Lenton
width=250width=250width=250width=250
Fourth: Harri Tuomaala
Skip: Juha Rajala
Second: Teemu Klasila
Lead: Riitta Särösalo
Alternate: Pekka Pälsynaho
Coach: Vesa Kokko
Skip: Christiane Putzich
Third: Burkhard Möller
Second: Wolf Meissner
Lead: Heike Melchior
Alternate: Melanie Spielmann
Coach: Helmar Erlewein, Jamie Boutin
Fourth: Péter Barkóczi
Skip: Viktor Beke
Second: Anikó Sasadi
Lead: Rita Sárai
Coach: Olivér Kerekes
Fourth: Egidio Marchese
Skip: Paolo Ioriatti
Second: Gabriele Dallapiccola
Lead: Angela Menardi
Alternate: Orietta Berto
Coach: Violetta Caldart, Amanda Bianchi
width=250width=250width=250width=250
Skip: Takashi Sakataya
Third: Kazuhiro Kashiwabara
Second: Tsutomu Iwata
Lead: Kana Matsuda
Alternate: Hiromi Takahashi
Coach: Tsutomu Kobayashi, Hiroya Sato
Skip: Andrej Daškevič
Third: Jurij Savickij
Second: Jevgenijus Pyževskis
Lead: Reda Pociūtė
Coach: Arnis Veidemanis
Fourth: Antoni Pardo
Third: Mariusz Włodarski
Skip: Michał Daszkowski
Lead: Joanna Kozakiewicz
Alternate: Łukasz Waszek
Coach: Jeremi Telak
Fourth: Robert Žerovnik
Skip: Žiga Bajde
Second: Jože Klemen
Lead: Jovita Jeglič
Coach: Gregor Verbinc
width=250width=250width=250width=250
Skip: Viljo Petersson-Dahl
Third: Mats-Ola Engborg
Second: Ronny Persson
Lead: Kristina Ulander
Alternate: Zandra Reppe
Coach: Alison Kreviazuk, Peter Narup
Fourth: Züleyha Bingöl
Third: Kenan Coşkun
Second: Turan Akalın
Skip: Savaş Şimşek
Alternate: Deren Özgen
Coach: Gökçe Ulugay, Soner Doğan
Skip: Stephen Emt
Third: Matthew Thums
Second: David Samsa
Lead: Meghan Lino
Alternate: Pamela Wilson
Coach: Rusty Schieber
[5]

Round-robin standings

Final round-robin standings[6]

valign=top width=10%
width=155Group A !width=155Skip !width=15W !width=15L !width=30
5 1
4 2 1–0
4 2 0–1
3 3 1–0
3 3 0–1
2 4
0 6
valign=top width=10%
width=155Group B !width=155Skip !width=15W !width=15L !width=30
6 1 1–0
6 1 0–1
5 2
3 4 1–0
3 4 0–1
2 5 1–0
2 5 0–1
1 6

Round-robin results

All draws are listed in Eastern European Time .[7]

Draw 1

Wednesday, November 27, 16:30

Draw 2

Wednesday, November 27, 20:00

Draw 3

Thursday, November 28, 08:30

Draw 4

Thursday, November 28, 12:00

Draw 5

Thursday, November 28, 15:30

Draw 6

Thursday, November 28, 19:00

Draw 7

Friday, November 29, 09:30

Draw 8

Friday, November 29, 14:30

Draw 9

Friday, November 29, 18:30

Draw 10

Saturday, November 30, 08:30

Draw 11

Saturday, November 30, 12:00

Draw 12

Saturday, November 30, 15:30

Draw 13

Saturday, November 30, 19:00

Draw 14

Sunday, December 1, 09:30

Playoffs

Qualification games

Sunday, December 1, 18:00

5th place game

Monday, December 2, 09:00

Semifinals

Monday, December 2, 09:00

Bronze medal game

Monday, December 2, 14:30

Final

Monday, December 2, 14:30

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Lohja, Finland to host more international curling, including World Qualification Event. World Curling Federation. Fischer. Stephen. March 1, 2019. November 26, 2019.
  2. Web site: World Wheelchair-B Curling Championship 2019. World Curling Federation. November 26, 2019.
  3. News: World Wheelchair-B Curling Championship 2019 set for Lohja, Finland. World Curling Federation. Gray. Richard. November 25, 2019. November 26, 2019.
  4. Web site: Canada win gold at the World Wheelchair-B Curling Championship 2019. World Curling Federation. December 2, 2019.
  5. Web site: Teams. World Curling Federation. November 26, 2019.
  6. Web site: Results. November 26, 2019.
  7. Web site: Schedule. World Curling Federation. November 26, 2019.