Career
Reddick began her successful curling career by winning the 1999 Ontario provincial junior championships. At the 1999 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Reddick skipped Ontario to an 8-4 record, just out of the playoffs. Reddick was still eligible for Bantams that year, and she won the 1999 Bantam Girls provincial championship as well.
Reddick won another provincial junior championship in 2000. Again, her Ontario team finished with an 8-4 record, and once again it would not be good enough to make the playoffs.
Reddick won her third provincial junior championship in 2002. At the Canadian Juniors that year, her team finished with another winning record, this time 7-5, but again they fell short of the playoffs.
Reddick would also find success in Mixed curling. In 2000, she played third for John Epping, winning the provincial mixed junior championship and repeated the title in 2002 when she played third for Sebastien Robillard. Reddick would then win back to back Ontario Mixed titles in 2006 and 2007 throwing third stones for John Epping. The team won the 2006 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship, but were unable to repeat in 2007, finishing 6-5.
Read more about this topic: Julie Reddick
Famous quotes containing the word career:
“In time your relatives will come to accept the idea that a career is as important to you as your family. Of course, in time the polar ice cap will melt.”
—Barbara Dale (b. 1940)
“What exacerbates the strain in the working class is the absence of money to pay for services they need, economic insecurity, poor daycare, and lack of dignity and boredom in each partners job. What exacerbates it in upper-middle class is the instability of paid help and the enormous demands of the career system in which both partners become willing believers. But the tug between traditional and egalitarian models of marriage runs from top to bottom of the class ladder.”
—Arlie Hochschild (20th century)
“He was at a starting point which makes many a mans career a fine subject for betting, if there were any gentlemen given to that amusement who could appreciate the complicated probabilities of an arduous purpose, with all the possible thwartings and furtherings of circumstance, all the niceties of inward balance, by which a man swings and makes his point or else is carried headlong.”
—George Eliot [Mary Ann (or Marian)