2022 World Women's Curling Championship: Results, final standings of Canada's Bronze medal performance at the international tournament

Bryan Murphy

2022 World Women's Curling Championship: Results, final standings of Canada's Bronze medal performance at the international tournament image

The best in the women's curling world came together in Prince George to compete for the World Women's Curling Championship.

The tournament, officially dubbed the 2022 BKT Tires & OK Tire World Women's Curling Championship, saw nine days of curling competition with 13 teams hitting the sheets. 

Canada represented by Kerri Einarson's team for the second consecutive year finished with a Bronze medal after defeating Sweden 8-7. The team was supposed to make their world championship debut in Prince George in 2020 before the tournament was canceled because of COVID.

Einarson's squad finished fifth at the 2021 World Championship in Calgary last year and is coming off its third-straight win at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts.

Switzerland defeated Korea 7-6 in the final of the tournament claiming the 2022 World Women's Curling Championship. They finished the tournament undefeated and earned global bragging rights.

Here is everything you need to know about the 2022 Women's World Championship. 

When is the 2022 World Women's Curling Championship?

The 2022 tournament began Saturday, March 19, and the final of the competition was played on at Sunday, March 27, at 5 p.m. ET.

DateTime (ET)MatchupTV
Saturday, March 195 p.m. Canada vs ItalyTSN1
Saturday, March 1910 p.m.Canada vs. NorwayTSN1
Sunday, March 205 p.m.Turkey vs. CanadaTSN1
Monday, March 215 p.m. Canada vs. DenmarkTSN1
Tuesday, March 225 p.m.Japan vs. CanadaTSN1
Wednesday, March 2312 p.m.Canada vs. SwedenTSN1
Thursday, March 2412 p.m.USA vs. CanadaTSN1
Friday, March 2510 p.m. Czech Republic vs. CanadaTSN1
Saturday, March 264 p.m.Qualification PlayoffTSN5
Saturday, March 267 p.m. Qualification PlayoffTSN2
Saturday, March 2610 p.m. SemifinalsTSN4
Sunday, March 272 p.m.Bronze Medal GameTSN3
Sunday, March 277 p.m.Gold Medal GameTSN1

What channel is the 2022 World Women's Curling Championship on in Canada?

The championship will be broadcast on TSN with live streaming available on TSN Direct, TSN.ca and the TSN app. 

Where is the 2022 World Women's Curling Championship taking place?

The tournament will be hosted at the CN Centre in Prince George, B.C. This is the first time that Prince George has hosted a World Curling Federation event. It previously was supposed to host the championship tournament in 2020 before it was canceled because of COVID. 

Who won the past 10 World Women's Curling Championships?

Switzerland has dominated the women's championships for the last decade with six wins in the last 10 years, but Canada was able to grab two wins during that same span, going back-to-back in 2016 and 2017. 

Here is a look at the winners from the last 10 championships. 

2013:  Scotland

2014:  Switzerland

2015:  Switzerland

2016:  Switzerland

2017:  Canada

2018:  Canada 

2019:  Switzerland

2020: Canceled due to COVID

2021:  Switzerland

2022: Switzerland

2022 World Women's Curling Championship final standings

There were 13 teams that made up the field at the 2022 World Women's Curling Championship, returning to the usual format after including 14 teams in the 2021 tournament. 

In response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the World Curling Federation removed all Russian Curling federation teams from competing at the World Championships. Their spot was taken by the Czech Republic instead.

Each team played every one of the other participants, resulting in 12 matches in round-robin play. After the round-robin concluded, the top six teams advanced to the playoffs. 

The top two seeds had a bye to the semifinals, with the No. 3-6 teams participating in the qualification games. The winners of those two matches advanced to the semifinals and the winner of the two semifinal matches played in the gold medal game. The losers of the semifinals played for the bronze. 

Scotland played in two matches before two of the team's players tested positive for COVID-19. The team has since withdrawn from the tournament. Japan forfeited its last round-robin game because of COVID-19 concerns.

TeamGamesWinsLosses
Switzerland^12120
South Korea^1293
Canada^1293
Sweden^1293
United States^1284
Denmark^1275
Japan*1266
Germany1266
Norway1257
Italy1248
Czech Republic12210
Turkey12210
Scotland*12012

^ Clinched playoff spot.

* Withdrew from tournament.

