Jocelyn Andrea Peterman (born September 23, 1993) is a Canadian curler . She currently plays second for the Kaitlyn Lawes rink.
51-610: Peterman may refer to: People [ edit ] J. Peterman (disambiguation) Jocelyn Peterman , Canadian curler John Peterman , American businessman Harold Peterman , American politician Melissa Peterman , American actress Mykyta Peterman , Ukrainian football player Nathan Peterman , American football player Places [ edit ] Peterman, Alabama (disambiguation) , several places Peterman, Houston County, Alabama Peterman, Monroe County, Alabama Other uses [ edit ] A slang term for
102-608: A Safecracker See also [ edit ] Petermann (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Peterman . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Peterman&oldid=956906515 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with surname-holder lists Hidden categories: Short description
153-848: A final payoff ranging in the thousands of dollars for the winners. There were 7 major men's and women's tournaments that were held throughout the year, each with a final cash prize of at least $ 100,000 for the winning team. These were the Elite 10 , the Masters , the Tour Challenge , the National , the Canadian Open , the Players' Championship , and the Champions Cup . Together, these events were known as Grand Slam events because of
204-408: A guard. Her rock, however, curled too much and hit the guard, giving up a steal of one and the game to Team Jones. After the game, Jones said that "We're there to pick each other up when you miss, not everybody can say that and that's really a big strength of our team." With the win, Team Jones travelled to Beijing , China to represent Canada at the 2022 Winter Olympics . Through the round robin,
255-533: A new team for the 2022–23 season . Lawes would skip the team, with Njegovan playing third, Peterman at second and MacCuish at lead. Team Jones still had two more events together before parting ways, the 2022 Players' Championship and 2022 Champions Cup Grand Slams. At the Players', the team went 1–3, missing the playoffs. They then missed the playoffs again at the Champions Cup with a 1–4 record, ending
306-483: A second chance at making that year's Scotties Tournament of Hearts, where they played Kerri Einarson in a wild-card game, but they would lose that event too. After the season, Peterman left the team, moving to Winnipeg to play for Jennifer Jones, replacing the retiring Jill Officer . In her first season as a member of Team Jones, the team won the 2018 Canada Cup and the 2019 TSN All-Star Curling Skins Game , but failed to win any Grand Slam events. As Jones had won
357-554: A third place tiebreaker match against Alberta, skipped by Laura Walker . Alberta defeated Manitoba 9–8 to advance to the semifinal. Team Jones ended their season at the only two Grand Slam events of the abbreviated season, also held in the Calgary bubble. The team missed the playoffs at both the 2021 Champions Cup and the 2021 Players' Championship . Team Jones qualified for the playoffs in each of their first four tour events, however, they were not able to qualify for any finals. At
408-449: Is a group of curling bonspiels featuring the best male, female, and mixed doubles curlers in the world. The World Curling Tour was founded by former World Champion Ed Lukowich , with later assistance from John Kawaja . The World Curling Tour commenced in 1992, with men's events only at first. It replaced the "Canadian Curling Tour" held the previous season. The first season consisted of 48 events (with only one outside Canada), and
459-448: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Jocelyn Peterman Peterman and her team of Brittany Tran , Becca Konschuh and Kristine Anderson won a silver medal skipping Alberta at the 2011 Canada Winter Games , losing to British Columbia's Corryn Brown in the final. The next season, the team represented Alberta at the 2012 Canadian Junior Curling Championships . They won
510-749: The 2007 Canada Winter Games and has won two Canada Summer Games silver medals in baseball. She is married to her doubles partner, Brett Gallant , and they have one child. She graduated from the University of Calgary in 2015 with a Bachelor's degree in Kinesiology, and she studied at the Smith School of Business at Queen's University at Kingston . She is currently self employed. She currently lives in Chestermere , Alberta . World Curling Tour The World Curling Tour (WCT)
561-565: The 2012 Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic and was winless at the 2013 Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic . After juniors, Peterman joined the Heather Nedohin team in 2014 as their alternate, later becoming their second. On the World Curling Tour that season, the team entered four slams, making the playoffs in three. Their best result was a semi-final finish at the Canadian Open . They also played in
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#1732801434914612-527: The 2014 Canada Cup of Curling , finishing in third place. The team played in the 2015 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts , the first provincial championship appearance for Peterman. There, the rink made it to the semi-final, where they lost to Chelsea Carey . Nedohin retired from curling in 2015, and Chelsea Carey would take over the team as skip, with Peterman becoming the full-time second, replacing Jessica Mair . The team would fail to qualify for either Slam they entered that season. They did however win
