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Two parks in Winnipeg will soon be renamed to honour curling legends Kaitlyn Lawes and Dawn McEwen, both Olympic gold ...
Mackenzie Zacharias, who stepped back from curling last spring after one season as vice of Jennifer Jones's five-player team, said she's not tempted to return to fill the upcoming vacancy.
Jennifer Jones, voted Canada's best female curler in history, announced retirement plans. Jennifer Jones, voted Canada's best female curler in history, announced ... Her team finished fifth. Jones ...
Team Jones is planning to have all five players train together and be on hand at most competitions. 'Heartbreak and betrayal': No room for friendships in the business of curling More curling coverage ...
The curling world has waited patiently to hear what’s next for the now-former teammates of Jennifer Jones. ... as Team Jones came up short against Ontario’s Rachel Homan in the national final.
Jennifer Jones, arguably the most dominant athlete at the Sochi Olympics, insisted after failing to qualify for PyeongChang that her curling team was OK.. She was right. Jones’ rink went 14-0 at the ...
Team Jones (from left, Emily Zacharias, Lauren Lenentine, Mackenzie Zacharias, Karlee Burgess and Jennifer Jones) celebrates its victory with PointsBet Canada Chief Executive Officer Scott Vanderwel, ...
Jennifer Jones and Brent Laing victorious in curling's return from the pandemic; ... Team Jones opened play with a 14-0 shellacking of Team Bella Croisier in a game called after four ends.
Team Jennifer Jones , Curling Canada The journey to the top of the Olympic podium – or any spot on the podium for that matter – will be a daunting one for the Canadian women’s curling team.
ST. JOHN’S—Jennifer Jones, fresh into four-player curling retirement, is back in the barn that started her glorious career, nearly 20 years ago. The date was Feb. 27, 2005 and the venue was ...
Manitoba skip Jennifer Jones, right, and second Mackenzie Zacharias talk while playing Team Wild Card 2 at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts, in Kamloops, B.C., on Wednesday, February 22, 2023.
Jennifer Jones, arguably the best female curler in Canadian history, plans to retire from team competition after this season at age 49. Jones said she still plans to compete in mixed doubles with ...