Stephen Hewitt Explained

Stephen Hewitt
Birth Date:15 July 1958[1]
Birth Place:Melbourne, Australia[2]
Curling Club:Melbourne CC,
New South Wales CC
Victoria Curling Association
Sydney Harbour CC, Sydney
Skip:Hugh Millikin
Fourth:Dean Hewitt
Third:Steve Johns
Second:Stephen Hewitt
World Championship Appearances:8
Pacific Championship Appearances:7
Olympic Appearances:1: (1992, demonstration)
Other Appearances:

2

Stephen "Steve" Hewitt (born 15 July 1958) is an Australian curler from Glen Waverley, Victoria.[3]

At the international level, he is a four-time curler (1991, 1993, 1994, 1996).

He played for Australia at the 1992 Winter Olympics where curling was a demonstration event. There, the Australian men's team finished in seventh place.

Hewitt only began curling in 1988.[4]

Teams and events

SeasonSkipThirdSecondLeadAlternateCoachEvents
1991–92 Stephen Hewitt Brian Stuart (PCC, WOG) AMCC 1991

WOG 1992 (demo) (7th)
(6th)
1993–94 Hugh Millikin Tom Kidd Stephen Hewitt AMCC 1993

(10th)
1994–95 Hugh Millikin Gerald Chick Stephen Hewitt Brian Johnson (WCC) AMCC 1994

(8th)
1995–96 Hugh Millikin Stephen Johns Gerald Chick Stephen Hewitt (10th)
1996–97 Hugh Millikin Gerald Chick Stephen Johns Stephen Hewitt Jonathan Wade (WCC) AMCC 1996

(7th)
1997–98 Hugh Millikin Stephen Johns Stephen Hewitt (9th)
2001–02Gerald Chick Jonathan Wade Stephen Hewitt
2002–03 Hugh Millikin John Theriault Stephen Johns Stephen Hewitt AMCC 2002
2003–04Stephen Hewitt
2004–05 Ian Palangio (Fourth) Hugh Millikin (Skip) John Theriault Stephen Johns Stephen Hewitt (10th)
2007–08 Ian Palangio (Fourth) Hugh Millikin (Skip) Stephen Johns Stephen Hewitt Earle Morris (WCC),
Rob Gagnon (PCC, WCC)
AMCC 2007

(10th)
2008–09 Ian Palangio (Fourth) Hugh Millikin (Skip) Sean Hall Stephen Johns Stephen Hewitt Earle Morris AMCC 2008
(5th)
2011–12 Hugh Millikin John Theriault Stephen Hewitt Rob Gagnon (7th)
2012–13 Hugh Millikin Stephen Hewitt Wyatt Buck (6th)
2024–25Dean Hewitt (Fourth) Stephen Johns Stephen Hewitt Hugh Millikin (Skip)

Notes and References

  1. News: Taking on the world. December 5, 1990. E6. Ottawa Citizen. April 23, 2020.
  2. News: Curling a mystery down under. April 7, 1998. C3. Victoria Times-Colonist. May 14, 2020.
  3. News: This is how Canadians get their rocky mountain high. February 5, 1994. 57. The Age. May 14, 2020.
  4. News: Expatriates on top. March 31, 1992. B4. Vancouver Province. April 23, 2020.