2022 Women's World Curling Championship schedule

Draw 1 (March 19, 5 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Canada ⁠— 9
Italy⁠ — 2

Sheet B
Sweden ⁠— 9
Turkey ⁠— 6

Sheet C
Czech Republic ⁠— 2
United States ⁠— 9

Sheet D
Korea ⁠— 7
Norway ⁠— 6

Draw 2 (March 19, 10 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Denmark — 11 
Germany — 8 

Sheet B
Canada — 4
Norway — 6

Sheet C
Scotland — 1 
Switzerland — 12

Sheet D
Japan — 7
Turkey — 6

Draw 3 (March 20, noon ET)

Sheet A
Switzerland — 8
Sweden — 7

Sheet B
Germany — 2
Korea — 7

Sheet C
Italy — 2
Japan — 9

Sheet D
Scotland — 9
Czech Republic —  10

Draw 4 (March 20, 5 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Korea — 8 
Czech Republic — 7

Sheet B
United States — 7
Italy — 6

Sheet C
Turkey — 4 
Canada — 8

Sheet D
Sweden — 9
Denmark — 4

Draw 5 (March 20, 10 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Japan — 7
United States — 6

Sheet B
Denmark — W
Scotland — L

Sheet C
Norway — 11
Germany — 6

Sheet D
Switzerland — 11
Canada — 3

Draw 6 (March 21, noon ET)

Sheet A
Italy — 8
Norway — 4

Sheet B
Czech Republic — 1
Sweden — 8

Sheet C
Japan — W
Scotland — L

Draw 7 (March 21, 5 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Czech Republic — 4
Germany — 6

Sheet B
Turkey — 3
Switzerland — 8

Sheet C
Canada — 8
Denmark — 4

Sheet D
United States — 4
Korea — 11

Draw 8 (March 21, 10 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Scotland — L
Sweden — W

Sheet B
Norway — 4
United States — 12

Sheet C
Switzerland — 8
Italy — 6

Sheet D
Germany — 7
Japan — 5

Draw 9 (March 22, noon ET)

Sheet A
Sweden — 6
Italy — 2

Sheet B
Korea — W
Scotland — L

Sheet C
Denmark — 11
Turkey — 10

Draw 10 (March 22, 5 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Germany — 7
United States — 8

Sheet B
Japan — 4
Canada — 10

Sheet C
Denmark — 8
Czech Republic — 6

Sheet D
Norway — 5 
Switzerland — 8

Draw 11 (March 22, 10 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Turkey — 5
Norway — 10

Sheet B
Scotland — L
Germany — W

Sheet C
Sweden — 8
Japan — 4

Sheet D
Italy — 4
Korea — 7

Draw 12 (March 23, noon ET)

Sheet A
Switzerland — 10
Czech Republic — 3

Sheet B
Korea — 7
Denmark — 8

Sheet C
United States — 12
Turkey — 5

Sheet D
Canada — 10
Sweden — 8

Draw 13 (March 23, 5 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Japan — 8
Denmark — 1

Sheet B
Switzerland — 8
United States — 7

Sheet C
Germany — 7
Italy — 5

Sheet D
Norway — W
Scotland — L

Draw 14 (March 23, 10 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Sweden — 7
Korea — 3

Sheet B
Italy — 9
Turkey — 7

Sheet C
Scotland — L
Canada — W

Sheet D
Czech Republic — 7
Japan — 3

Draw 15 (March 24, noon ET)

Sheet A
United States — 3
Canada — 9

Sheet B
Norway — 7
Czech Republic — 1

Sheet C
Denmark — 3
Switzerland — 7

Sheet D
Turkey — 1
Germany — 8

Draw 16 (March 24, 5 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Italy — W
Scotland — L

Sheet B
Germany — 5
Sweden — 6

Sheet C
Japan — 9
Norway — 5

Sheet D
Korea — 5
Switzerland — 8

Draw 17 (March 24, 10 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Czech Republic — 5
Turkey — 7

Sheet B
Canada — 7
Korea — 8

Sheet C
United States — 5
Sweden — 4

Sheet D
Denmark — 7
Italy — 5

Draw 18 (March 25, noon ET)

Sheet A
Norway — 4
Denmark — 11

Sheet B
Switzerland — 11
Japan — 3

Sheet C 
Canada — 8
Germany — 5

Sheet D
Scotland — L
United States — W

Draw 19 (March 25, 5 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Korea — W 
Japan — L

Sheet B
Turkey — W
Scotland — L

Sheet C
Italy — 7
Czech Republic — 3

Sheet D
Sweden — 6
Norway — 3

Draw 20 (March 25, 10 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Germany — 6
Switzerland — 7

Sheet B
United States — 9
Denmark — 5

Sheet C
Turkey — 2
Korea — 10

Sheet D
Czech Republic — 6
Canada — 9

Qualification Games (March 26, 4 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Canada — 9 
Denmark — 8

Sheet C
Sweden — 8
United States — 6

Semifinals (March 26, 10 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Switzerland — 7
Sweden — 5

Sheet C
Canada — 6
Korea — 9

Bronze-medal game (March 27, 2 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Canada — 8
Sweden — 7

Gold-medal game (March 27, 8 p.m. ET)

Sheet A
Switzerland — 7
Korea — 6

Bryan Murphy

Bryan Murphy joined The Sporting News in 2022 as the NHL/Canada content producer. Previously he worked for NBC Sports on their national news desk reporting on breaking news for the NFL, MLB, NBA and NHL, in addition to covering the 2020 and 2022 Olympic Games. A graduate of Quinnipiac University, he spent time in college as a beat reporter covering the men’s ice hockey team.