Karen Smith (Australian field hockey)

Karen Smith (born 30 January 1979 in Toowoomba, Queensland) is a former field hockey midfield player from Australia. After her stint in hockey she went on to become a P.E. teacher for 4yrs at Clairvaux MacKillop College. She is married with two children and resides in Toowoomba

Karen Smith
Personal information
Born (1979-01-30) 30 January 1979
Toowoomba, Queensland

International senior competitions

  • 1997 – Champions Trophy, Berlin, Germany (1st)
  • 1998 – World Cup, Utrecht, Netherlands (1st)
  • 1999 – Champions Trophy, Brisbane, Australia (1st)
  • 2000 – Champions Trophy, Amstelveen, Netherlands (3rd)
  • 2001 – Champions Trophy, Amstelveen, Netherlands (3rd)
  • 2002 – Commonwealth Games, Manchester, United Kingdom (3rd)
  • 2002 – Champions Trophy, Macau, China (4th)
  • 2002 – World Cup, Perth, Australia (4th)
  • 2003 – Champions Trophy, Sydney, Australia (1st)
  • 2004 – Summer Olympics, Athens, Greece (5th)
  • 2004 – Champions Trophy, Rosario, Argentina (4th)
  • 2005 – Champions Trophy, Canberra, Australia (2nd)
  • 2006 – Commonwealth Games, Melbourne, Australia (1st)
  • 2006 – Champions Trophy, Amstelveen, Netherlands (5th)
  • 2006 – World Cup, Madrid, Spain (2nd)
gollark: There's also that stupid DRM blob my browser needs for "encrypted media extensions", though I have that turned off.
gollark: I don't think there's open-source firmware available for my... SSD, keyboard, smartcard reader thingy, and whatever else.
gollark: With my actual x86-based computer, I mostly control it, except... lots of the firmware, the intel management engine, and the BIOS.
gollark: Mine does too, but it has an annoying screen complaining about the bootloader being unlocked on boot.
gollark: Android phones have the same issue (iOS too, more so, but I have an android one so I'll complain about it) - you can barely do anything to it unless you root it, and even that's a hassle and still has limitations.

References



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.