2006 Tim Hortons Brier - Teams

Teams

Alberta British Columbia Manitoba
Saville Sports Centre, Edmonton

Skip: Kevin Martin
Third: Don Walchuk
Second: Carter Rycroft
Lead: Don Bartlett
Fifth: Mark Johnson

Kamloops Curling Club, Kamloops

Skip: Brian Windsor
Third: Dennis Graber**
Second: Randy Nelson
Lead: Bill Johnson
Fifth: Aron Herick

Charleswood Curling Club, Winnipeg

Skip: Jeff Stoughton
Third: Jon Mead
Second: Garry Van Den Berghe
Lead: Steve Gould
Fifth: Don Harvey

New Brunswick Newfoundland and Labrador Northern Ontario
Gage Golf & Country Club, Oromocto

Skip: James Grattan
Third: Wayne Tallon
Second: Jason Vaughan
Lead: Jeff Lacey
Fifth: Mark Dobson

St. John's Curling Club, St. John's

Skip: Ken Peddigrew
Third: Ryan LeDrew
Second: Jeff Rose
Lead: Keith Jewer
Fifth: David Noftall

Cobalt-Haileybury Curling Club, Haileybury

Skip: Robbie Gordon
Third: David MacInnes
Second: Steve Burnett
Lead: Jeremy Landry
Fifth: Larry Carr

Nova Scotia Ontario Prince Edward Island
Mayflower Curling Club, Halifax

Skip: Mark Dacey
Third: Bruce Lohnes
Second: Rob Harris
Lead: Andrew Gibson

Coldwater & District Curling Club, Coldwater

Skip: Glenn Howard
Third: Richard Hart
Second: Brent Laing
Lead: Craig Savill

Charlottetown Curling Club, Charlottetown

Skip: Rod MacDonald
Third: Kevin Champion
Second: Phil Gorveatt
Lead: Mike Dillon
Fifth: Mark O'Rourke

Quebec Saskatchewan Yukon/Northwest Territories
Club de curling Victoria, Sainte-Foy &
Club de curling Etchemin, Saint-Romuald

Skip: Jean-Michel Ménard
Third: François Roberge
Second: Éric Sylvain
Lead: Maxime Elmaleh
Fifth: Jean Gagnon

Davidson Curling Club, Davidson

Skip: Pat Simmons
Third: Jeff Sharp
Second: Chris Haichert
Lead: Ben Hebert

Yellowknife Curling Club, Yellowknife

Skip: Jamie Koe
Third: Kevin Whitehead
Second: Mark Whitehead
Lead: Brad Choroskowski

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Famous quotes containing the word teams:

    A sturdy lad from New Hampshire or Vermont who in turn tries all the professions, who teams it, farms it, peddles, keeps a school, preaches, edits a newspaper, goes to Congress, buys a township, and so forth, in successive years, and always like a cat falls on his feet, is worth a hundred of these city dolls. He walks abreast with his days and feels no shame in not “studying a profession,” for he does not postpone his life, but lives already.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)