Curling at the 2018 Winter Olympics

The curling competition of the 2018 Winter Olympics was held between 8 and 25 February 2018 at the Gangneung Curling Centre.[1] This was the seventh time that curling is on the Olympic program. In each of the men's and women's competitions, ten nations competed. A third competition was added for the 2018 Olympics, mixed doubles, in which teams consist of one woman and one man. There were eight participating countries in the doubles competition.[2]

Curling
at the XXIII Olympic Winter Games
Curling pictogram at the 2018 Winter Olympics
VenueGangneung Gymnasium
Dates8–25 February 2018
No. of events3 (1 men, 1 women, 1 mixed)
Competitors116 from 13 nations
← 2014
2022 →
Men's curling
at the XXIII Olympic Winter Games
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)  United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Sweden
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Switzerland
Women's curling
at the XXIII Olympic Winter Games
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Sweden
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  South Korea
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Japan
Mixed doubles's curling
at the XXIII Olympic Winter Games
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Canada
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Switzerland
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Norway
Gangneung Curling Centre
Gangneung Curling Centre during the 2018 Winter Olympics
Inside view of Gangneung Curling Centre
Inside view of Gangneung Curling Centre

Qualification

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Qualification to the curling tournaments at the Winter Olympics was determined through two methods. Nations could qualify teams by earning qualification points from performances at the 2016 and 2017 World Curling Championships. Teams could also qualify through an Olympic qualification event which was held in December 2017. Seven nations qualified teams via World Championship qualification points, while two nations qualified through the qualification event. As host nation, South Korea qualified teams automatically, thus making a total of ten teams per gender in the curling tournaments. For the mixed doubles competition the top seven ranked teams earning qualification points from performances at the 2016 and 2017 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship qualified along with hosts South Korea.[3]

Competition schedule

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Curling competitions started the day before the Opening Ceremony and finish on the last day of the games, meaning the sport was the only one to have a competition every day of the games.[4] The following was the competition schedule for the curling competitions:

RR Round robin SF Semifinals B 3rd place play-off F Final
Date
Event
Thu 8 Fri 9 Sat 10 Sun 11 Mon 12 Tue 13 Wed 14 Thu 15 Fri 16 Sat 17 Sun 18 Mon 19 Tue 20 Wed 21 Thu 22 Fri 23 Sat 24 Sun 25
Men's tournament RR RR RR RR RR RR RR RR SF B F
Women's tournament RR RR RR RR RR RR RR RR SF B F
Mixed doubles RR RR RR RR SF B F

Medal summary

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Medal table

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RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Sweden1102
2  Canada1001
  United States1001
4  Switzerland0112
5  South Korea*0101
6  Japan0011
  Norway0011
Totals (7 entries)3339

Medal events

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Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men
details
  United States
John Shuster
Tyler George
Matt Hamilton
John Landsteiner
Joe Polo
  Sweden
Niklas Edin
Oskar Eriksson
Rasmus Wranå
Christoffer Sundgren
Henrik Leek
  Switzerland
Benoît Schwarz
Claudio Pätz
Peter de Cruz
Valentin Tanner
Dominik Märki
Women
details
  Sweden
Anna Hasselborg
Sara McManus
Agnes Knochenhauer
Sofia Mabergs
Jennie Wåhlin
  South Korea
Kim Eun-jung
Kim Kyeong-ae
Kim Seon-yeong
Kim Yeong-mi
Kim Cho-hi
  Japan
Satsuki Fujisawa
Chinami Yoshida
Yumi Suzuki
Yurika Yoshida
Mari Motohashi
Mixed doubles
details
  Canada
Kaitlyn Lawes
John Morris
  Switzerland
Jenny Perret
Martin Rios
  Norway1
Kristin Skaslien
Magnus Nedregotten
Notes
  1. ^ The Olympic Athletes from Russia team originally won the mixed doubles bronze medal, but were disqualified after Alexander Krushelnitskiy tested positive for meldonium.[5]

