QRC Winter Games NZ 2019

Maniototo Curling International, Naseby27 - 31 August 2019

Final Standings

1(7-0)KoreaHyeji Jang & Yujin Seong
2(6-2)Australia 1Tahli Gill & Dean Hewitt
3(5-2)SwedenTherese Westman & Robin Ahlberg
4(5-3)USATabitha Peterson & Joe Polo
5(3-3)CanadaEmilie Desjardins & Robert Desjardins
6(4-2)New Zealand 2Holly Thompson & Anton Hood
7(2-3)JapanNaofumi Den & Misako Den
8(2-3)FinlandEszter Juhász & Markku Uusipaavalniemi
9(1-4)New Zealand 1Jess Smith & Ben Smith
10(1-4)Australia 2Jennifer Westhagen & Matt Panoussi
11(0-5)New Zealand 3Courtney Smith & Hamish Walker
12(0-5)ItalyAnna Maria Maurino & Fabrizio Gallo

Playoffs

Quarter-Finals

Semi-Finals

Medal Games

  Australia 1 8 





  Australia 1 9 

  New Zealand 2 4 
  Australia 1 4 

  Sweden 7 




Korea

  Korea 9 
Gold
  Canada 2 
  Korea 7 

  USA 8 
Australia 
  USA 10 

Silver


  Sweden 9 



Sweden


  USA 8 Bronze
 Pool A
PWL
 Pool B
PWL
  KoreaQS550
  SwedenQS541
  Australia 1QQ541
  USAQQ 541
  CanadaQQ532
  New Zealand 2QQ 541
  Finland
523
  Japan
523
  New Zealand 1
514
  Australia 2
514
  New Zealand 3
505
  Italy
505
Q: Qualified for Semi / Quarterfinal

Korea win Gold at QRC Winter Games NZ

31 Aug 2019 – Korea's Hyeji Jang and Yujin Seong won the gold medal at the QRC Winter Games NZ Mixed Doubles Curling Tournament fuelled by Forsyth Barr.

They beat Tahli Gill and Dean Hewitt from Australia 7-4 in the final at Naseby's Maniototo Curling International rink this afternoon.

Therese Westman and Robin Ahlberg won the bronze medal for Sweden, beating USA's Tabitha Peterson and Joe Polo 9-8 in their extra end decider.

Korea opened the scoring in the gold medal match with a double takeout to score 2 in the first end, and then stole the next. Australia scored in the next two ends to level the scores 3-3 at the fourth-end break.

Korea edged ahead as the game neared its end, and Australia came into the last end needing to steal two to force an extra end. However a strong runback by Korea's Yujin Seong spilled the Australian stones and hopes, and Korea stole the end to cement their win.

Hyeji Yang felt her teammate's precision takeouts were a key to their strong tournament. "His runback is very accurate, and important for our game," she said. "This was Korea's first win in the Winter Games, so it is important to us and we are very excited by it."

Dean Hewitt commented, "We came in here just trying to reach the playoffs. So if you'd told us at the start of the week we were going to get to get silver for Australia we'd have been pretty happy with that."

Sweden and the USA had a tight to-and-fro game in the match for bronze. The USA scored 3 in the fifth end, actually throwing their last stone away as there was no safe way to attempt to score a fourth.

Sweden retook the lead when they scored 4 with their powerplay in the next, only for the USA to level the scores in the eighth end and force an extra deciding end. There were a number of stones around the centre of the house with just the final Swedish stone to play, but the Swedish pair were confident that they already had the shot for the win.

They elected not to throw their last stone, and were pleased that the umpire's measure vindicated their call.

It was our goal to medal here," said Therese Westman, "so we're happy with the bronze."

"We struggled in the first half," added Robin Ahlberg, "both with the game and with ourselves. But then we got that 4 with the powerplay, and kept the momentum going."

Australia and Korea to play for gold


USA and Australia 1 win Quarter-Finals


New Zealand 2 carry local hopes


Korea qualify for semi-finals


Korea only unbeaten team after five sessions


Australia impress early


Meet the Teams


Let the Games begin