Jiang Yilun

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Jiang Yilun Curling
birthday 2nd December 1993 (age 26)
place of birth Harbin , China
Career
nation China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China People's Republic of China
society Harbin CC
Playing position Skip / Fourth
Playing hand right
status active
Medal table
PAM medals 0 × gold 1 × silver 2 × bronze
J-PAM medals 1 × gold 2 × silver 1 × bronze
Pacific Asian Curling ChampionshipsTemplate: medals_winter sports / maintenance / unrecognized
silver 2013 Shanghai
bronze 2017 Naseby
bronze 2018 Gangneung
Junior Pacific Asian ChampionshipsTemplate: medals_winter sports / maintenance / unrecognized
gold 2010 Nayoro
bronze 2012 Jeonju
silver 2014 Harbin
silver 2016 Naseby
last change: November 20, 2018

Jiang Yilun ( Chinese  姜 懿 倫  /  姜 懿 伦 , Pinyin Jiāng Yìlún ; born December 2, 1993 in Harbin ) is a Chinese curler .

Career

Jiang started curling when he was 13. She started her international career at the Junior Pacific Championship in 2010 , where she won the gold medal as a substitute for Liu Jinli's Chinese team . At the 2010 Junior World Championship , for which the Chinese team had qualified through this victory, she played as lead in the team led by Liu Sijia and came in seventh place. The following year she played in the Junior Pacific Asian Championship as third. At the Junior Pacific Asia Championship in 2012 , she led the Chinese junior team for the first time as Skip and won the bronze medal. This was followed by two silver medals (2014 and 2015), again as Skip.

In the adults, she played for the first time at the Pacific Asia Cup in 2013 as a substitute for Wang Bingyu's team; the team won the silver medal. In this position she was also present at the 2014 Winter Olympics . At the 2014 World Cup , she played third and, like the Olympic Games, came seventh. In 2015 she played again in third at the World Cup and finished fifth with the Chinese team around Liu Sijia.

In 2017 she led the Chinese team as Skip at the Pacific Asia Championship and won the bronze medal; The Chinese beat Hong Kong in the third place match. At the 2018 World Cup , she came seventh with her team. At the Pacific Asia Cup in 2018 , she played fourth under Liu Sijia and won the bronze medal.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Media Guide, Ford World Women's Championship 2018, p. 8