663-462: The 2016 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts , defeating Edmonton's Val Sweeting in the final. The win sent Peterman to her first ever national women's championship, the 2016 Scotties Tournament of Hearts . At this event, her team of Carey, Amy Nixon , Laine Peters , alternate Susan O'Connor and coach Charley Thomas went 9–2 in the round robin, clinching the first place seed in the playoffs. The team defeated Jennifer Jones of Team Canada in
714-512: The 2017 Scotties Tournament of Hearts , where they won a bronze medal. Team Carey had a strong run at the 2017 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials , going undefeated until losing to the Rachel Homan rink in the final. The team continued on this roll into the new year, winning the 2018 Meridian Canadian Open . Their success stopped at the 2018 Alberta Scotties Tournament of Hearts , with the team losing both of their playoff games. They had
765-527: The 2022 PointsBet Invitational , Team Lawes lost in the semifinal to Team Scheidegger. In the first Slam of the season, the 2022 National , the team advanced to the semifinals where they were stopped by Silvana Tirinzoni 7–5. They also qualified for the playoffs at the 2022 Tour Challenge where they lost in the quarterfinals to Rachel Homan. Following a quarterfinal finish at the 2022 Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic , Lawes went on maternity leave. During that time, Selena Njegovan took over skipping
816-492: The 2022 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship after the Canadian Mixed Doubles Championship was cancelled due to COVID. At the championship, the pair finished second in their pool with an 8–1 record, only suffering one loss to Scotland's Eve Muirhead and Bobby Lammie . This earned them a spot in the qualification game against Norway's Maia and Magnus Ramsfjell . After a tight game all
867-460: The 2023 PointsBet Invitational and the 2023 Players Open , losing out to Kerri Einarson and Anna Hasselborg respectively. At the first Slam of the season, the 2023 Tour Challenge , the team began with two straight losses before rallying together four straight victories to reach their first Grand Slam final as a unit. There, they lost 7–4 to Team Jones. They would miss the playoffs at the other four Slams that season, however. In November, they made
918-432: The 2023 Scotties Tournament of Hearts as a Wild Card team. After a 5–3 record, they lost in a tiebreaker to Nova Scotia, skipped by Christina Black . The team finished the season at the 2023 Players' Championship and the 2023 Champions Cup , missing the playoffs at both. Back together for the 2023–24 season , Team Lawes had promising results to begin the season. In October, they had two straight semifinal finishes at
969-584: The 2024 Players' Championship . In April 2016, Peterman and teammate Brett Gallant won the 2016 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Trials after battling to a 12–8 win over Laura Crocker and Geoff Walker at the Nutana Curling Club in Saskatoon, Sask. The new champions were playing in their first Mixed Doubles event together. The pair played in the 2018 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Olympic Trials , going undefeated in group play, but lost to
1020-401: The 2024 Scotties Tournament of Hearts where they did not a good start, losing three of their first four games. Sitting 3–4 heading into their last round robin game, they were able to beat Northern Ontario's Krista McCarville 6–5. This created a five-way tie for third with Northern Ontario, British Columbia, Quebec, and Saskatchewan. With tiebreaker games abolished and the first tiebreaker (which
1071-564: The 1-vs-2 game and then Northern Ontario's Krista McCarville in the final. Peterman represented Canada at the 2016 Ford World Women's Curling Championship , in Swift Current , where the team went on to finish in fourth place. Early in the 2016-17 curling season , the Carey rink played in the 2016 Canada Cup of Curling and finished with a 2–4 record. Later in the year, the Carey rink represented Team Canada (as defending champions) at
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#17328014349141122-440: The 2018 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, the team represented Team Canada at the 2019 Scotties Tournament of Hearts . There the team failed to make the playoffs, finishing with a 6–5 record. In their first event of the 2019-20 season , Team Jones won the 2019 AMJ Campbell Shorty Jenkins Classic , defeating Tracy Fleury in the final. Next they played in the 2019 Colonial Square Ladies Classic where Fleury would take them out in
1173-640: The Alberta playdowns. In 2014, her last year of junior eligibility, Peterman's team lost in the Alberta junior final to Kelsey Rocque , who would go on to win that year's World Junior championships. During her junior career, the Peterman team entered several World Curling Tour , including the Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic twice, which was a Grand Slam event at the time. She would win just one match at
1224-451: The Brier and Scotties playdowns. The WCT is experimenting with length of games in two interesting ways. The first is that the games are only eight ends long with a 4th end break. The second is that the time clocks only count "thinking time", so the clock goes off when the players throw the rock. The reason is that time clocks, an innovation created to speed up the game, would stop as soon as
1275-596: The Canadian team had mixed results, ultimately finishing tied for third with a 5–4 record. However, because of their draw shot challenge results, which were the lowest of the teams they were tied with, they ranked fifth overall, missing the playoffs. On March 15, 2022, Team Jones announced they would be parting ways after the 2021–22 season. Peterman and third Kaitlyn Lawes then announced they would be joining Selena Njegovan and Kristin MacCuish of Team Fleury to form
