2010–11 curling season

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The 2010–11 curling season began in September 2010 and ended in April 2011.

2010–11 curling season
SportCurling
Seasons

Note: In events with two genders, the men's tournament winners will be listed before the women's tournament winners.

CCA-sanctioned events

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Season of Champions events in bold; other CCA-sanctioned events in regular typeface.[1]

Event Winning skip Runner-up skip
Canadian Mixed Curling Championship
Morris, Manitoba, Nov. 13-20
  Prince Edward Island   Manitoba
The Dominion Curling Club Championship
Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Nov. 23-28
  Saskatchewan   Ontario
  Alberta   Saskatchewan
Canada Cup of Curling
Medicine Hat, Alberta, Dec. 1-5
  Glenn Howard   Kevin Martin
  Stefanie Lawton   Cheryl Bernard
Continental Cup of Curling
St. Albert, Alberta, Jan. 13-16
   North America   World
Universiade
Erzurum, Turkey, Jan. 27-Feb. 6
  South Korea   Switzerland
  Great Britain   Russia
Canadian Junior Curling Championships
Calgary, Alberta, Jan. 29-Feb. 6
  Saskatchewan   Ontario
  Trish Paulsen   Nadine Chyz
Canada Winter Games
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Feb. 13-26
  Ontario   Saskatchewan
  British Columbia   Alberta
Tournament of Hearts
Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Feb. 19-27
  Saskatchewan   Canada
World Wheelchair Curling Championship
Prague, Czech Republic, Feb. 21-Mar.1
  Canada   Scotland
Tim Hortons Brier
London, Ontario, Mar. 5-13
  Manitoba   Ontario
World Junior Curling Championships
Perth, Scotland, Mar. 5-13
  Sweden   Switzerland
  Scotland   Canada
CIS/CCA University Championships
St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Mar. 9-13
  Memorial Sea-Hawks   Manitoba Bisons
  Laurier Golden Hawks   Brock Badgers
Canadian Senior Curling Championships
Digby, Nova Scotia, Mar. 19-26
  Manitoba   Alberta
  New Brunswick   Ontario
World Women's Curling Championship
Esbjerg, Denmark, Mar. 19-27
  Sweden   Canada
Canadian Wheelchair Curling Championship
Edmonton, Alberta, Mar. 20-27
  Manitoba   Alberta
Canadian Masters Curling Championships
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Mar. 30-Apr. 5
  British Columbia   Manitoba
  Manitoba   British Columbia
World Men's Curling Championship
Regina, Saskatchewan, Apr. 2-10
  Canada   Scotland
World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship
St. Paul, Minnesota, Apr. 15-24
  Switzerland   Russia
World Senior Curling Championships
St. Paul, Minnesota, Apr. 15-24
  Canada   United States
  Canada   Sweden

Other events

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Event Winning skip Runner-up skip
European Mixed Curling Championship
Howwood, Scotland, September 20–28
  Scotland   Switzerland
World Wheelchair Curling Championship Qualification
Lohja, Finland, Nov. 7-12
  China   Russia
Pacific Curling Championships
Uiseong, South Korea, Nov. 16-23
  China   South Korea
  South Korea   China
European Curling Championships
Champéry, Switzerland, Dec. 3-11
A   Norway   Denmark
  Sweden   Scotland
B   Italy   Latvia
  Czech Republic   Italy
European Junior Curling Challenge
Prague, Czech Republic, Jan. 3-8
  Czech Republic   Russia
  Norway   Germany
Pacific Junior Curling Championships
Naseby, New Zealand, Jan. 9-16
  China   South Korea
  Japan   South Korea
TSN Curling Skins Game
Rama, Ontario, Jan. 22-23
  Kevin Martin   David Murdoch
Karuizawa International Curling Championship
Karuizawa, Nagano, Japan, Jan. 26-30
  Yusuke Morozumi   Tyler George
  Jennifer Jones   Satsuki Fujisawa
Winter Deaflympics
Vysoké Tatry, Slovakia, Feb. 19-26
Event cancelled[2]

