Chrissy Cadorin

Christina "Chrissy" Cadorin (born October 19, 1980 in North York, Ontario) is a Canadian curler from Thornhill, Ontario. She currently plays third on Team Cathy Auld on the World Curling Tour.

Chrissy Cadorin
Born
Christina Cadorin

(1980-10-19) October 19, 1980
North York, Ontario
Team
Curling clubRoyals[1],
Toronto, ON
SkipCathy Auld
ThirdChrissy Cadorin
SecondCourtney Auld
LeadCayla Auld
Career
Member Association Ontario
Top CTRS ranking20th (2006–07)

Career

As a junior curler, Cadorin won two Junior Mixed junior mixed titles, in 1999 playing lead on a team skipped by John Morris and in 2001 playing third on a team skipped by Sean St. Amand.

In university, Cadorin was a member of the Laurier Golden Hawks curling team.[2]

In 2006, Cadorin joined Team Jenn Hanna, playing third on the team. The team played in one Grand Slam event that season, Cardorin's first, the 2006 Trail Appliances Autumn Gold Curling Classic. The team missed the playoffs. Cadorin remained on the team for one more season before forming her own rink in 2008 with Colleen Madonia, Janet Murphy and Kate Hamer.

In the 2008-09 season, Cadorin's new team entered four Grand Slam events, the 2008 Trail Appliances Curling Classic, the 2008 Casinos of Winnipeg Classic, the Wayden Transportation Ladies Classic and the 2008 Sobeys Slam. The team missed the playoffs in all four events. They began the season with Madonia skipping the team, while Cadorin threw last stones, however Cadorin would eventually take over skipping duties.

For the 2009-10 season, Cadorin joined the Jo-Ann Rizzo team, playing third for the rink. Cadorin played in the 2009 Manitoba Lotteries Women's Curling Classic with the team, missing the playoffs. Ṣ In 2010, Cadorin left the Rizzo rink to form her own team once again, and has been a skip ever since.

In December 2017, Cadorin won the Ontario Trophy Championship, in the first year it was a direct qualifier for the Ontario Scotties Tournament of Hearts.

Personal life

Cadorin posed partially-nude as a model in the 2009 Women of Curling calendar.[3][4] She works as a regional sales manager.

gollark: You can define arbitrary operators as functions and set the precedence/infixness.
gollark: I also like how Macron has an AST with exactly 49 hardcoded operators instead of the superior Haskell way.
gollark: I like how you say this as if any of the code exists whatsoever.
gollark: Well, it's beeoidal to unoptimize stuff and just hope it'll be optimized again later.
gollark: I think you would just have to AND the result afterward. It would not be very efficient.

References

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