1326-540: The European and Asian based Curling Champions Tour to create a worldwide entity focused on growing the game on the international stage. The World Curling Tour World rights holder is now the Zurich Switzerland-based company CCT Event GmbH. This merger has also led to the growth of a Mixed Doubles tour, along with adding Junior and Wheelchair curling tours to expand the offering. Throughout the 2010's,
1377-536: The Grand Slam the Capital One Grand Slam of Curling. Unlike the other World Curling Tour events, these Grand Slams they are played in 8-end games as opposed to the usual 10 end games found in the other WCT events. Another new rule that was first put into practice at the men's nationals in 2014 is the 5 rock rule which increased the 4 rock rule and free guard zone rule by another rock. This changed
1428-674: The Men's and Women's World Curling Tour began in early August with the Hokkaido Bank Curling Classic and had events taking place all throughout the curling season until the Champions Cup in late April. Following the COVID-19 pandemic that cancelled the majority of the events during the 2020–21 season , a large majority of the tour events that made up the WCT left the tour, leaving only a handful of European events. The rest of
1479-496: The WCT introduced a series of Grand Slam events for men which was later followed in 2006 by Grand Slam events for women. These became known as the Grand Slam of Curling and featured large payouts. Originally, curlers who participated in Grand Slam events were obliged to not participate in their respective Brier playdowns, however this was quickly rescinded. Most WCT events are held in the Fall, and early Winter to avoid competing with
1530-479: The event, defeating Manitoba's Shannon Birchard rink in the national final. This qualified the team to represent Canada at the 2012 World Junior Curling Championships . After posting a 6–3 round robin record, the team lost to Russia's Anna Sidorova in a tie-breaker match, thus failing to make the playoffs. In 2013, her rink failed to even make the Canadian Juniors, having not even made the playoffs in
1581-412: The eventual champion John Morris / Kaitlyn Lawes pairing in the semifinal. Peterman and Gallant also won the 2019 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship , defeating Nancy Martin and Tyrel Griffith in the final. The pair represented Canada at the 2019 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship , where they won the silver medal after losing 6–5 to Sweden's Anna Hasselborg and Oskar Eriksson on
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1632-411: The final, where they would face Fleury again. After a tight game all the way through, Team Fleury stole one in the ninth end to take a single-point lead. In the tenth end, Jones had an open hit-and-stick to win the game; however, her shooter rolled too far, and she only got one. This sent the game to an extra end. On her final shot, Fleury attempted a soft-weight hit on a Jones stone partially buried behind
1683-431: The first Grand Slam of the season, the 2021 Masters , the team was able to reach the final before losing to Tracy Fleury in a 9–7 match. They then missed the playoffs at the 2021 National two weeks later. A month later, Team Jones competed in the 2021 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials . There, the team posted a 5–3 round robin record, earning a spot in the semifinal. They then defeated Krista McCarville to qualify for
1734-476: The game goes to an extra end. The system is now a standard in Curling Canada championship events, though with a 38-minute limit for standard 10-end curling (four minutes for extra ends) and 22 minutes for mixed doubles. The 2018 Canada Cup experimented with breaking the time down by ends — four minutes per end in the first half of the game, and four minutes, 15 seconds in the second half; if time runs out,
1785-559: The large payoff that is associated with them as well as the number of high-level curlers that play in these tournaments. These events are now part of the World Team Ranking System. There also used to be 2 more Grand Slam events for the women called the Sobeys Slam and Wayden Transportation Ladies Classic but these were discontinued in 2010. On October 2, 2006, the license of rights for the Grand Slam of Curling
1836-436: The last rock. The duo returned to defend their championship title at the 2021 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship , as the 2020 championship was cancelled due to the pandemic. After finishing 5–1 through the round robin, they lost to Kadriana Sahaidak and Colton Lott in the round of 8, eliminating them from contention. On March 2, 2022, Curling Canada announced that Peterman and Gallant would represent Canada at
1887-517: The offending team can play no more rocks in the end. The team with the most winnings at the end of the year wins the Founders Trophy. The winners in 2007 were Kevin Martin 's team who won a total of $ 176,000. A separate Women's World Curling Tour existed, until it was merged into the WCT in 2005. Each of the bonspiel events on the World Curling Tour lasts for approximately 3 days with
1938-534: The second all-star team as a result. The Jones rink won their lone event of the abbreviated 2020–21 season at the 2020 Stu Sells Oakville Tankard . The 2021 Manitoba Scotties were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Manitoba , so Curl Manitoba appointed the Jones rink to represent Manitoba at the 2021 Scotties Tournament of Hearts . At the 2021 Hearts, the team finished with a 9–3 record, putting them in