Grand Slam events in bold.[3][4]

Teams

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Men's events

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Week Event Winning skip Runner-up skip
1 Baden Masters
Baden, Switzerland, September 10–12
  Thomas Lips   Brad Gushue
2 AMJ Campbell Shorty Jenkins Classic
Brockville, Ontario, September 16–19
  Jean-Michel Ménard   Brad Jacobs
The Shoot-Out
Edmonton, September 16–19
  Don Walchuk   Ted Appelman
3 Radisson Blu Oslo Cup
Oslo, September 23–26
  Niklas Edin   Thomas Ulsrud
World Financial Group Classic
Calgary, September 24–27
  Dean Ross   Don Walchuk
4 Swiss Cup Basel
Basel, Oct. 1-4
  Andy Kapp   Christof Schwaller
Horizon Laser Vision Center Classic
Regina, Saskatchewan, Oct. 1-4
  Randy Bryden   Carl deConinck Smith
Twin Anchors Invitational
Vernon, British Columbia, Oct. 1-4
  Kevin Koe   Andrey Drozdov
5 Manitoba Lotteries Men's Fall Classic
Brandon, Manitoba, Oct. 8-11
  Scott Bitz   Vic Peters
Westcoast Curling Classic
New Westminster, British Columbia, Oct. 8-11
  Kevin Martin   Kevin Koe
6 St. Paul Cash Spiel
St. Paul, Minnesota, Oct. 15-17
  Tyler George   Bryan Burgess
Meyers Norris Penny Charity Classic
Medicine Hat, Alberta, Oct. 15-18
  Pat Simmons   Ted Appelman
7 Challenge Casino Lac Leamy
Gatineau, Quebec, Oct. 21-24
  Serge Reid   Jean-Michel Ménard
Bern Open
Bern, Switzerland, Oct. 22-24
  Thomas Lips   Hammy McMillan
Canad Inns Prairie Classic
Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, Oct. 22-25
  Mike McEwen   Jeff Stoughton
8 Cactus Pheasant Classic
Brooks, Alberta, Oct. 28-31
  Kevin Martin   Wayne Middaugh
9 Grey Power World Cup of Curling
Windsor, Ontario, Nov. 3-7
  Mike McEwen   Jeff Stoughton
Red Deer Curling Classic
Red Deer, Alberta, Nov. 5-8
  Jason Montgomery   Brent Bawel
10 Whites Drug Store Classic
Swan River, Manitoba, Nov. 11-14
  Kevin Martin   Darrell McKee
Lucerne Curling Trophy
Lucerne, Switzerland, Nov. 11-14
  Andy Kapp   Tom Brewster
11 Skookum WCT Cash Spiel
Whitehorse, Yukon, Nov. 18-21
  Kevin Koe   Greg McAulay
Wainwright Roaming Buffalo Classic
Wainwright, Alberta, Nov. 19-22
  Robert Schlender   Jamie Fletcher
Interlake Pharmacy Classic
Stonewall, Manitoba, Nov. 19-22
  Reid Carruthers   David Bohn
Sun Life Classic
Brantford, Ontario, Nov. 19-22
  Mike McEwen   Brad Gushue
12 Challenge Casino de Charlevoix
Clermont, Quebec, Nov. 25-28
  Mike McEwen   Serge Reid
Seattle Cash Spiel
Seattle, Washington, Nov. 26-28
  Brad Hannah   Leon Romaniuk
Edinburgh International
Edinburgh, Scotland, Nov. 26-28
  Graham Shaw   Hammy McMillan
Labatt Crown of Curling
Kamloops, British Columbia, Nov. 26-29
  Bob Ursel   Steve Petryk
Point Optical Curling Classic
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Nov. 26-29
  Dave Elias   Randy Bryden
13 Dauphin Clinic Pharmacy Classic
Dauphin, Manitoba, Dec. 3-6
  Rae Kujanpaa   Brent Gedak
Laphroaig Scotch Open
Madison, Wisconsin, Dec. 3-5
  Todd Birr   Matt Hamilton
15 The Swiss Chalet National
Vernon, British Columbia, Dec. 15-19
  Kevin Martin   Jeff Stoughton
Curl Mesabi Cash Spiel
Eveleth, Minnesota, Dec. 17-19
  Jeff Currie   John Benton
17 Ramada Perth Masters
Perth, Scotland, Jan. 6-9
  Mike McEwen   Duncan Fernie
19 BDO Canadian Open of Curling
Oshawa, Ontario, Jan. 26-30
  Mike McEwen   Glenn Howard
27 DEKALB Superspiel
Morris, Manitoba, Mar. 17-21
  Kevin Koe   Mike McEwen
29 Victoria Curling Classic Invitational
Victoria, British Columbia, Mar. 31-Apr. 3
  Glenn Howard   Brock Virtue
30 GP Car and Home Players' Championship
Grande Prairie, Alberta, Apr. 12-18
  Kevin Martin   Niklas Edin

