The 1992 World Men's Curling Championship (branded as 1992 Canada Safeway World Men's Curling Championship for sponsorship reasons) took place from March 28 – April 5, 1992, at the Olympic Eisstadion in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany.
Teams
Australia
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Canada
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England
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Finland
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France
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Melbourne CC
Skip: Hugh Millikin
Third: Tom Kidd
Second: Daniel Joyce
Lead: Stephen Hewitt
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Granite CC, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Skip: Vic Peters
Third: Dan Carey
Second: Chris Neufeld
Lead: Don Rudd
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Wigan CC, Wigan Haigh CC, Wigan
Skip: Alistair Burns
Third: Neil Hardie
Second: Martyn Deakin
Lead: Stephen Watt
Alternate: Ian Coutts
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Hyvinkää CC
Skip: Jussi Uusipaavalniemi
Third: Jori Aro
Second: Markku Uusipaavalniemi
Lead: Mikko Orrainen
Alternate: Juhani Heinonen
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Megève CC
Skip: Christophe Boan
Third: Thierry Mercier
Second: Spencer Mugnier
Lead: Gerard Ravello
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Germany
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Scotland
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Sweden
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Switzerland
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United States
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Munchener EV, Munich
Skip: Rodger Gustaf Schmidt
Third: Wolfgang Burba
Second: Hans-Joachim Burba
Lead: Bernhard Mayr
Alternate: Martin Beiser
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Castle Kennedy CC, Stranraer
Skip: Hammy McMillan
Third: Norman Brown
Second: Gordon Muirhead
Lead: Roger McIntyre
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Sollefteå CK
Skip: Mikael Hasselborg
Third: Hans Nordin
Second: Lars Vågberg
Lead: Stefan Hasselborg
Alternate: Lars-Åke Nordström
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Biel-Touring CC, Biel
Skip: Markus Eggler
Third: Frédéric Jean
Second: Stefan Hofer
Lead: Björn Schröder
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Granite CC, Seattle, Washington
Skip: Doug Jones
Third: Jason Larway
Second: Joel Larway
Lead: Tom Violette
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Round-robin standings
| Key
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Teams to playoffs
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Teams to tiebreaker
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Round-robin results
Draw 1
Draw 2
Draw 3
Draw 4
Draw 5
Draw 6
Draw 7
Draw 8
Draw 9
Tiebreaker
Playoffs
Scotland skip Hammy McMillan made an incredible "around the horn" takeout in the 8th end of the semifinal against Canada to score 3 points en route to defeating the Canadians. [1]
Bracket
Final
| 1992 Safeway World Curling Championship
|
.svg.png) Switzerland 3rd title
|
References
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Men's (Medalist) | | 1950s | |
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| 1960s | |
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| 1970s | |
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| 1980s | |
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| 1990s | |
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| 2000s | |
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| 2010s | |
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| 2020s |
2020
- 2021
- 2022
- 2023
- 2024
- 2025
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Women's (Medalist) | | 1970s | |
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| 1980s | |
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| 1990s | |
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| 2000s | |
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| 2010s | |
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| 2020s |
2020
- 2021
- 2022
- 2023
- 2024
- 2025
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| Mixed doubles | | 2000s | |
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| 2010s | |
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| 2020s |
2020
- 2021
- 2022
- 2023
- 2024
- 2025
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| Mixed | |
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| Senior | | 2000s |
- 2002
- 2003
- 2004
- 2005
- 2006
- 2007
- 2008
- 2009
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| 2010s |
- 2010
- 2011
- 2012
- 2013
- 2014
- 2015
- 2016
- 2017
- 2018
- 2019
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| 2010s | |
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| Wheelchair | | 2000s |
- 2002
- 2004
- 2005
- 2007
- 2008
- 2009
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| 2010s | |
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| 2020s | |
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| Wheelchair-B | |
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| Wheelchair mixed doubles | |
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