2024 Cortina Curling Cup | |
Host City: | Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy |
Arena: | Olympic Ice Stadium |
Dates: | January 11–13 |
Winner: | Team Yıldız |
Curling Club: | Milli Piyango CA, Erzurum |
Skip: | Dilşat Yıldız |
Third: | Öznur Polat |
Second: | İfayet Şafak Çalıkuşu |
Lead: | Berfin Şengül |
Alternate: | İclal Karaman |
Coach: | Bilal Ömer Çakır |
Finalist: | Xenia Schwaller |
The 2024 Cortina Curling Cup was held from January 11 to 13 at the Olympic Ice Stadium in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy as part of the World Curling Tour.[1] The event was held in a round-robin format with a € 20,000 purse.[2]
In the final, the Turkish women's team, led by Dilşat Yıldız won their first tour title, defeating Zürich's Xenia Schwaller 6–4 in the championship game. Yıldız, with Öznur Polat, İfayet Şafak Çalıkuşu, Berfin Şengül and İclal Karaman opened the scoring with two in the first and took two more in the fourth to maintain a two point lead. After Schwaller got two back in the sixth, the Turkish team scored a single in the seventh before stealing one in the eighth for the victory. Coming in as the eighth seeds, Team Yıldız finished 3–1 through the round robin to qualify for the quarterfinals, which included an upset victory over the host Stefania Constantini rink. In the playoffs, they beat Germany's Emira Abbes 9–3 in the quarters before defeating Norway's Marianne Rørvik 4–2 in the semis to qualify for the final. Team Schwaller went 4–0 through pool play and beat Korea's Gim Eun-ji 7–4 in the semifinals. In the third place game, Team Rørvik won 6–2 over Team Gim.
The inaugural event was held as a test event for the 2026 Winter Olympics, utilizing the venue that the curling competition will be played on during the Games. Because of this, it attracted many national teams, all with the hopes of qualifying for the 2026 Games.[3]
Ten teams from eight nations made up the field for the event.[4] Among them were Italy's own Team Stefania Constantini rink of Cortina d'Ampezzo, world number two ranked Team Gim Eun-ji of South Korea and reigning world silver medalists Team Marianne Rørvik of Norway.
The teams are listed as follows:[5]
Skip | Third | Second | Lead | Alternate | Locale | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Emira Abbes (Fourth) | Mia Höhne (Skip) | Füssen, Germany | ||||
– | Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy | |||||
Seol Ye-ji | Uijeongbu, South Korea | |||||
Celine Schwizgebel | Zug, Switzerland | |||||
Erika Tuvike (Fourth) | Kerli Laidsalu (Skip) | Tallinn, Estonia | ||||
Rebecca Mariani | Lucrezia Grande | Rachele Scalesse | Trentino, Italy | |||
Lisa Davie | Stirling, Scotland | |||||
Kristin Skaslien (Fourth) | Marianne Rørvik (Skip) | Lillehammer, Norway | ||||
Marion Wüest | Zürich, Switzerland | |||||
İclal Karaman | Erzurum, Turkey |
Year to date World Curling Federation order of merit ranking for each team prior to the event.[6]
width=175 | Team ! | width=15 | Rank ! | width=15 | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 283.5 | ||||
8 | 206.8 | ||||
14 | 128.8 | ||||
24 | 114.4 | ||||
39 | 70.6 | ||||
50 | 46.8 | ||||
77 | 24.4 | ||||
83 | 21.3 | ||||
87 | 20.4 | ||||
Rebecca Mariani | 235 | 1.1 |
Final Round Robin Standings[7]
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All draw times listed in Central European Time .[8] [9]
Thursday, January 11, 10:00 am
Thursday, January 11, 2:00 pm
Thursday, January 11, 6:00 pm
Friday, January 12, 8:00 am
Friday, January 12, 12:00 pm
Friday, January 12, 4:00 pm
Friday, January 12, 8:00 pm
Source:[10]
Saturday, January 13, 8:00 am
Saturday, January 13, 11:30 am
Saturday, January 13, 3:00 pm
Saturday, January 13, 3:00 pm