Kim Su-jin (curler)

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Kim Su-jin
Born (1999-03-25) March 25, 1999 (age 25)[1]
Team
Curling clubChuncheon CC,
Chuncheon, KOR
SkipHa Seung-youn
ThirdKim Hye-rin
SecondYang Tae-i
LeadKim Su-jin
Career
Member Association South Korea
World Championship
appearances
1 (2019)
Pacific-Asia Championship
appearances
1 (2018)
Other appearancesWorld Junior Curling Championships: 4 (2017, 2018, 2019, 2020)

Kim Su-jin (born March 25, 1999) is a South Korean curler from Uijeongbu.[3] She currently plays lead on the Chuncheon City Hall curling team, skipped by Ha Seung-youn. While playing with Kim Min-ji, she won a gold medal at the 2018 Pacific-Asia Curling Championships and a silver medal at the 2020 World Junior Curling Championships.

Career

Kim joined the Kim Min-ji rink in 2006. In her first World Curling Tour event as a member of the team, they won the 2016 Hub International Crown of Curling.

The Kim team represented Korea at the 2017 World Junior Curling Championships, where they posted a 5–4 round robin record, tied with Switzerland for fourth. They would beat the Swiss in a tiebreaker, before losing two straight games against Canada to finish in fourth place. This team represented Korea at the 2018 World Junior Curling Championships, where they finished with a 4–5 record, missing the playoffs.

The team began the 2018–19 season by winning the Hokkaido Bank Curling Classic. They then went on to win gold at the 2018 Pacific-Asia Curling Championships, earning South Korea a berth at the 2019 World Women's Curling Championship.

She and her team participated in all four legs of the 2018–19 Curling World Cup. In the First Leg, they finished with a 1–5 record, placing seventh out of eight teams. At the Second Leg, they made it all the way to the final falling just short to Japan's Satsuki Fujisawa 7–6. The team improved on this performance by winning the Third Leg against Sweden's Anna Hasselborg rink. In the Grand Final, the team finished with a 2–4 record.

Her team, still junior eligible represented Korea at the 2019 World Junior Curling Championships. They finished the round robin with a 6–3 record, which was tied with three other teams for the second best record. However, they missed the playoffs due to tiebreaker rules. The following month, the team represented Korea at the 2019 Winter Universiade. This time their 6–3 record was enough to make the playoffs, where they made it all the way to the final before losing to Sweden. Later that month, the team had yet another international event to play in, the 2019 World Championship. The team was even better on this stage, finishing the round robin with a 9–3 record, in second place. In the playoffs, they lost to Switzerland's Silvana Tirinzoni rink in the semifinal, but rebounded to win the bronze medal game against Seina Nakajima of Japan. It was the first ever medal won by Korea at the Women's World Championship. The team ended their season with a 1–3 record at the 2019 Champions Cup Grand Slam of Curling event.

Team Kim lost the final of the 2019 Korean Women's Curling Championship the following season in June 2019 to the Gim Un-chi rink after Kim missed her last shot and gave up a steal of two in the tenth end.[4] This meant they would not be the national women's team for the season. The team won the Tour Challenge Tier 2 event after a strong 9–2 win over Jestyn Murphy. This qualified them for the Canadian Open in Yorkton, Saskatchewan. There, they defeated higher ranked teams such as three time Scotties champion Rachel Homan, 2013 world champion Eve Muirhead and 2020 Scotties champion Kerri Einarson. They made it all the way to the final before losing to the Anna Hasselborg rink in an extra end. They also made it all the way to the final of the 2020 World Junior Curling Championships, where they lost to Canada's Mackenzie Zacharias. On the World Curling Tour, they won the Boundary Ford Curling Classic, finished fourth at the inaugural WCT Uiseong International Curling Cup, made the quarterfinals at the Red Deer Curling Classic and missed the playoffs at the 2019 Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic and the 2019 Canad Inns Women's Classic.

The Kim rink began the abbreviated 2020–21 season at the 2020 Korean National Women's Curling Championship. There, they qualified for the playoffs with a 5–1 record before losing both of their playoff games to the Kim Eun-jung and Gim Un-chi rinks, settling for third.[5] Later that season, they competed in the only two Grand Slam events of the season, which were played in a "curling bubble" in Calgary, Alberta, with no spectators, to avoid the spread of the coronavirus.[6] The team missed the playoffs at both the 2021 Champions Cup and the 2021 Players' Championship.

The 2021–22 season began in June for Team Kim as they competed in the 2021 Korean Curling Championships to decide who would get the chance to represent Korea at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, China.[7] In the first of three rounds, the team went a perfect 4–0 in the round robin before losing in the semifinal to the Gim Un-chi rink. They rebounded with a win over Kim Ji-su in the third place game. In the second round, they went 4–2, however, because Team Kim Eun-jung won both the first and second rounds, they became the national champions.[8] Kim Su-jin later competed in the Gangwon qualifier for the 2021 Korean Mixed Doubles Curling Championship with partner Oh Seung-hoon, however, failed to reach the national championship after a 1–4 record. Through the fall of 2021, skip Kim Min-ji was absent from the team due to winning the Mixed Doubles championship with Lee Ki-jeong.[9] This moved the team's second Kim Hye-rin up to skip the team.[10] The team played in two Grand Slam events, the 2021 Masters and the 2021 National, finishing with a 1–3 record at both. They only played in one more event during the season, the Boundary Ford Curling Classic, where they lost in the final to Team Gim.[11] In March 2022, Kim Min-ji would move to Gyeonggi Province to join Team Gim, with Ha Seung-youn taking over as skip for the Chuncheon City Hall team.

References

  1. ^ "대한컬링경기연맹".
  2. ^ "Sujin Kim | Players". Curling World Cup. Retrieved 2018-12-09.
  3. ^ "SUJIN KIM". Grand Slam of Curling. Retrieved November 5, 2021.
  4. ^ 2019 Korean Women's Curling Finals:Kim Minji vs Gim Unchi. YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-11.
  5. ^ "2020 Korean National Women's Curling Championship – Playoffs". CurlingZone. Retrieved June 8, 2021.
  6. ^ Jonathan Brazeau (April 12, 2021). "Humpty's Champions Cup start moved to Thursday". Grand Slam of Curling. Retrieved June 8, 2021.
  7. ^ "베이징 올림픽 대표를 포함한 2021-2022 컬링 국가대표를 뽑는 2021 KB금융 한국컬링선수권대회 with 강릉". Instagram (in Korean). curling1spoon. June 19, 2021. Archived from the original on 2021-12-26. Retrieved June 16, 2022.
  8. ^ "여자부 강릉시청 '팀 킴'은 2차전 5승 1패로 우승해 오는 12월 열리는 베이징 올림픽 자격대회에 출전하게 됐습니다. 축하합니다". Instagram (in Korean). curling1spoon. July 2, 2021. Archived from the original on 2021-12-26. Retrieved June 16, 2022.
  9. ^ "'19연승' 컬링 믹스더블 국가대표 된 김민지·이기정". OhmyStar. August 9, 2021. Retrieved June 16, 2022.
  10. ^ 2021 Masters Program Guide, Grand Slam of Curling
  11. ^ "2021 Boundary Ford Curling Classic". CurlingZone. Retrieved June 16, 2022.

External links

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