Women's events

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Week Event Winning skip Runner-up skip
2 AMJ Campbell Shorty Jenkins Classic
Brockville, Ontario, September 16–19
  Rachel Homan   Tracy Horgan
The Shoot-Out
Edmonton, September 16–19
  Heather Nedohin   Cathy King
3 Radisson SAS Oslo Cup
Oslo, September 23–26
  Mirjam Ott   Anna Hasselborg
Schmirler Curling Classic
Regina, Saskatchewan, September 24–27
  Amber Holland   Sherry Middaugh
4 Twin Anchors Invitational
Vernon, British Columbia, September 30-Oct. 3
  Cheryl Bernard   Liudmila Privivkova
5 RE/MAX Masters Basel
Basel, Switzerland, Oct. 8-10
  Andrea Schöpp   Anna Hasselborg
Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic
Calgary, Oct. 8-11
  Wang Bingyu   Desirée Owen
6 Meyers Norris Penny Charity Classic
Medicine Hat, Alberta, Oct. 15-18
  Jessie Kaufman   Eve Muirhead
7 Grasshopper Women's Masters
Zürich, Switzerland, Oct. 22-24
  Mirjam Ott   Liudmila Privivkova
Manitoba Lotteries Women's Curling Classic
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Oct. 22-25
  Chelsea Carey   Cathy Overton-Clapham
8 Colonial Square Ladies Classic
Saskatoon, Oct. 29-Nov. 1
  Stefanie Lawton   Jennifer Jones
9 Royal LePage OVCA Women's Fall Classic
Kemptville, Ontario, Nov. 4-7
  Christine McCrady   Tracy Horgan
Stockholm Ladies Cup
Stockholm, Sweden, Nov. 4-7
  Mirjam Ott   Anna Hasselborg
Red Deer Curling Classic
Red Deer, Alberta, Nov. 5-8
  Shannon Kleibrink   Jessie Kaufman
10 Sobeys Slam
New Glasgow, Nova Scotia, Nov. 11-14
  Jennifer Jones   Chelsea Carey
11 Interlake Pharmacy Classic
Stonewall, Manitoba, Nov. 19-22
  Shauna Streich   Jill Thurston
Sun Life Classic
Brantford, Ontario, Nov. 19-22
  Jennifer Jones   Kelly Scott
12 Labatt Crown of Curling
Kamloops, British Columbia, Nov. 26-29
  Allison MacInnes   Marla Mallett
Boundary Ford Curling Classic
Lloydminster, Alberta, Nov. 26-29
  Shannon Kleibrink   Heather Nedohin
International ZO Women's Tournament
Wetzikon, Switzerland, Nov. 26-28
  Mirjam Ott   Binia Feltscher
17 International Bernese Ladies Cup
Bern, Switzerland, Jan. 14-16
  Lene Nielsen   Shinobu Aota
18 Glynhill Ladies International
Glasgow, Scotland, Jan. 21-23
  Anna Hasselborg   Mirjam Ott
27 DEKALB Superspiel
Morris, Manitoba, Mar. 17-21
  Chelsea Carey   Michelle Montford
29 Victoria Curling Classic Invitational
Victoria, British Columbia, Mar. 31-Apr. 3
  Jennifer Jones   Shannon Kleibrink
30 GP Car and Home Players' Championship
Grande Prairie, Alberta, Apr. 12-18
  Jennifer Jones   Rachel Homan

