Loading AI tools
Curling competition at Glasgow, Scotland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 1988 World Women's Curling Championship was held in Glasgow, Scotland from 2–10 April 1988.
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (May 2020) |
1988 World Women's Curling Championship | |
---|---|
Host city | Glasgow, Scotland |
Arena | The Summit Centre |
Dates | 2–10 April 1988 |
Winner | Germany |
Curling club | SC Riessersee, Garmisch-Partenkirchen |
Skip | Andrea Schöpp |
Third | Almut Hege-Schöll |
Second | Monika Wagner |
Lead | Suzanne Fink |
Finalist | Canada (Heather Houston) |
« 1987 1989 » |
West Germany, skipped by Andrea Schöpp defeated Canada in the final to claim Germany's first ever women's world championship in curling.
Country | Skip | W | L |
---|---|---|---|
Germany | Andrea Schöpp | 9 | 2 |
Canada | Heather Houston | 7 | 4 |
Sweden | Anette Norberg | 7 | 4 |
Norway | Anne Jøtun Bakke | 6 | 5 |
Denmark | Helena Blach | 5 | 4 |
Switzerland | Erika Müller | 5 | 4 |
United States | Nancy Langley | 4 | 5 |
France | Annick Mercier | 3 | 6 |
Scotland | Christine Allison | 3 | 6 |
Finland | Anne Eerikäinen | 0 | 9 |
Team | Final |
Denmark (Blach) | 9 |
Switzerland (Müller) | 1 |
Team | Final |
United States (Langley) | 7 |
France (Mercier) | 3 |
Team | Final |
Scotland (Allison) | 6 |
Canada (Houston) | 5 |
Team | Final |
Germany (Schöpp) | 9 |
Finland (Eerikäinen) | 7 |
Team | Final |
Sweden (Norberg) | 6 |
Norway (Jøtun Bakke) | 4 |
Team | Final |
Denmark (Blach) | 9 |
Finland (Eerikäinen) | 3 |
Team | Final |
Canada (Houston) | 11 |
Switzerland (Müller) | 0 |
Team | Final |
Norway (Jøtun Bakke) | 9 |
United States (Langley) | 5 |
Team | Final |
Sweden (Norberg) | 10 |
Scotland (Allison) | 8 |
Team | Final |
Germany (Schöpp) | 6 |
France (Mercier) | 5 |
Team | Final |
Switzerland (Müller) | 12 |
France (Mercier) | 7 |
Team | Final |
Sweden (Norberg) | 11 |
United States (Langley) | 1 |
Team | Final |
Germany (Schöpp) | 7 |
Denmark (Blach) | 5 |
Team | Final |
Canada (Houston) | 7 |
Norway (Jøtun Bakke) | 1 |
Team | Final |
Scotland (Allison) | 13 |
Finland (Eerikäinen) | 6 |
Team | Final |
Canada (Houston) | 8 |
United States (Langley) | 6 |
Team | Final |
France (Mercier) | 6 |
Denmark (Blach) | 5 |
Team | Final |
Switzerland (Müller) | 9 |
Finland (Eerikäinen) | 8 |
Team | Final |
Norway (Jøtun Bakke) | 9 |
Scotland (Allison) | 3 |
Team | Final |
Germany (Schöpp) | 10 |
Sweden (Norberg) | 8 |
Team | Final |
Norway (Jøtun Bakke) | 9 |
Switzerland (Müller) | 1 |
Team | Final |
United States (Langley) | 15 |
Finland (Eerikäinen) | 1 |
Team | Final |
Sweden (Norberg) | 7 |
France (Mercier) | 5 |
Team | Final |
Germany (Schöpp) | 8 |
Canada (Houston) | 4 |
Team | Final |
Denmark (Blach) | 8 |
Scotland (Allison) | 4 |
Team | Final |
Sweden (Norberg) | 8 |
Denmark (Blach) | 2 |
Team | Final |
Germany (Schöpp) | 12 |
Scotland (Allison) | 3 |
Team | Final |
Canada (Houston) | 11 |
Finland (Eerikäinen) | 2 |
Team | Final |
Norway (Jøtun Bakke) | 7 |
France (Mercier) | 2 |
Team | Final |
Switzerland (Müller) | 7 |
United States (Langley) | 6 |
Team | Final |
France (Mercier) | 6 |
Scotland (Allison) | 5 |
Team | Final |
Denmark (Blach) | 6 |
Canada (Houston) | 5 |
Team | Final |
United States (Langley) | 7 |
Germany (Schöpp) | 4 |
Team | Final |
Switzerland (Müller) | 8 |
Sweden (Norberg) | 3 |
Team | Final |
Norway (Jøtun Bakke) | 10 |
Finland (Eerikäinen) | 5 |
Team | Final |
Norway (Jøtun Bakke) | 10 |
Germany (Schöpp) | 4 |
Team | Final |
Sweden (Norberg) | 7 |
Finland (Eerikäinen) | 0 |
Team | Final |
Switzerland (Müller) | 8 |
Scotland (Allison) | 7 |
Team | Final |
United States (Langley) | 6 |
Denmark (Blach) | 5 |
Team | Final |
Canada (Houston) | 9 |
France (Mercier) | 4 |
Team | Final |
Canada (Houston) | 10 |
Sweden (Norberg) | 2 |
Team | Final |
Germany (Schöpp) | 9 |
Switzerland (Müller) | 6 |
Team | Final |
Denmark (Blach) | 13 |
Norway (Jøtun Bakke) | 6 |
Team | Final |
France (Mercier) | 9 |
Finland (Eerikäinen) | 5 |
Team | Final |
Scotland (Allison) | 10 |
United States (Langley) | 3 |
Semifinal | Gold-medal game | ||||||||
1 | Germany | 9 | |||||||
4 | Norway | 2 | |||||||
1 | Germany | 9 | |||||||
2 | Canada | 3 | |||||||
2 | Canada | 10 | |||||||
3 | Sweden | 4 | Bronze-medal game | ||||||
3 | Sweden | 14 | |||||||
4 | Norway | 2 |
Team | Final |
Norway (Jøtun Bakke) | 2 |
Germany (Schöpp) | 9 |
Team | Final |
Canada (Houston) | 10 |
Sweden (Norberg) | 4 |
Team | Final |
Sweden (Norberg) | 14 |
Norway (Jøtun Bakke) | 2 |
Team | Final |
Germany (Schöpp) | 9 |
Canada (Houston) | 3 |
1988 World Women's Curling Championship Winner |
---|
Germany 1st title |
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.