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Curling competition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Karuizawa International Curling Championships is a curling bonspiel held annually since the Olympic Games in Nagano at the SCAP Karuizawa Arena in Kariuzawa, Japan. The bonspiel is held to commemorate the curling event at the 1998 Nagano Olympics, the first official curling event in the Olympic programme since the 1924 Winter Olympics. It is also held to help promote curling throughout Japan.[1] The event became a World Curling Tour event in 2014.
Karuizawa International Curling Championships | |
---|---|
Organizer | Sports Community Karuizawa Club |
Established | 1999 |
Host city | Karuizawa, Japan |
Arena | Karuizawa Ice Park |
Website | karuizawa-icurling |
Men's purse | ¥ 1,500,000 |
Women's purse | ¥ 1,500,000 |
Current champions (2023) | |
Men | Brad Gushue |
Women | Ikue Kitazawa |
Current edition | |
A total of 24 teams (12 men's and 12 women's teams) are invited each year to participate in the championship. The teams play a two-pool round robin tournament with games of eight ends, and the top six teams of each gender play eight-end games in the final round.[1]
Prior to 2013, a total of 16 teams (8 men's and 8 women's teams) were invited each year to participate in the championship. Five teams of each gender were chosen from foreign nations based on performances at the most recent World Curling Championships, while three teams were chosen from within Japan. The teams were chosen as follows:
The eight teams of each gender played a round robin tournament with games of eight ends, and the top four teams of each gender played ten-end games in the final round.
Year | Men's winner | Women's winner |
---|---|---|
1999 | Bob Turcotte | Cathy Borst |
2000 | Makoto Tsuruga | Sherry Fraser |
2001 | Markku Uusipaavalniemi | Nancy Smith |
2002 | Greg Monkman | Margaretha Lindahl |
2003 | Paul Pustovar | Manuela Kormann |
2004 | Brian Gessner | Cheryl Bernard |
2005 | Pat Simmons | Moe Meguro |
2006 | Ryan Fry | Crystal Rumberg |
2007 | Craig Disher | Jo-Ann Rizzo |
2008 | Joel Jordison | Yukako Tsuchiya |
2009 | Bob Ursel | Manuela Kormann |
Year | Winning skip | Runner-up skip |
---|---|---|
2010[2] | Canada (Chris Busby) | Japan (Yusuke Morozumi) |
Canada (Hollie Nicol) | Sweden (Stina Viktorsson) | |
2011 | Japan (Yusuke Morozumi) | United States (Tyler George) |
Canada (Jennifer Jones) | Japan (Satsuki Fujisawa) | |
2012 | Japan Selection (Yusuke Morozumi) | Canada (Colin Thomas) |
Canada (Laura Crocker) | Switzerland (Silvana Tirinzoni) | |
2013 | Kim Chang-min | Yusuke Morozumi |
Binia Feltscher-Beeli | Ayumi Ogasawara | |
2014 | Kevin Koe | Seong Se-hyeon |
Jennifer Jones | Kim Eun-jung | |
2015 | David Murdoch | Pat Simmons |
Ayumi Ogasawara | Satsuki Fujisawa | |
2016 | Tom Brewster | David Murdoch |
Gim Un-chi | Margaretha Sigfridsson | |
2017 | Yusuke Morozumi | Kim Chang-min |
Satsuki Fujisawa | Chiaki Matsumura | |
2018 | Reid Carruthers | Yuta Matsumura |
Anna Sidorova | Sayaka Yoshimura | |
2019[3][4] | Yuta Matsumura | Niklas Edin |
Anna Sidorova | Satsuki Fujisawa | |
2020–2021 | Cancelled | |
2022[5][6] | Riku Yanagisawa | Yusuke Morozumi |
Kim Eun-jung | Kerri Einarson | |
2023[7][8] | Brad Gushue | Hayato Sato |
Ikue Kitazawa | Kim Eun-jung |
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