Results summary

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Men's tournament

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Round robin

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Standings
Final round robin standings
Team Skip Pld W L PF PA EW EL BE SE S% Qualification
  Sweden Niklas Edin 9 7 2 62 43 34 28 13 8 87% Playoffs
  Canada Kevin Koe 9 6 3 56 46 36 34 14 8 87%
  United States John Shuster 9 5 4 67 63 37 39 4 6 80%
  Great Britain Kyle Smith 9 5 4 55 60 40 37 8 7 82% Tiebreaker
  Switzerland Peter de Cruz 9 5 4 60 55 39 37 10 6 83%
  Norway Thomas Ulsrud 9 4 5 52 56 34 39 7 8 82%
  South Korea Kim Chang-min 9 4 5 65 63 39 39 8 8 82%
  Japan Yusuke Morozumi 9 4 5 48 56 33 35 13 5 81%
  Italy Joël Retornaz 9 3 6 50 56 37 38 15 7 81%
  Denmark Rasmus Stjerne 9 2 7 53 70 36 39 12 5 83%
Source: [citation needed]
Results
Team                     Record
  Canada 8–3 6–4 5–3 8–4 7–4 7–6 2–5 6–8 7–9 6–3
  Denmark 3–8 6–7 6–4 4–6 8–10 9–8 5–9 7–9 5–9 2–7
  Great Britain 4–6 7–6 7–6 6–5 10–3 5–11 6–8 6–5 4–10 5–4
  Italy 3–5 4–6 6–7 5–6 6–4 6–8 3–7 7–4 10–9 3–6
  Japan 4–8 6–4 5–6 6–5 6–4 4-10 4–11 5–6 8–2 4–5
  Norway 4–7 10–8 3–10 4–6 4–6 7–5 7–2 5–7 8–5 4–5
  South Korea 6–7 8–9 11–5 8–6 10-4 5–7 2–7 8–7 7–11 4–5
  Sweden 5–2 9–5 8–6 7–3 11–4 2–7 7–2 3–10 10–4 7–2
  Switzerland 8–6 9–7 5–6 4–7 6–5 7–5 7–8 10–3 4–8 5–4
  United States 9–7 9–5 10–4 9–10 2–8 5–8 11–7 4–10 8–4 5–4

Playoffs

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Semifinals Gold medal game
      
1   Sweden 9
4   Switzerland 3
1   Sweden 7
3   United States 10
2   Canada 3
3   United States 5 Bronze medal game
2   Canada 5
4   Switzerland 7

Women's tournament

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Round robin

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Standings
Final round robin standings
Team Skip Pld W L PF PA EW EL BE SE S% Qualification
  South Korea Kim Eun-jung 9 8 1 75 44 41 34 5 15 79% Playoffs
  Sweden Anna Hasselborg 9 7 2 64 48 42 34 14 13 83%
  Great Britain Eve Muirhead 9 6 3 61 56 39 38 12 6 79%
  Japan Satsuki Fujisawa 9 5 4 59 55 38 36 10 13 75%
  China Wang Bingyu 9 4 5 57 65 35 38 12 5 78%
  Canada Rachel Homan 9 4 5 68 59 40 36 10 12 81%
  Switzerland Silvana Tirinzoni 9 4 5 60 55 34 37 12 7 78%
  United States Nina Roth 9 4 5 56 65 38 39 7 6 78%
  Olympic Athletes from Russia Victoria Moiseeva 9 2 7 45 76 34 40 8 6 76%
  Denmark Madeleine Dupont 9 1 8 50 72 32 41 10 6 73%
Source: [citation needed]
Results
Team                     Record
  Canada 5–7 8–9 5–6 8–3 9–8 6–8 6–7 10–8 11–3 4–5
  China 7–5 10–7 7–8 7–6 6–7 5–12 4–8 7–2 4–10 4–5
  Denmark 9–8 7–10 6–7 5–8 7–8 3–9 3–9 4–6 6–7 1–8
  Great Britain 6–5 8–7 7–6 8–6 10–3 4–7 6–8 8–7 4–7 6–3
  Japan 3–8 6–7 8–5 6–8 10–5 7–5 5–4 4–8 10–5 5–4
  Olympic Athletes from Russia 8–9 7–6 8–7 3–10 5–10 2–11 4–5 2–11 6–7 2–7
  South Korea 8–6 12–5 9–3 7–4 5–7 11–2 7–6 7–5 9–6 8–1
  Sweden 7–6 8–4 9–3 8–6 4–5 5–4 6–7 8–7 9–6 7–2
  Switzerland 8–10 2–7 6–4 7–8 8–4 11–2 5–7 7–8 6–5 4–5
  United States 3–11 10–4 7–6 7–4 5–10 7–6 6–9 6–9 5–6 4–5

