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Cameron Bryce

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Cameron Bryce
Born (1995-07-20) 20 July 1995 (age 29)
Team
Curling clubBorder Ice Rink,
Kelso, SCO
SkipCameron Bryce
ThirdDuncan Menzies
SecondLuke Carson
LeadRobin McCall
Curling career
Member Association Scotland
World Mixed Championship
appearances
3 (2015, 2016, 2022)
Medal record
Curling
Representing  Scotland
World Mixed Curling Championship
Silver medal – second place 2022 Aberdeen
Bronze medal – third place 2016 Kazan

Cameron Bryce (born 20 July 1995) is a Scottish curler from Kelso.[1] He currently skips his own team out of Stirling.

Career

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Bryce has skipped Scotland three times at the World Mixed Curling Championship. He and teammates Katie Murray, Bobby Lammie and Sophie Jackson finished 9th place at the 2015 World Mixed Curling Championship. The team was much more successful at the 2016 World Mixed Curling Championship. The team won their group with an undefeated 6–0 record, and then went on to beat Canada in the quarterfinals before losing to Sweden in the semifinal. In the bronze medal game, Scotland defeated South Korea. Bryce then improved upon this placement at the 2022 World Mixed Curling Championship, finishing 7-1 in group play, and making their way to the gold medal game, finishing in second place after losing to Canada and Jean-Michel Ménard 7-4 in the final.

After winning the 2017 Scottish Junior Men's Curling Championship,[2] Bryce skipped Scotland at the 2017 World Junior Curling Championships. He and his rink of Robin Brydone, Euan Kyle and Frazer Shaw would finish the round robin portion of the tournament with a 6–3 record, in 3rd place. In the playoffs, they would beat Norway in the 3 vs. 4 game, but lost to South Korea in the semifinal and then lost to Norway in a rematch in the bronze medal game, settling for fourth place.

Bryce and teammates Ross Whyte, Brydone and Kyle would win his first World Curling Tour event at the 2017 Tallinn Challenger.

Grand Slam record

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Key
C Champion
F Lost in Final
SF Lost in Semifinal
QF Lost in Quarterfinals
R16 Lost in the round of 16
Q Did not advance to playoffs
T2 Played in Tier 2 event
DNP Did not participate in event
N/A Not a Grand Slam event that season
Event 2019–20 2020–21 2021–22 2022–23 2023–24 2024–25
Tour Challenge T2 N/A N/A DNP T2 Q
Masters DNP N/A DNP DNP Q DNP

References

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  1. ^ "Ice cool Bryce earns place in World Championships". The Southern Reporter. Archived from the original on 2017-09-03. Retrieved 2017-09-04.
  2. ^ "CurlingZone – Everything Curling". curlingzone.com. Archived from the original on 2017-09-04. Retrieved 2017-09-04.
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