1989-590: The semi-finals. They had two quarterfinal finishes at the first two Slams of the season, the Masters and the Tour Challenge . At the Canada Cup , the team struggled, finishing with a 2–4 record. The team made the final at the Boost National , losing to Team Hasselborg , and the quarterfinals at the Canadian Open . The team made the final of the 2020 Manitoba Scotties Tournament of Hearts and lost to Team Einarson. By virtue of their CTRS ranking,
2040-485: The semifinal to finish in third place. It would be their last event of the season as both the Players' Championship , and the Champions Cup Grand Slam events were also cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic . On March 18, 2020, the team announced that Lisa Weagle , after parting ways with Team Homan, would join the team in a 5-player rotation. Peterman curled 82% at the tournament and was named to
2091-566: The semifinals at the Red Deer Curling Classic where they fell 5–3 to Team Homan. They followed this up with a third-place finish at the 2023 Karuizawa International Curling Championships in Japan. Entering the 2024 Manitoba Scotties Tournament of Hearts as the top seeded team, Team Lawes lost just one game en route to claiming the provincial title, defeating Beth Peterson 9–8 in the championship game. This qualified them for
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2142-490: The starting strategy of the game as the team with the hammer was able to throw up two guards uncontested instead of the usual 1 allowed with the previously used 4 rock rule. Through the addition of the Grand Slam events and the new rule changes, the WCT is rapidly becoming a well known series to sports fans worldwide. On June 28, 2017, the Canadian-based World Curling Tour officially merged with
2193-407: The stone stopped. With the old system where teams were given 73 minutes of time if a team was losing, they would throw more draw shots which take time. The team that is winning throws more hits and thus ends up with more time if needed. So the WCT moved to "Thinking time" to even out this discrepancy. With this new system, each team is given 40 minutes of “Thinking Time” plus an additional 5 minutes if
2244-462: The team had a second chance to qualify for the 2020 Scotties Tournament of Hearts through the wild card play-in game, where they defeated Team Fleury to become Team Wild Card. At the Scotties, they finished the round robin and championship pool with a 9–2 record as the second seed in playoffs but lost to Kerri Einarson (Team Manitoba) in the 1 vs. 2 playoff game and to Rachel Homan (Team Ontario) in
2295-499: The team's run together. The new Lawes rink began the 2022–23 season with a second-place finish at the 2022 Oslo Cup . After going undefeated in the round robin, they beat Marianne Rørvik in the semifinal before losing 5–3 to Anna Hasselborg in the final. They were able to pick up their first tour victory at the Mother Club Fall Curling Classic , winning 6–2 in the final over Sarah Anderson . At
2346-401: The team, leading them to a victory at the 2022 Stu Sells 1824 Halifax Classic and a quarterfinal finish at the 2022 Masters . Lawes returned for the 2023 Canadian Open where the team missed the playoffs with a 2–3 record. At the 2023 Manitoba Scotties Tournament of Hearts , the team was eliminated in the semifinal after losing 8–5 to Abby Ackland . Despite this, they still qualified for
2397-466: The way through, Jones and Laing scored five in the eighth end to win the game 9–4. On the World Curling Tour, Gallant and Peterman have won the 2018 Battleford Mixed Doubles Fall Curling Classic , the 2019 China Open and the 2022 Winnipeg Open. She was a competitive softball player, having competed at the 2013 Canada Summer Games . She is the daughter of Lowell and Nancy and began curling at age 5. Her brother, Joel Peterman, won Gold in curling at
2448-461: The way through, Norway scored two in the final end to win the game 6–5, eliminating the Canadians in fifth place. Peterman and Gallant went undefeated through the round robin of the 2023 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship with a 7–0 record. They then won both their quarterfinal and semifinal game to reach the final where they faced Jennifer Jones and Brent Laing. After a tight game all
2499-403: Was head-to-head between all tied teams) tied as well at 2–2, cumulative last stone draw distance between all the teams was used to decide who would make the playoffs. The Lawes rink finished first with a 231.6 and thus earned a spot in the playoffs. Facing Alberta's Selena Sturmay in the 3 vs. 4 page qualifier, the team lost 8–5 and were eliminated. They finished their season with a 1–4 record at
2550-537: Was sold to Insight Sports Ltd. but was later sold again in August 2012 to Rogers Communications . The WCT naming rights were then sold to Asham, a long time contributor to the sport, until 2014 and because of this, the World Curling Tour was renamed Asham's World Curling Tour. The Grand Slam was originally simply called the Grand Slam of Curling until 2008 when the rights were sold by the CBC to Capital One bank which renamed
2601-658: Was sponsored by Seagram's distillery. Teams earned points in every event with the top 30 qualifying for the season ending " V.O. Cup ", today known as the Players' Championship . Its first president and CEO was Lukowich. The first two events were held on the first weekend of October 1992, the Red Carpet Classic in Regina, Saskatchewan and a qualifier for the Coca-Cola Classic in Winnipeg . In 2001,
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