Tahli Gill Explained

Tahli Gill
Birth Date:8 September 1999
Birth Place:Sydney, Australia[1]
Skip:Tahli Gill
Third:Kirby Gill
Second:Oh Sun-yun
Lead:Lucy Militano
Alternate:Ivy Militano
Mixed Doubles Partner:Dean Hewitt
World Mixed Doubles Championship Appearances:5
Pacific Championship Appearances:1
Olympic Appearances:1 (2022)

Tahli Gill (born 8 September 1999) is an Australian curler who resides in Brisbane.[2] She currently skips her own team and plays mixed doubles with partner Dean Hewitt.

Career

Gill started curling at age 11. Her mother Lynette is also a curler,[3] as well as Tahli's sisters Kirby and Jayna. The four Gills sometimes play together, such as when they, along with Laurie Weeden, won the 2018 Australian Women's Championship.[4] They then represented Australia at the 2018 Pacific-Asia Championship, where they finished in sixth place out of the seven teams.[5]

At the 2019 World Mixed Doubles Championship, Gill and her teammate Dean Hewitt made it to the semifinals before being eliminated by Sweden's Anna Hasselborg and Oskar Eriksson. In the bronze medal match, they again lost to John Shuster and Cory Christensen from the United States.[6] Their fourth-place finish is the best finish ever for an Australian team at any world curling championship.

Gill focused on mixed doubles for the 2019–20 season, placing second at the New Zealand Winter Games and winning the WCT Pacific Ocean Cup, a World Curling Tour (WCT) event.[7] Gill and Hewitt were qualified for the 2020 World Mixed Doubles Championship, but the event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

At the 2021 Olympic Curling Qualification Event in December 2021, Gill and her teammate Dean Hewitt made history when they won qualification to the mixed doubles tournament at the 2022 Winter Olympics. They are the first ever Australian curling team (in any curling discipline) to qualify for the Winter Olympics.[8]

Personal life

Outside of curling, Gill worked in a gelateria and is currently a student.[9] She attended the Queensland University of Technology.[10]

Teams

Women's

SeasonSkipThirdSecondLeadAlternateCoachEvents
2011–12Victoria Wilson Marlene Corgat-Taylor Shontelle Walker Tahli Gill 2012 PAJCC (5th)
2012–13Victoria Wilson Marlene Corgat-Taylor Kelsey Hamsey Tahli Gill Samantha Jeffs Lynette Gill 2013 PAJCC (5th)
2013–14Victoria Wilson Samantha Jeffs Tahli Gill Kirby Gill Ivy Militano Lynette Gill 2014 PAJCC (5th)
2014–15Victoria Wilson Samantha Jeffs Tahli Gill Kirby Gill Ivy Militano Lynette Gill 2015 PAJCC (5th)
2015–16Samantha Jeffs Tahli Gill Ivy Militano Kirby Gill Jayna Gill Lynette Gill 2016 WJBCC (18th)
2016–17Samantha Jeffs Tahli Gill Ivy Militano Kirby Gill Jayna Gill Lynette Gill 2017 WJBCC (21st)
2017–18Tahli Gill (fourth) Samantha Jeffs (skip) Ivy Militano Kirby Gill Jayna Gill Lynette Gill 2018 WJBCC (20th)
2018–19Tahli Gill Lynette Gill Kirby Gill Jayna Gill Ken Macdonald
(PACC)
AWCC 2018
(6th)
Tahli Gill Ivy Militano Jayna Gill Kirby Gill Lynette Gill 2019 (Jan) WJBCC (16th)
2019–20Tahli Gill Kirby Gill Oh Sun-yun Veronica Johns Lucy Militano Lynette Gill 2019 (Dec) WJBCC (16th)
2022–23Tahli Gill Kirby Gill Oh Sun-yun Lucy Militano Ivy Militano

Mixed doubles

SeasonFemaleMaleCoach Events
2018–19Tahli Gill (4th)
2019–20Tahli Gill Dean Hewitt
2020–21Tahli Gill Dean Hewitt Pete Manasantivongs (13th)
2021–22Tahli Gill Dean Hewitt John Morris (OQE),
Pete Manasantivongs
OQE 2021
WOG 2022 (10th)
(11th)
2022–23Tahli Gill Dean Hewitt (8th)
2023–24Tahli Gill Dean Hewitt AMDCC 2023

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tahli GILL . Olympics.com . 1 February 2022.
  2. Web site: Tahli Gill. Olympic winter institute of Australia. 27 May 2020.
  3. Web site: Australia's Tahli Gill indebted to her mum for discovering curling. 2 August 2019. World Curling Federation. 27 May 2020.
  4. Web site: Gill wins 2019 Australian Womens National Championship. CurlingZone. 27 May 2020.
  5. Web site: Pacific-Asia Curling Championships 2018. World Curling Federation. 27 May 2020.
  6. Web site: World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship 2019. World Curling Federation. 27 May 2020.
  7. Web site: Gill wins 2019 WCT Pacific Ocean Cup. CurlingZone. 27 May 2020.
  8. Web site: Australia make history and qualify for Beijing 2022 Mixed Doubles Event . World Curling Federation . 2021-12-09 .
  9. News: Beach to Beijing: The young duo representing Australia for the first time in curling at the Winter Olympics. . Bakalla. Ilias. December 20, 2021. The Feed. 21 December 2021.
  10. https://lakeplacid2023-results.microplustimingservices.com/#/athlete-details/F990908AUS1311A26