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Joëlle Sabourin

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Joëlle Sabourin
 
Born (1972-05-28) May 28, 1972 (age 52)
Hull, Quebec, Canada
Team
Curling clubClub de Curling Thurso, Thurso
Curling career
Member Association Quebec
 Ontario (2003–07)
Hearts appearances8 (1994, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2005, 2008, 2009, 2011)
Medal record
Curling
Scotties Tournament of Hearts
Bronze medal – third place 2009 Victoria

Joëlle Sabourin (born May 28, 1972) is a Canadian curler from Gatineau.

Born in Hull, Quebec, Canada, Sabourin is a five-time provincial champion for her native Quebec, earning her the right to play at five national championships (the Scotties Tournament of Hearts). In 1997 she won as Chantal Osborne's second, in 1999 and 2000 as Janique Berthelot's third, and in 2008 and 2009 playing lead for Marie-France Larouche. Three times she played in the Scotties as an alternate: in 1994 for Agnes Charette, in 2005 for Ontario's Jenn Hanna and in 2011 for Marie-France Larouche.

In 2001 Sabourin won the Canadian Mixed Curling Championship playing lead for Jean-Michel Ménard.

From 2004 to 2007, Sabourin played in Ontario for Jenn Hanna. In 2004 and 2006 she was the team's third. In 2005, when she was pregnant, Sabourin was the team's alternate.[1] It was that season that the team lost in the 2005 Scott Tournament of Hearts finals to Jennifer Jones. In 2007, Sabourin played lead[2] and second for the team before leaving it to play for Larouche. In 2010 season Sabourin joined Chantal Osborne and now plays third stones. Sabourin will play five major events on the curling tour, at the beginning of 2011, with Jennifer Jones, as a replacement for Jill Officer who will be on maternity leave from September to December.[3][4] Although Sabourin was initially planning to take the year off, she will also play several tour events with her Quebec team.[5]

Teams

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Women's

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Season[6] Skip Third Second Lead Alternate Coach Events
1993–94 Agnes Charette France Charette Chantal Osborne Sylvie Daniel Joelle Sabourin STOH 1994 (8th)
1996–97 Chantal Osborne France Charette Joelle Sabourin Sylvie Daniel Janique Berthelot Gerry Tomalty STOH 1997 (6th)
1998–99 Janique Berthelot Joelle Sabourin Annie Lemay Nancy Lemire STOH 1999 (12th)
1999–00 Janique Berthelot Joelle Sabourin Annie Lemay Valerie Leclerc Marie-France Larouche Benoit Cyr STOH 2000 (8th)
2003–04 Jenn Hanna Joelle Sabourin Dawn Askin Stephanie Hanna
2004–05 Jenn Hanna Pascale Letendre Dawn Askin Stephanie Hanna Joelle Sabourin Robert Hanna STOH 2005 (9th)
2005–06 Jenn Hanna Joelle Sabourin Dawn Askin Stephanie Hanna
2006–07 Jenn Hanna Chrissy Cadorin Joelle Sabourin Stephanie Hanna
2007–08 Marie-France Larouche Nancy Bélanger Annie Lemay Joelle Sabourin Valérie Grenier Camil Larouche STOH 2008 (4th)
2008–09 Marie-France Larouche Nancy Bélanger Annie Lemay Joelle Sabourin Veronique Brassard Camil Larouche STOH 2009 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)
Marie-France Larouche Nancy Bélanger Annie Lemay Joelle Sabourin CC 2009 2nd place, silver medalist(s)
2009–10 Marie-France Larouche Nancy Bélanger Annie Lemay Joelle Sabourin
2010–11 Marie-France Larouche Annie Lemay Véronique Grégoire Veronique Brassard Joelle Sabourin Camil Larouche STOH 2011 (8th)
Chantal Osborne Joëlle Sabourin Catherine Derick Sylvie Daniel
2011–12 Jennifer Jones Kaitlyn Lawes Joëlle Sabourin Dawn Askin CC 2011 1st place, gold medalist(s)
Chantal Osborne Joëlle Sabourin Catherine Derick Sylvie Daniel
2012–13 Chantal Osborne Joëlle Sabourin Catherine Derick Sylvie Daniel
2018–19 Amélie Blais Janique Berthelot Brittany O'Rourke Vicky Tremblay Joëlle Sabourin QC STOH 2019

Mixed

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Season Skip Third Second Lead Events
1996–97 Guy Hemmings Nathalie Audet Michael Fournier Joëlle Sabourin CMxCC 1997 (6th)
2000–01 Jean-Michel Ménard Jessica Marchand Marco Berthelot Joëlle Sabourin CMxCC 2001 1st place, gold medalist(s)

References

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  1. ^ Few spare moments for Ontario's fifth[usurped]
  2. ^ It seems change has been good for Hanna and her Ottawa rink Archived 2012-11-10 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Report: Sabourin to replace Officer during pregnancy leave". TSN. 2011-06-09. Archived from the original on 2012-10-20.
  4. ^ [1][usurped]
  5. ^ "World Curling Tour". Archived from the original on 2012-02-05. Retrieved 2012-05-23.
  6. ^ Joëlle Sabourin past teams
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