Alina Pätz

Alina Pätz
Curler
Born (1990-03-08) 8 March 1990
Urdorf, Switzerland
Team
Curling club Baden Regio-Privera CC,
Baden, SUI
Skip Alina Pätz
Third Nadine Lehmann
Second Marisa Winkelhausen
Lead Nicole Schwägli
Alternate Elena Stern
Career
World Championship
appearances
2 (2012, 2015)
European Championship
appearances
3 (2012, 2013, 2015)
Olympic
appearances
1 (2014)

Alina Pätz (born 8 March 1990 in Urdorf, Switzerland) is a two-time World champion Swiss curler. She currently skips a team on the World Curling Tour and is the former alternate player for the Mirjam Ott rink which represented Switzerland at the 2014 Winter Olympics.[1]

Playing as the alternate for the Ott rink, Pätz won a gold medal at the 2012 Ford World Women's Curling Championship and a bronze medal at the 2013 European Curling Championships. Pätz has also won a silver medal at the 2010 European Mixed Curling Championship (Lead for Claudio Pätz) and a gold medal at the 2011 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship (with Sven Michel).

Outside of playing as Ott's alternate, Pätz has skipped her own rink since 2013. She won the 2015 World Women's Curling Championship defeating Canada's Jennifer Jones in the final.

Grand Slam record

Key
C Champion
F Lost in Final
SF Lost in Semifinal
QF Lost in Quarterfinals
R16 Lost in the round of 16
Q Did not advance to playoffs
T2 Played in Tier 2 event
DNP Did not participate in event
N/A Not a Grand Slam event that season
Event 2012–13 2013–14 2014–15 2015–16 2016–17
Masters Q DNP QF Q Q
Tour Challenge N/A N/A N/A Q Q
Canadian Open DNP DNP DNP QF
Players' DNP DNP QF Q

Former events

Event 2012–13 2013–14 2014–15
Colonial Square Q DNP Q

Teams

Season Skip Third Second Lead
2010-11 Nicole Dünki Alina Pätz Gioia Oeschle Fabiola Duss
2011-12 Manuela Siegrist Alina Pätz Claudia Hug Nicole Dünki
2012-13 Manuela Siegrist Alina Pätz Nadine Lehmann Nicole Dünki
2013-14 Alina Pätz Nadine Lehmann Nicole Schwägli Nicole Dünki
2014-15 Alina Pätz Nadine Lehmann Marisa Winkelhausen Nicole Schwägli
2015-16 Alina Pätz Nadine Lehmann Marisa Winkelhausen Nicole Schwägli

References

  1. "Alina Pätz". Sochi 2014. Retrieved February 12, 2014.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.