Cathrine Lindahl

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Cathrine Lindahl Curling
Cathrine Lindahl at the 2010 Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver
birthday February 26, 1970
place of birth Harnösand
Career
nation SwedenSweden Sweden
job Accountant
society Härnösands curling club
Playing position Second
Playing hand right
status active
Medal table
Olympic medals 2 × gold 0 × silver 0 × bronze
World Cup medals 2 × gold 2 × silver 2 × bronze
EM medals 6 × gold 1 × silver 1 × bronze
JWM medals 1 × gold 1 × silver 0 × bronze
Olympic rings winter Olympics
gold 2006 Turin
gold 2010 Vancouver
World Curling ChampionshipTemplate: medals_winter sports / maintenance / unrecognized
bronze 1991 Winnipeg
silver 2001 Lausanne
bronze 2003 Winnipeg
gold 2005 paisley
gold 2006 Grande Prairie
silver 2009 Gangneung
European Curling ChampionshipTemplate: medals_winter sports / maintenance / unrecognized
bronze 1991 Chamonix
gold 2001 Vierumäki
gold 2002 Grindelwald
gold 2003 Courmayeur
gold 2004 Sofia
gold 2005 Garmisch-Partenkirchen
gold 2007 Fuessen
silver 2008 Örnsköldsvik
Junior World Curling ChampionshipsTemplate: medals_winter sports / maintenance / unrecognized
silver 1990 Portage la Prairie
gold 1991 Glasgow
last change: February 27, 2009

Cathrine Lindahl (* 26. February 1970 in Härnösand as Cathrine Norberg ) is a Swedish curler .

She belongs to the Härnösands curling club and plays in the team of her sister Anette Norberg on the position of second . She works part-time as an auditor.

Since her debut, Lindahl has won six European championships and two world championships in curling .

As second of the Swedish curling team with Skip Anette Norberg, Third Eva Lund , Lead Anna Svärd and Alternate Ulrika Bergman , Lindahl won the Olympic gold medal in Turin in 2006 . In the final, the team prevailed against Switzerland with 7: 6 stones. In 2010 she won gold at the Winter Olympics for the second time with the same team in Vancouver. In the final they beat the Canadians to Skip Cheryl Bernard 7: 6 after a stolen stone in the additional end.

successes

  • Olympic Games: Gold 2006, Gold 2010 [1]
  • World Championships: bronze 1991, silver 2001, bronze 2003, gold 2005, gold 2006, silver 2009
  • European Championships: Bronze 1991, Gold 2001, Gold 2002, Gold 2003, Gold 2004, Gold 2005, Gold 2007, Silver 2008
  • Junior World Championships: Silver 1990, Gold 1991

Web links