Laine Peters

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Laine Peters Curling
birthday March 24, 1970
place of birth Arborfield
Career
nation CanadaCanada Canada
Playing position Lead
Playing hand right
status active
Medal table
World Cup medals 1 × gold 1 × silver 1 × bronze
World Curling ChampionshipTemplate: medals_winter sports / maintenance / unrecognized
gold 2001 Lausanne
silver 2003 Winnipeg
bronze 2012 Lethbridge
last change: December 10, 2017

Laine Peters (born March 24, 1970 in Arborfield , Saskatchewan ) is a Canadian curler . Since the 2018/19 season she has played as lead in Laura Walker's team .

Career

Peters won the gold medal at the 2001 World Cup as a substitute for Colleen Jones' Canadian team . At the 2003 World Cup , she was back as a substitute in the Jones team and won the silver medal. In 2010 she moved to Heather Nedohin's team as lead . With this team she reached third place at the 2012 World Cup by winning the game for third place against South Korea for Skip Kim Ji-sun . In her sixth World Cup participation in 2016 , she was fourth as the lead in the team of Chelsea Carey , who had taken over the position of skip from Heather Nedohin in 2015. The team lost in the game for 3rd place against Russia with Skip Anna Sidorowa .

Peters has participated in the Canadian Tournament of Hearts women's championships eleven times . She won her first gold medal in 1999 as a substitute in the team of Colleen Jones, which competed for the province of Nova Scotia . She won further gold medals for this province in 2001, 2002 and 2003. In 2009 she moved to Calgary and from 2010 played on Heather Nedohin's team, which competed in the Tournament of Hearts for the province of Alberta and won it in 2012. Under Skip Chelsea Carey, she won the gold medal for Alberta at the 2016 championship and joined Team Canada the following year to win the bronze medal.

Team members

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Curling team announcements for 2018-19 season. In: sportsnet.ca. Retrieved July 24, 2018 .
  2. ^ Diana Spencer: Team Canada cheered nationwide. In: Winnipeg Free Press. March 19, 2012, accessed December 10, 2017 .