| 2002 World Men's Curling Championship |
|---|
| Host city | Bismarck, North Dakota |
|---|
| Arena | Bismarck Civic Center |
|---|
| Dates | April 6–14, 2002 |
|---|
| Winner | Canada |
|---|
| Curling club | Ottewell CC, Edmonton, Alberta |
|---|
| Skip | Randy Ferbey |
|---|
| Fourth | David Nedohin |
|---|
| Second | Scott Pfeifer |
|---|
| Lead | Marcel Rocque |
|---|
| Alternate | Dan Holowaychuk |
|---|
| Coach | Brian Moore |
|---|
| Finalist | Norway (Pål Trulsen) |
|---|
| 2003 » |
The 2002 World Men's Curling Championship (branded as 2002 Ford World Men's Curling Championship for sponsorship reasons) was held April 6–14, 2002 at the Bismarck Civic Center in Bismarck, North Dakota.
Teams
Austria
|
Canada
|
Denmark
|
Finland
|
Japan
|
Kitzbühel CC, Kitzbühel
Skip: Alois Kreidl
Third: Stefan Salinger
Second: Andreas Unterberger
Lead: Werner Wanker
Alternate: Richard Obermoser
|
Ottewell CC, Edmonton, Alberta
Fourth: David Nedohin
Skip: Randy Ferbey
Second: Scott Pfeifer
Lead: Marcel Rocque
Alternate: Dan Holowaychuk
|
Hvidovre CC
Skip: Ulrik Schmidt
Third: Lasse Lavrsen
Second: Carsten Svensgaard
Lead: Bo Jensen
Alternate: Joel Ostrowski
|
Oulunkylä Curling, Helsinki
Skip: Markku Uusipaavalniemi
Third: Wille Mäkelä
Second: Kalle Kiiskinen
Lead: Teemu Salo
Alternate: Aku Kauste
|
Miyota CC
Skip: Hiroaki Kashiwagi
Third: Kazuto Yanagizawa
Second: Jun Nakayama
Lead: Keita Yanagizawa
Alternate: Takanori Ichimura
|
Norway
|
Scotland
|
Sweden
|
Switzerland
|
United States
|
Stabekk CC, Oslo
Skip: Pål Trulsen
Third: Lars Vågberg
Second: Flemming Davanger
Lead: Bent Ånund Ramsfjell
Alternate: Niels Siggaard Andersen
|
Airleywight CC, Perth
Skip: Warwick Smith
Third: Norman Brown
Second: Ewan MacDonald
Lead: Peter Loudon
Alternate: Tom Brewster, Jr.
|
Sundsvalls CK
Skip: Per Carlsén
Third: Mikael Norberg
Second: Tommy Olin
Lead: Niklas Berggren
Alternate: Thomas Norgren
|
Lausanne-Olympique CC
Skip: Patrick Hürlimann
Third: Dominic Andres
Second: Martin Romang
Lead: Diego Perren
Alternate: Patrik Lörtscher
|
Madison CC, Madison, Wisconsin
Skip: Paul Pustovar
Third: Mike Fraboni
Second: Geoff Goodland
Lead: Richard Maskel
Alternate: Dave Nelson
|
Round-robin standings
Round-robin results
Draw 1
Draw 2
Draw 3
Draw 4
Draw 5
Draw 6
Draw 7
Draw 8
Draw 9
Playoffs
Brackets
Semifinals
| Player percentages
|
Scotland
|
Norway
|
| Peter Loudon |
88%
|
Bent Ånund Ramsfjell |
89%
|
| Ewan MacDonald |
82%
|
Flemming Davanger |
81%
|
| Norman Brown |
83%
|
Lars Vågberg |
83%
|
| Warwick Smith |
79%
|
Pål Trulsen |
83%
|
| Total |
83%
|
Total |
84%
|
| Player percentages
|
United States
|
Canada
|
| Richard Maskel |
84%
|
Marcel Rocque |
91%
|
| Geoff Goodland |
69%
|
Scott Pfeifer |
91%
|
| Mike Fraboni |
73%
|
Randy Ferbey |
85%
|
| Paul Pustovar |
79%
|
David Nedohin |
75%
|
| Total |
76%
|
Total |
85%
|
Bronze medal game
| Player percentages
|
United States
|
Scotland
|
| Richard Maskel |
81%
|
Peter Loudon |
70%
|
| Geoff Goodland |
64%
|
Ewan MacDonald |
84%
|
| Mike Fraboni |
64%
|
Norman Brown |
78%
|
| Paul Pustovar |
75%
|
Warwick Smith |
68%
|
| Total |
71%
|
Total |
75%
|
Gold medal game
| Player percentages
|
Canada
|
Norway
|
| Marcel Rocque |
88%
|
Bent Ånund Ramsfjell |
89%
|
| Scott Pfeifer |
94%
|
Flemming Davanger |
70%
|
| Randy Ferbey |
85%
|
Lars Vågberg |
72%
|
| David Nedohin |
79%
|
Pål Trulsen |
69%
|
| Total |
86%
|
Total |
75%
|
| 2002 Ford World Curling Championship
|
.svg.png) Canada 27th title
|
Top player percentages
| Leads
|
%
|
Seconds
|
%
|
Thirds
|
%
|
Skips
|
%
|
Marcel Rocque |
88
|
Ewan MacDonald |
85
|
Dominic Andres |
84
|
Markku Uusipaavalniemi |
84
|
Peter Loudon |
84
|
Scott Pfeifer |
84
|
Norman Brown |
83
|
Warwick Smith |
80
|
Bent Ånund Ramsfjell |
84
|
Martin Romang |
82
|
Randy Ferbey |
82
|
David Nedohin |
79
|
Niklas Berggren |
84
|
Flemming Davanger |
81
|
Wille Mäkelä |
82
|
Patrick Hürlimann |
77
|
Keita Yanagizawa |
83
|
Tommy Olin |
80
|
Mikael Norberg |
80
|
Ulrik Schmidt |
77
|
References
|
|---|
Men's (Medalist) | | 1950s | |
|---|
| 1960s | |
|---|
| 1970s | |
|---|
| 1980s | |
|---|
| 1990s | |
|---|
| 2000s | |
|---|
| 2010s | |
|---|
| 2020s |
2020
- 2021
- 2022
- 2023
- 2024
- 2025
|
|---|
|
|---|
Women's (Medalist) | | 1970s | |
|---|
| 1980s | |
|---|
| 1990s | |
|---|
| 2000s | |
|---|
| 2010s | |
|---|
| 2020s |
2020
- 2021
- 2022
- 2023
- 2024
- 2025
|
|---|
|
|---|
| Mixed doubles | | 2000s | |
|---|
| 2010s | |
|---|
| 2020s |
2020
- 2021
- 2022
- 2023
- 2024
- 2025
|
|---|
|
|---|
| Mixed | |
|---|
| Senior | | 2000s |
- 2002
- 2003
- 2004
- 2005
- 2006
- 2007
- 2008
- 2009
|
|---|
| 2010s |
- 2010
- 2011
- 2012
- 2013
- 2014
- 2015
- 2016
- 2017
- 2018
- 2019
|
|---|
| 2010s | |
|---|
|
|---|
| Wheelchair | | 2000s |
- 2002
- 2004
- 2005
- 2007
- 2008
- 2009
|
|---|
| 2010s | |
|---|
| 2020s | |
|---|
|
|---|
| Wheelchair-B | |
|---|
| Wheelchair mixed doubles | |
|---|