WCT Order of Merit rankings

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Men[5]

Year-end Standings
# Skip Points
1   Kevin Martin 540.090
2   Glenn Howard 458.120
3   Mike McEwen 388.030
4   Kevin Koe 386.160
5   Jeff Stoughton 342.128
6   Brad Gushue 338.762
7   Thomas Ulsrud 325.530
8   Niklas Edin 290.370
9   Bob Ursel 212.830
10   Dale Matchett 182.180

Women[6]

Year-end Standings
# Skip Points
1   Jennifer Jones 481.075
2   Amber Holland 326.000
3   Cheryl Bernard 314.060
4   Shannon Kleibrink 288.520
5   Mirjam Ott 253.310
6   Stefanie Lawton 243.951
7   Kelly Scott 226.610
8   Heather Nedohin 213.821
9   Eve Muirhead 210.513
10   Wang Bingyu 196.760

WCT Money List

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Men[7]

Year-end Standings
# Skip $ (CAD)
1   Mike McEwen 127,490
2   Kevin Martin 125,500
3   Glenn Howard 85,900
4   Kevin Koe 84,000
5   Jeff Stoughton 75,250
6   Pat Simmons 51,800
7   Niklas Edin 47,727
8   Rob Fowler 41,750
9   Bob Ursel 34,250
10   Brad Gushue 33,348

Women[8]

Year-end Standings
# Skip $ (CAD)
1   Jennifer Jones 76,069
2   Chelsea Carey 43,000
3   Heather Nedohin 40,100
4   Mirjam Ott 36,282
5   Shannon Kleibrink 34,400
6   Stefanie Lawton 29,200
7   Eve Muirhead 27,338
8   Rachel Homan 27,300
9   Desirée Owen 24,400
10   Jessie Kaufman 23,900

Cyber attack on curling websites

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On January 14, 2011, four major curling websites (CurlingZone, World Curling Tour, Ontario Curling Tour, and Canadian Curling Reporters) went offline[9] in an apparent cyber attack by hackers from China and Korea.[10] The problem was found to be missing databases of painstakingly documented curling information dating back two years from primary and secondary backup systems. For many weeks, the four websites and any content supported by CurlingZone's software were unable to be accessed. The proprietors of the websites were forced to request the help of data recovery services to recover the lost data, which includes information on thousands of curling events both major, like the Olympics season, and minor. As a result of these presumed cyber attacks, the websites were switched to a new server and reloaded with whatever information was available at the time.[11]

Capital One, the sponsor of the Grand Slam of Curling, the World Curling Championships, and various teams and bonspiels, stated a few days after the incident that they would match donations to CurlingZone to help the recovery effort and encouraged other curling-related businesses to donate money.[12] However, people involved with CurlingZone and The Curling News expressed concern that much of the data is irrecoverable and may have disappeared forever. As of March, the websites are up and running, but the content from last year and many years preceding it are still missing.

In another event, the websites of U.S. and world curling governing bodies were attacked by sites in China and Korea. The attacks may be related to the attacks on the four major curling websites.[11]

The Dominion MA Cup

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The Dominion MA Cup presented by TSN was created for the first time for the 2010-11 season.[13] The Cup is awarded to the Canadian Curling Association Member Association (MA) who has had the most success during the season in the CCA sanctioned events. Events include the Canadian Mixed, Men's & Women's Juniors, the Scotties, the Brier, Men's & Women's Seniors and the national Wheelchair championship.

The inaugural title will go to both Alberta and Saskatchewan. Both MAs finished with the highest number of points, in a tie. The tie breaking procedure is the best record between the two MAs in round robin games, but the two MAs split their season series 4-4.

Alberta did not win any national titles; it was runner up in three events, and finished in the top six in all events. Saskatchewan, on the other hand, won both junior events and the Scotties. Manitoba finished third, having also won three events (the Brier, the men's seniors, the national wheelchairs).