Playoffs

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Semifinals Gold medal game
      
1   South Korea 8
4   Japan 7
1   South Korea 3
2   Sweden 8
2   Sweden 10
3   Great Britain 5 Bronze medal game
3   Great Britain 3
4   Japan 5

Mixed doubles

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Round robin

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Standings
Final round robin standings
Team Athletes Pld W L PF PA EW EL BE SE S% Qualification
  Canada Kaitlyn Lawes / John Morris 7 6 1 52 26 28 20 0 9 80% Playoffs
  Switzerland Jenny Perret / Martin Rios 7 5 2 45 40 29 26 0 10 71%
  Olympic Athletes from Russia Anastasia Bryzgalova / Alexander Krushelnitskiy 7 4 3 36 44 26 27 1 7 67%
  Norway Kristin Skaslien / Magnus Nedregotten 7 4 3 39 43 26 25 1 8 74% Tiebreaker
  China Wang Rui / Ba Dexin 7 4 3 47 42 27 27 1 6 72%
  South Korea Jang Hye-ji / Lee Ki-jeong 7 2 5 40 40 23 29 1 7 67%
  United States Rebecca Hamilton / Matt Hamilton 7 2 5 37 43 26 25 0 9 74%
  Finland Oona Kauste / Tomi Rantamäki 7 1 6 35 53 23 29 0 6 67%
Source: [citation needed]
Results
Team                 Record
  Canada 10–4 8–2 6–9 8–2 7–3 7–2 6–4 6–1
  China 4–10 10–5 9–3 5–6 8–7 5–7 6–4 4–3
  Finland 2–8 5–10 6–7 5–7 4–9 6–7 7–5 1–6
  Norway 9–6 3–9 7–6 3–4 8–3 6–5 3–10 4–3
  Olympic Athletes from Russia 2–8 6–5 7–5 4–3 6–5 8–9 3–9 4–3
  South Korea 3–7 7–8 9–4 3–8 5–6 4–6 9–1 2–5
  Switzerland 2–7 7–5 7–6 5–6 9–8 6–4 9–4 5–2
  United States 4–6 4–6 5–7 10–3 9–3 1–9 4–9 2–5

Playoffs

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Semifinals Gold medal game
      
1   Canada 8
4   Norway 4
1   Canada 10
2   Switzerland 3
2   Switzerland 7
3   Olympic Athletes from Russia 5 Bronze medal game
3   Olympic Athletes from Russia (DSQ) L
4   Norway W

Participating nations

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A total of 113 athletes from 13 nations (including the IOC's designation of Olympic Athletes from Russia) were scheduled to participate (the numbers of athletes are shown in parentheses). Some curlers competed in both the 4-person and mixed doubles tournament, therefore the numbers included on this list are the total athletes sent by each NOC to the Olympics, not how many athletes they qualified.

References

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  1. ^ "Gangneung Curling Centre". pyeongchang2018. PyeongChang Organizing Committee for the 2018 Olympic & Paralympic Winter Games. Archived from the original on 17 April 2016. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
  2. ^ McKay, Duncan (10 April 2016). "New disciplines added to Pyeongchang 2018 but snowboard parallel slalom cut to accommodate them". Insidethegames. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
  3. ^ "Qualification Systems for XXIII Olympic Winter Games, PyeongChang 2018" (PDF). World Curling Federation. 9 March 2016. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
  4. ^ "Developing Mixed Doubles ahead of Olympic debut". www.worldcurling.org/. World Curling Federation. 14 September 2016. Archived from the original on 10 November 2016. Retrieved 10 November 2016.
  5. ^ "Russian curler stripped of Winter Olympics medal after an anti-doping rule violation". The Guardian. 22 February 2018. Retrieved 22 February 2018.
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