Elaine Dagg-Jackson | |
Birth Name: | Elaine Dagg |
Birth Date: | 23 May 1955 |
Birth Place: | Vancouver, British Columbia |
Curling Club: | Racquet Club, Victoria, BC Juan de Fuca CC, Victoria, BC, Richmond, Richmond, BC |
Hearts Appearances: | 6 |
World Championship Appearances: | 1 |
Olympic Appearances: | 1 (1992 - demo) |
Show-Medals: | yes |
Elaine Dagg-Jackson (born May 23, 1955 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada as Elaine Dagg) is a Canadian curler and curling coach from Victoria, British Columbia.
She is a and a three-time .
She won a bronze medal at the 1992 Winter Olympics when curling was a demonstration sport.[1]
Dagg-Jackson grew up in Kelowna. Her father is Lyall Dagg, winner of the 1964 Macdonald Brier. She moved to Victoria in 1986, and began curling competitively thereafter. Before her coaching career, she worked for Copeland Communications. She is married to curler and coach Glen Jackson.[2] [3]
("Canadian Curling Association National Team Coach"). [4]
Season | Skip | Third | Second | Lead | Alternate | Events | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1986–87 | Elaine Dagg-Jackson | ||||||
1987–88 | Pat Sanders | Louise Herlinveaux | Georgina Hawkes | Deb Massullo | Elaine Dagg-Jackson | ||
1990–91 | Elaine Dagg-Jackson | | |||||
1991–92 | Julie Sutton | Jodie Sutton | Melissa Soligo | Karri Willms | Elaine Dagg-Jackson | ||
1992–93 | Julie Sutton | Jodie Sutton | Melissa Soligo | Karri Willms | Elaine Dagg-Jackson | (4th) | |
1999–00 | Julie Skinner | Georgina Wheatcroft | Elaine Dagg-Jackson |
Year | Tournament, event | National team | Place | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1998 | (women) | |||
1998 | (women) | |||
1998 | (women) | |||
1999 | (junior women) | |||
1999 | (women) | |||
2000 | (women) | |||
2001 | (women) | |||
2002 | (women) | |||
2002 | (women) | |||
2003 | (men) | |||
2005 | (women) | |||
2006 | (women) | |||
2010 | (women) | |||
2018 | (women) |