The Governors Cup was also awarded, to the Member Association who has seen the most improvement. It was given to New Brunswick.

Points are awarded based on placement in each of the events, with the top association receiving 14 points, then the second place team with 13, etc.

Final standings

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Rank Member Association CMCC CWJCC CMJCC Scotties Brier CWSCC CMSCC CWhCC Total Pts. Avg. Pts
T1   Alberta 9 13 9 8 11 11 13 13 87 10.875
T1   Saskatchewan 7 14 14 14 7 12 11 8 87 10.875
3   Manitoba 13 12 8 6 14 4 14 14 85 10.625
4   Ontario 11 6 13 11 13 13 9 6 82 10.250
5   Nova Scotia 12 4 10 12 9 10 7 12 76 9.500
6   New Brunswick 10 9 11 4 6 14 3 n/a 57 8.143
7   British Columbia 8 11 3 10 8 8 6 11 65 8.125
8   Northern Ontario 6 8 7 n/a 10 7 8 10 56 8.000
9   Prince Edward Island 14 10 5 9 3 9 5 n/a 55 7.857
10   Newfoundland and Labrador 3 5 12 3 12 6 12 5 58 7.250
11   Quebec 4 3 2 7 5 3 10 7 41 5.125
12   Northwest Territories 5 2 4 5 4 5 2 n/a 27 3.857
13   Yukon 2 7 6 2 2 2 4 n/a 25 3.571
14   Nunavut n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a 0 0.000

Capital One Cup

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The Capital One Cup is a season-long competition that awards curling teams point values for their participation in Capital One Grand Slam of Curling events. At the end of the season, the men's and women's teams with the top three point values are awarded purse totalling CAD$170,000. The top-ranked team is awarded $50,000, the second-ranked team $25,000, and the third-ranked team $10,000.

The points are allocated as follows:

Rank Point Value
GPWC, National, BDO
Autumn, Manitoba, Sobeys
GPPC
1st 12 points 24 points
2nd 9 points 18 points
3rd/4th 7 points 14 points
5th-8th 5 points 10 points
Qualifying 1 point per win 2 points per win

Men[14]

# Team GPWC National BDO GPPC Total
1   Kevin Martin 5 12 5 24 46
2   Mike McEwen 12 5 12 10 39
3   Glenn Howard 7 7 9 14 37
4   Jeff Stoughton 9 9 7 10 35
5   Niklas Edin 5 5 18 28
  Kevin Koe 5 2 7 14 28
6   Rob Fowler 7 5 10 22
7   Wayne Middaugh 3 7 2 12
  Pat Simmons 3 2 5 2 12
8   Braeden Moskowy 10 10
9   Randy Ferbey (Gushue) 5 2 1 8
  Bob Ursel 2 5 1 8
10   John Epping 2 2 2 6
  Brad Jacobs 2 4 6
  Don Walchuk 5 1 6
11   Dale Matchett 5 5
  Thomas Ulsrud 3 2 5
12   Jake Higgs 2 2 4
  Steve Petryk 4 4
  Robert Schlender 4 4
13   Kevin Park 2 1 3
14   Mathew Camm 2 2
  Peter Corner 2 2
  Sean Geall 2 2
  Jason Montgomery 2 2
15   Brent Bawel 1 0 1
16   Brock Virtue 0 0

Women[15]

