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1989 Scott Tournament of Hearts

Canadian women's curling championship From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The 1989 Scott Tournament of Hearts, the Canadian women's national curling championship, was held from February 25 to March 4, 1989 at the Kelowna Memorial Arena[2] in Kelowna, British Columbia.[3] The total attendance for the week was 19,436.[1]

Quick facts Host city, Arena ...

The defending champions, Team Canada, who was skipped by Heather Houston repeated as champions as they defeated Manitoba in the final 11–5. This was the first time since the introduction of Team Canada in 1986 that they had won the event and the first time since 1973 that a team has successfully defended their title.[4]

Houston's rink would again go onto represent Canada at the 1989 World Women's Curling Championship in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA where they won the gold medal over Norway after finishing runner-up the year before.

There were a few notable feats and records that were set in this tournament.[5]

  • Alberta's 15–6 victory over Newfoundland in Draw 2 set a Hearts era (since 1982) record for the highest score by a team in one game. This has since been matched three different times.
  • Manitoba's 8–0 victory over Alberta in Draw 12 was the fifth time in tournament history that a shutout was recorded.
  • In British Columbia's 9–3 win over Newfoundland in Draw 15, BC's third Georgina Hawkes recorded the first perfect game in the women's national championship history since statistics were recorded in 1982.
  • The semifinal between Canada and Saskatchewan was the third game ever in tournament history and the only playoff game to date to go into a second extra end.
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Teams

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The teams were listed as follows:[6]

More information Team Canada, Alberta ...


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Round Robin standings

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Final Round Robin standings[6]

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Round Robin results

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All draw times are listed in Pacific Standard Time (UTC-08:00).[6][8]

Draw 1

Saturday, February 25, 12:00 pm

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Draw 2

Saturday, February 25, 6:00 pm

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More information Sheet E, Final ...

Draw 3

Sunday, February 26, 12:00 pm

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More information Sheet E, Final ...

Draw 4

Sunday, February 26, 6:00 pm

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More information Sheet E, Final ...

Draw 5

Monday, February 27, 8:00 am

More information Sheet C, Final ...
More information Sheet D, Final ...

Draw 6

Monday, February 27, 12:00 pm

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Draw 7

Monday, February 27, 6:00 pm

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Draw 8

Tuesday, February 28, 8:00 am

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Draw 9

Tuesday, February 28, 12:00 pm

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Draw 10

Tuesday, February 28, 6:00 pm

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Draw 11

Wednesday, March 1, 8:00 am

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Draw 12

Wednesday, March 1, 12:00 pm

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Draw 13

Wednesday, March 1, 6:00 pm

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Draw 14

Thursday, March 2, 12:00 pm

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Draw 15

Thursday, March 2, 6:00 pm

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More information Sheet E, Final ...
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Tiebreakers

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  To Semifinal
Saskatchewan 5
New Brunswick 2 British Columbia 3
British Columbia 9
 Canada 8
Nova Scotia 6

Round 1

Friday, March 3, 8:00 am

More information Sheet B, Final ...
More information Player percentages, New Brunswick ...

Round 2

Friday, March 3, 12:00 pm

More information Sheet B, Final ...
More information Player percentages, Canada ...
More information Sheet D, Final ...
More information Player percentages, British Columbia ...
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Playoffs

Semifinal Final
1 Manitoba 5
2 Saskatchewan 6 2  Canada 11
3  Canada 8

Semifinal

Friday, March 3, 6:00 pm

Sheet C 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Final
Saskatchewan (Schneider) 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 6
 Canada (Houston) (has hammer) 1 0 2 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 8
More information Player percentages, Canada ...

Final

Saturday, March 4, 11:15 am

More information Sheet C, Final ...
More information Player percentages, Canada ...
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Statistics

Top 5 player percentages

Final Round Robin Percentages[6]

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More information Leads, % ...
  1. Shot percentages include the final three draws where Team British Columbia changed their lineup with Sutton throwing second stones, Hawkes throwing third stones, and Sanders throwing fourth stones.

Perfect games

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Awards

The all-star team and sportsmanship award winners were as follows:[9]

All-Star Team

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Sylvia Fedoruk Award

The Scotties Tournament of Hearts Sportsmanship Award is presented to the curler who best embodies the spirit of curling at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts. The winner was selected in a vote by all players at the tournament.

Prior to 1998, the award was named after a notable individual in the curling community where the tournament was held that year. For this edition, the award was named after Sylvia Fedoruk, a Canadian Curling Hall of Fame inductee who played third for the Joyce McKee rink that won the inaugural women's championship in 1961 and was president of the Canadian Ladies Curling Association from 1971–72.[10]

More information Name, Team ...
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Notes

  1. After Draw 11, Team British Columbia skip Julie Sutton threw second stones, third Pat Sanders threw fourth stones, and second Georgina Hawkes threw third stones.[7]
  2. Team British Columbia alternate Diane Nelson threw lead stones in the last end of Draw 7 and the last five ends of Draw 12.

References

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