词条 | Grant Hardie |
释义 |
| name = Grant Hardie | image = | birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=yes|1992|3|27}} | birth_place = Dumfries, Scotland | Curling club = Gogar Park CC, Edinburgh, SCO | Skip = Bruce Mouat | Third = Grant Hardie | Second = Bobby Lammie | Lead = Hammy McMillan Jr. | Alternate = Ross Whyte | World Championship appearances = 2 (2018, 2019) | European Championship appearances = 1 (2018) | Grand Slam victories = 1 (2017 Boost National) |medaltemplates= {{MedalSport | Curling}}{{MedalCountry | {{SCO}}}}{{MedalCompetition | World Men's Curling Championship}}{{MedalBronze | Las Vegas 2018 | }}{{MedalCompetition | European Championships}}{{MedalGold| 2018 Tallinn|}}{{MedalCompetition | World Mixed Curling Championship}}{{MedalGold | Champéry 2017 | }}{{MedalCompetition | Winter Universiade}}{{MedalBronze | Granada 2015 | }} }}Grant Hardie (born 27 March 1992 in Dumfries) is a Scottish curler from Glasgow.[1] He currently plays third for the Bruce Mouat rink. He is the nephew of 1999 world champion Hammy McMillan.[2] University careerWhile attending the University of Strathclyde (where he took civil engineering),[3] Hardie played third for the British team at the 2015 Winter Universiade, which was skipped by Kyle Smith. The team would go on to win the bronze medal. Mixed careerHardie skipped the Scottish team at the 2017 World Mixed Curling Championship. He led his team of Rhiann Macleod, Billy Morton and Barbara McFarlane to a 6-1 record after the group stage. The team then went on to win four straight playoff games en route to winning the gold medal, defeating Canada in the final. Men's careerBefore joining the Mouat rink, Hardie found success in his own right as a skip. He and teammates Blair Fraser, Dave Reid and Duncan Menzies won the 2017 Aberdeen International Curling Championship, Hardie's first World Curling Tour win. This win qualified the rink for the season ending Champions Cup, his first Grand Slam event. There, the team went winless, going 0-4. After the season, Hardie joined forces with the 2016 World Junior champion skip, Bruce Mouat. The new Mouat rink found immediate success on the World Curling Tour, winning the Stu Sells Oakville Tankard and Oakville OCT Fall Classic tour events to begin the season. In their very first slam as a team, the 2017 Boost National, the team would win the whole thing, becoming the first Scottish team to win a Grand Slam title. Also on the tour that season, the team would win the Dumfries Challenger Series and the Aberdeen International Curling Championship. The team had less success at the second slam they played in the, 2018 Meridian Canadian Open, failing to make it to the playoffs. Later in the season, the team won the Scottish Men's Curling Championship, and defeated the British Olympic team (skipped by Kyle Smith) in a playoff to earn the right to represent Scotland at the 2018 World Men's Curling Championship. References1. ^British Curling profile 2. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.gallowaygazette.co.uk/sport/grant-keeps-up-the-family-tradition-by-becoming-a-world-curling-champion-1-4592155|title=Grant keeps up the family tradition by becoming a world curling champion|website=The Galloway Gazette|accessdate=2018-04-02}} 3. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.bucs.org.uk/page.asp?section=18029§ionTitle=Grant+Hardie+-+Biography&preview=1|title=Grant Hardie - Biography - British Universities & Colleges Sport|website=bucs.org.uk|accessdate=2018-04-02}} External links
9 : Living people|1992 births|Scottish male curlers|Sportspeople from Dumfries|Sportspeople from Glasgow|Alumni of the University of Strathclyde|Universiade medalists in curling|European curling champions|Continental Cup of Curling participants |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。