Colleen Jones

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Image:Colleenjonesteam.jpg
Colleen Jones (left) and her 2005-06 team

Colleen P. Jones (born December 16, 1959 in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada) is the most successful Canadian women's skip in curling history.

From a family of curlers, at age 14, she joined the Mayflower Curling Club. At an early age, she gained success in competitive curling and was only 19 years old when she won the first of her 16 Nova Scotia curling titles that led to competing in the Canadian championships where she finished second. Jones graduated from Dalhousie University and went to work in broadcasting in her native Halifax.

In 1982 she became the youngest ever to win the Canadian ladies curling championship but career, marriage and a family slowed her down, a little. She joined CBC Television as a reporter in 1986 and went on to cover numerous summer and winter Olympic Games. She continues to work for the CBC, and is currently the weather and sports reporter on CBC Newsworld's CBC News: Morning.

Image:Colleenjones2002.jpg
Colleen Jones and her team after winning the 2002 ourScott Tournament of Hearts.

In 1999, with her new team of Kim Kelly, Mary Anne Waye (later Arsenault) and Nancy Delahunt, Jones won the Canadian curling title for the second time. The team repeated this in 2001 and they went on to win the World Curling Championship in Lausanne, Switzerland. They followed this up with another Canadian championship in 2002 and then won it for a record setting fifth time at the 2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts. This made Jones the first skip to win 4 straight Canadian titles. From there the team went on to win their second World Curling Championship. Their return at the 2005 Scott Tournament of Hearts was not as stellar. The team finished the round-robin at 6-5 and lost in a tie-breaker to Sandy Comeau of New Brunswick. When this happened, the team got a standing ovation, which even halted play in the other game that was occurring two sheets over. The following year, the team was back in form, but bowed out in the semi-finals to Jennifer Jones. After the 2006 season, her team broke up, and Jones joined the team of fellow Haligonian Kay Zinck, as her third. The rest of the team got a new skip in Laine Peters. [1]

In November 2004, while competing in the Continental Cup of Curling, Jones revealed that she has political ambitions and may run for office in the future.[citation needed]

She has also participated in every Continental Cup, and has been in 7 Canadian Mixed Curling Championships, where she has won 2 titles (as vice-skip).

Colleen Jones is a member of the Canadian Curling Hall of Fame.

Career Highlights:

  • Canadian Champion: 1982, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004
  • World Curling Championship: 2001, 2004
  • Canadian Mixed Curling Champion: 1993, 1999

Her teammates as of 2006 are:

  • Kay Zinck (Skip)
  • Mary Mattatall (Second)
  • Monica Moriarty (Lead)

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