Anita Ford

Anita Ford (born October 3, 1947)[1] is a Canadian curler and curling coach from Regina, Saskatchewan. She is known as the alternate and later coach of the Sandra Schmirler team.

Anita Ford
Born (1947-10-03) October 3, 1947
Team
Curling clubCaledonian CC,
Regina, SK
Career
Member Association Saskatchewan
Hearts appearances4 (1991, 1993, 1994, 1995)
World Championship
appearances
2 (1993, 1994)

She is a two-time World women's champion (1993, 1994)[2] and two-time Canadian women's champion (1993, 1994).

In 1999, she was inducted into Canadian Curling Hall of Fame together with all of the Sandra Schmirler team.[3]

Teams and events

SeasonSkipThirdSecondLeadAlternate
Coach
Events
1970–71[4]Val SpencerAnita FordMary BennetGeorgie Reichel
1971–72[5]Beth LakeAmy GilroyMary EntwistleAnita Ford
1979–80Crystal BrunasAnita FordRandi KellyNelda McDonald
1980–81[6]Crystal BrunasAnita FordRandi KellyNelda McDonald
1990–91Sandra PetersonJan BetkerJoan InglisMarcia SchimlAnita FordSTOH 1991 (4th)
1992–93Sandra PetersonJan BetkerJoan McCuskerMarcia SchimlAnita FordSTOH 1993
WCC 1993
1993–94Sandra PetersonJan BetkerJoan McCuskerMarcia GudereitAnita FordSTOH 1994
WCC 1994
1994–95Sandra PetersonJan BetkerJoan McCuskerMarcia GudereitAnita FordSTOH 1995
2003–04Crystal FriskAnita FordRandi KellyDawne OblemanPat ReeveCSCC 2004 (6th)
2004–05Crystal FriskAnita FordRandi KellyDawne OblemanCSCC 2005 (12th)
2010–11Nancy KerrAnita FordDawn OblemanWendy Leach[7]

Record as a coach of club teams

YearTournament, eventTeamSkipPlace
19971997 Scott Tournament of HeartsSaskatchewanSandra Schmirler
19971997 Canadian Olympic Curling TrialsSandra Schmirler
19981998 Scott Tournament of HeartsSaskatchewanSandra Schmirler
20082008 Scotties Tournament of HeartsSaskatchewanMichelle Englot
7

Record as a coach of national teams

YearTournament, eventNational teamPlace
19981998 Winter Olympics Canada (women)

Private life

Anita Ford is from a family of curlers. Her husband Gary (died 2004) was a four-time Saskatchewan men's curling champion from 1968 to 1971. They have two daughters, both of which are also curlers, Atina Ford and Cindy Simmons. Atina is an Olympic and Canadian champion, and sometime part of the Schmirler team. Simmons played in the STOH 2008 with Michelle Englot.[8]

gollark: Great.
gollark: I have another one in an hour.
gollark: <@&358173303816323072> Can someone catch my experiment in ~15 minutes?
gollark: Anyone available in 5ish hours? I have two experiments running.
gollark: Smallish ND experiments don't really say much about the effectiveness of various things, because NDs are highly random, and there don't seem to be any attempts to do larger-scale ND experiments which control for the many variables involved.

References

  1. "The Anita Ford File". Regina Leader-Post. February 7, 1998. p. G14. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
  2. Anita Ford on the World Curling Federation database
  3. Ford, Anita — CCA Hall of Fame | ACC Temple de la Renommée Virtuelle
  4. "Spencer rink wins". Regina Leader-Post. April 10, 1971. p. 26. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
  5. "Highland club holds wind-up". Regina Leader-Post. April 22, 1972. p. 21. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
  6. "Brunas' bubble bursts". Regina Leader-Post. February 2, 1981. p. 18. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
  7. 2011 Canadian Masters Curling Championships
  8. Regina Leader-Post: 2008-02-13 – Curling is a family affair


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