Audi quattro Winter Games NZ 2015

Maniototo Curling International, Naseby23 - 27 August 2015

Playoffs

Tiebreaker

Quarter-Finals

Semi-Finals

Medal Games



 USA10 






 USA10 


 New Zealand 2
 USA


 Finland





Canada 1


 Japan
Gold

 Canada 2
 Canada 1
 New Zealand 1
 Canada 1
USA

 Canada 1

Silver
 Canada 1

 Finland




Finland



 JapanBronze

Round Robin


Pool A
PWL

Pool B
PWL
1JapanQS541
1FinlandQS541
2USAQQ541
2Canada 2QQ541
3Canada 1TB523
3New Zealand 2QQ532
4New Zealand 1TB523
4Australia 2
523
5Australia 1
523
5Korea
514
6Czech Republic
514
6China
514
Q: Qualified for Semi / Quarterfinal – TB: Tiebreaker

Final Standings

  1. Canada 1 – Kalynn Park and Charley Thomas
  2. USA – Sarah Anderson and Korey Dropkin
  3. Finland – Katya Kiiskinen and Pauli Jäämies
  4. Japan – Michiko Tomabechi and Kenji Tomabechi
  5. Canada 2 – Kimberley Tuck and Wayne Tuck
  6. New Zealand 2 – Bridget Becker and Sean Becker
  7. New Zealand 1 – Eleanor Adviento and Brett Sargon
  8. Australia 2 – Jennifer Westhagen and Matt Panoussi
  9. Australia 1 – Sandy Gagnon and Ian Gagnon
  10. Korea – Hyein Lee and Jong Chul Baek
  11. China – Fan Suyuan and Lu Feijiaking
  12. Czech Republic – Jana Jelinkova and Ondrej Mihola

Canada claim Winter Games gold

27 Aug 2015 – Canada 1 beat USA 5-4 in a thrilling final to win the gold medal in the Audi quattro Winter Games NZ 2015 Mixed Doubles Curling Tournament in Naseby, New Zealand today.

The USA took home the silver medal, and Finland won the bronze medal game 7-4 over Japan.

Canada's Charley Thomas and Kalynn Park scored two in the opening end of the final, and after they stole the fourth end they went into the break with a handy 4-1 lead.

The young USA team of Sarah Anderson and Korey Dropkin played immaculately for the next three ends and as the final end started the scores were level at 4-4, but it was Canada who held the crucial last stone advantage.

The Canadians took their powerplay (positioning the stationary stones to the side) to keep the centre of the house clear, but the USA did everything possible to steal.

When Thomas came to play Canada's second-to-last stone he faced an American stone in the centre of the house that appeared to be well guarded. He judged his hit perfectly, squeezing past the guard to clip a corner of the shot stone and send it into the side boards.

Anderson's last draw for USA was just a fraction deep, so Kalynn Park just needed to follow it in to score the single the Canadians needed for the win and the gold medal.

Park was relieved after the teams came off the ice. "It was intense out there, a really great game," she said. "I struggled a bit but Charley played really well, I was just relieved I made that final shot. And the USA team were great – they played really well all week and they certainly deserved to be in the final."

Korey Dropkin was upbeat after the game, despite not winning the gold. "The week's been great, we've enjoyed every second of this tournament," he commented. "The other athletes have been awesome with us, we've just enjoyed the whole experience. And playing top teams at this level just helps us all improve our game and our future careers."

Finland led Japan 2-0 after two ends of the bronze medal game, and after the sides traded threes the Finns maintained the margin to lead 5-3 at the fourth end break.

The key moment came in the fifth end when Japan held three well-guarded shots and tried to draw a fourth in. It just hung out a little wide, and left Finland a small opportunity. Katja Kiiskinen judged a tough hit and roll perfectly, with her stone spinning almost square to sit on the button nestled amongst the Japanese stones.

Kiiskinen and Pauli Jäämies stole that end and the next for Finland, and ran the Japanese couple Michiko and Kenji Tomabechi out of stones in the last end.

"Of course we would have liked to be in the final," said Jäämies after the game, "but the USA played very well this morning and they deserved their win. This afternoon our hitting game was the best for us all week, and we also had good draw weight. So we're very happy with our bronze."

The semifinals were held earlier in the day. The Japanese side went into their semi against Canada 1 hoping to put the memory of yesterday's one-sided 11-0 loss to the back of their minds, and today's contest was much closer.

Japan were eyeing a second consecutive steal in the fourth end before an upweight hit from Thomas cleared two Japanese stones lying either side of the button. The scores were level at 5-5 after five ends, but Canada made the decisive break in the next with a score of three, and they eventually ran Japan out of stones in the last end to win 9-5.

USA broke open their semi-final against Finland in the fourth end when Sarah Anderson chipped out an opposition stone sitting as second shot, giving USA a score of four points. There was some outstanding shot-making from both sides but the Americans finished it off in style with a double takeout from Korey Dropkin, followed a couple of shots later by Anderson chipping a Finnish stone off the button to score another four and give the USA a 10-4 win.

Study evaluates Games becoming annual event


Finland, Japan, USA and Canada in semis


Five of six qualifiers found after Day 2


Japan, Canada and NZ unbeaten after Day 1


Meet the Teams


NZ teams announced for Winter Games


World-class Canadian and US teams sign up