2009 Mount Titlis World Women's Curling Championship - Teams

Teams

Canada China Denmark
St. Vital CC, Winnipeg

Skip: Jennifer Jones
Third: Cathy Overton-Clapham
Second: Jill Officer
Lead: Dawn Askin
Alternate: Jennifer Clark-Rouire

Harbin CC, Harbin

Skip: Wang Bingyu
Third: Liu Yin
Second: Yue Qingshuang
Lead: Zhou Yan
Alternate: Liu Jinli

Tårnby CC, Tårnby

Skip: Angelina Jensen*
Fourth: Madeleine Dupont
Third: Denise Dupont
Lead: Camilla Jensen
Alternate: Ane Hansen
(*Throws second rocks)

Germany Italy South Korea
SC Riessersee, Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Skip: Andrea Schöpp
Third: Monika Wagner
Second: Melanie Robillard
Lead: Stella Heiß
Alternate: Tina Tichatschke

CC Dolomiti, Cortina d'Ampezzo

Skip: Diana Gaspari
Third: Giorgia Apollonio
Second: Violetta Caldart
Lead: Elettra De Col
Alternate: Claudia Alvera

Kyung Gido Council, Gyeonggi-do

Skip: Kim Mi-Yeon
Third: Shin Mi-Sung
Second: Lee Seul-Bee
Lead: Lee Hyun-Jung
Alternate: Kim Ji-Sun

Norway Russia Scotland
Oppdal CK, Oppdal

Skip: Marianne Rørvik
Third: Henriette Løvar
Second: Kristin Skaslien
Lead: Ingrid Stensrud
Alternate: Kristin Tøsse Løvseth

Moskvitch CC, Moscow

Skip: Ludmila Privivkova
Third: Olga Jarkova
Second: Nkeiruka Ezekh
Lead: Ekaterina Galkina
Alternate: Margarita Fomina

Dunkeld CC, Perth

Skip: Eve Muirhead
Third: Karen Addison
Second: Rachael Simms
Lead: Anne Laird
Alternate: Jackie Lockhart

Sweden Switzerland United States
Härnösands CK, Härnösand

Skip: Anette Norberg
Third: Eva Lund
Second: Cathrine Lindahl
Lead: Margaretha Sigfridsson
Alternate: Kajsa Bergström

Davos CC, Davos

Skip: Mirjam Ott
Third: Carmen Schäfer
Second: Valeria Spälty
Lead: Janine Greiner
Alternate: Carmen Küng

Madison CC, Madison

Skip: Debbie McCormick
Third: Allison Pottinger
Second: Nicole Joraanstad
Lead: Natalie Nicholson
Alternate: Tracy Sachtjen

Read more about this topic:  2009 Mount Titlis World Women's Curling Championship

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)