Justine Comeau

Justine Comeau (born July 28, 1998)[2] is a Canadian curler from Fredericton, New Brunswick. She currently plays third on Team Melissa Adams.

Justine Comeau
Born
Justine Comeau

(1998-07-28) July 28, 1998
Team
Curling clubCapital Winter Club,
Fredericton, NB[1]
SkipMelissa Adams
ThirdJustine Comeau
SecondJaclyn Tingley
LeadKendra Lister
Career
Member Association New Brunswick
Other appearancesCJCC: 4 (2015, 2016, 2018, 2019)
Top CTRS ranking72nd (2019–20)

Career

Comeau has represented New Brunswick at four Canadian Junior Curling Championships with two bronze medals to her name in 2016 and 2018.[3][4] She also has a very accomplished Under 18 championship record. She won silver medals in both 2016 and 2017 at the 2016 U18 International Curling Championships and the 2017 Canadian U18 Curling Championships.[5] Still of junior age, she has participated in the past few New Brunswick Scotties Tournament of Hearts. In 2017, she lost the semifinal to the Melissa Adams rink and in 2018 she lost the tiebreaker to Sarah Mallais.[6][7] She did not participate in the 2019 playdowns as she was at the 2019 Canadian Junior Curling Championships. The Comeau rink would lose another semifinal at the 2020 provincials, this time to the Sylvie Quillian rink.[8] Later that season, Comeau skipped the UNB Reds at the 2020 U Sports/Curling Canada University Curling Championships. There, the team made it all the way to the final where they lost to the Alberta Pandas skipped by Selena Sturmay.[9]

Comeau aged out of juniors the next season and joined a new team skipped by Melissa Adams with Jaclyn Tingley at second and Kendra Lister at lead.[10]

Personal life

Comeau currently attends the University of New Brunswick and is a Business Administration student.[11] Her sister is Brigitte Comeau.

Teams

Season Skip Third Second Lead
2013–14[12] Justine ComeauEmma Le BlancBrigitte ComeauKeira McLaughlin
2014–15 Justine ComeauEmma Le BlancBrigitte ComeauKeira McLaughlin
2015–16 Justine ComeauEmma Le BlancBrigitte ComeauKeira McLaughlin
2016–17 Justine ComeauEmma Le BlancBrigitte ComeauKeira McLaughlin
2017–18 Justine ComeauEmma Le BlancBrigitte ComeauKeira McLaughlin
2018–19 Justine ComeauEmma Le BlancBrigitte ComeauKeira McLaughlin
2019–20 Justine ComeauErica CluffBrigitte Comeau
Leah Thompson[lower-alpha 1]
Keira McLaughlin
2020–21 Melissa AdamsJustine ComeauJaclyn TingleyKendra Lister

Notes

  1. Leah Thompson replaced Brigitte Comeau halfway through the season as Comeau stepped back from competitive curling.[13]
gollark: No apparent correlation to RAM use.
gollark: And as such power draw was at 95W for this duration.
gollark: It is pretty great though; for instance, I can see that from 07:28 to 18:44 CPU usage was at slightly over 14% on all cores for no apparent reason.
gollark: I wonder if I can make it downsample older stuff.
gollark: I'm pretty sure this will eventually accumulate several gigabytes of unnecessary time series data but oh well.

References

  1. "Justine Comeau Profile". Curling Canada. Retrieved January 26, 2020.
  2. 2019 Canadian Juniors Media Guide
  3. "2016 Canadian Junior Women's Curling Championships". CurlingZone. Retrieved January 26, 2020.
  4. "2018 New Holland Canadian Junior Women's Curling Championships". CurlingZone. Retrieved January 26, 2020.
  5. "2016 Optimist U18 Women's International". CurlingZone. Retrieved January 26, 2020.
  6. "2017 New Brunswick Scotties Tournament of Hearts". CurlingZone. Retrieved January 26, 2020.
  7. "2018 New Brunswick Scotties Tournament of Hearts". CurlingZone. Retrieved January 26, 2020.
  8. "2020 New Brunswick Scotties Tournament of Hearts". CurlingZone. Retrieved January 26, 2020.
  9. "2020 U Sports/Curling Canada University Curling Championships". Curling Canada. Retrieved March 16, 2020.
  10. "Team Adams Announcement". Facebook. Retrieved July 22, 2020.
  11. "Team Comeau Profile's". Team Comeau. Retrieved January 26, 2020.
  12. "Justine Comeau Past Teams". CurlingZone. Retrieved January 26, 2020.
  13. "Brigitte Comeau steps away from team Comeau". Facebook. Retrieved January 26, 2020.
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