# Team Autumn Manitoba Sobeys GPPC Total
1   Jennifer Jones 7 5 12 24 48
2   Chelsea Carey 2 12 9 10 33
3   Heather Nedohin 7 7 14 28
4   Eve Muirhead 3 7 14 24
5   Rachel Homan 1 2 18 21
6   Cheryl Bernard 5 4 10 19
  Desirée Owen 9 10 19
  Stefanie Lawton 5 7 5 2 19
7   Cathy Overton-Clapham 2 9 7 0 18
8   Shannon Kleibrink 5 10 15
9   Wang Bingyu 12 2 14
10   Amber Holland 4 4 5 13
11   Erika Brown 3 4 5 12
12   Sherry Middaugh 5 3 2 10
13   Valerie Sweeting 4 4 8
  Stina Viktorsson 4 4 8
14   Crystal Webster 3 4 7
15   Michelle Englot 4 2 6
  Kelly Scott 1 5 6
16   Kelly Einarson 3 2 5
  Kathy O'Rourke 5 5
  Heather Rankin 5 5
  Renee Sonnenberg 5 5
17   Jacqueline Harrison 4 4
  Mirjam Ott 4 4
  Allison Pottinger 3 1 4
  Casey Scheidegger 4 4
18   Lisa Eyamie 3 3
  Colleen Jones 1 2 3
  Cindy Ricci 1 2 3
  Barb Spencer 3 3
  Heather Strong 3 3
  Kirsten Wall 3 3
19   Lisa Blixhavn 2 2
  Marie Christianson 2 2
  Chantell Eberle 2 2
  Karen Fallis 2 2
  Kerri Flett 2 2
  Jessie Kaufman 2 2
  Karen Harvey 2 2
  Andrea Kelly 2 2
  Patti Lank 1 1 2
  Shelley Nichols 2 2
  Sarah Rhyno 2 2
  Jill Thurston 2 2
  Faye White 2 2
20   June Campbell 1 1
  Kerry Galusha 1 1
  Deb McCreanor 1 1
  Colleen Pinkney 1 1
  Liudmila Privivkova 1 1
  Bobbie Sauder 1 1
  Holly Scott 1 1
  Adina Tasaka 1 1

Notable team changes

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Retirements

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Careers on hiatus

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Team line-up changes

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Teams listed by skip, new teammates listed in bold

References

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  1. ^ Season of Champions Events Archived 2014-06-18 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "Deaf athletes shocked by cancelled Games | Alison Korn | Columnists | Sports | Toronto Sun". Archived from the original on 2011-02-18.
  3. ^ "WCT Men's Events". Archived from the original on 2011-05-16. Retrieved 2011-03-16.
  4. ^ "WCT Women's Events". Archived from the original on 2011-05-16. Retrieved 2011-03-16.
  5. ^ "WCT Order Of Merit - Men". Archived from the original on 2010-11-19. Retrieved 2010-10-28.
  6. ^ "WCT Order Of Merit - Women". Archived from the original on 2010-11-19. Retrieved 2010-10-28.
  7. ^ WCT Money List - Men
  8. ^ WCT Money List - Women
  9. ^ "Curlers not happy with this hack". Archived from the original on July 14, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  10. ^ "Asian hackers rock curling websites in hi-tech attack". The London Free Press. 24 January 2011.
  11. ^ a b "Cyber Attack on Curling". The Curling News. 17 January 2011.
  12. ^ "Curling Cyber Attack update: Capital One and your help". The Curling News. 21 January 2011.
  13. ^ "The Travelers MA Cup Standings". Archived from the original on 2016-10-04. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  14. ^ 2010-11 Capital One Cup Men's Standings
  15. ^ 2010-11 Capital One Cup Women's Standings
  16. ^ a b c d e "EXCLUSIVE:Hart leaves Team Howard". The Curling News. 21 April 2011.
  17. ^ "O'Rourke not surprised by players' move". The Guardian (PEI). 11 March 2011. Archived from the original on 1 January 2013. Retrieved 30 May 2011.
  18. ^ "Walling: Last Run for Gushue and Nichols at the Brier". The Sports Network. 7 March 2011.
  19. ^ "Cheryl Bernard to add Olson-Johns, Sadlier for 2011-12 curling season". Vancouver Sun. 24 March 2011.
  20. ^ "Brad Gushue to test-drive two newcomers in Victoria". The Calgary Herald. 23 March 2011. [permanent dead link]
  21. ^ Announcement @TeamReidCurling
  22. ^ "2011 Tim Hortons Brier Notebook" (PDF). Tankard Times (8). Canadian Curling Association: 16. 2011-03-12. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2011-04-02.

See also

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Preceded by 2010–11 curling season
September 2010 – April 2011
Succeeded by