2003 Scott Tournament of Hearts


The 2003 Scott Tournament of Hearts was held at the Kitchener Memorial Auditorium in Kitchener, Ontario from February 15 to 23. The Colleen Jones rink returned as Team Canada, going on to win their third straight Hearts, then representing Canada at the 2003 World Women's Curling Championship where they won silver.

Teams

The teams were listed as follows:

Round Robin standings

Final round robin standings
LocaleSkip
Suzanne Gaudet10189615042101380%
Colleen Jones8381604941141079%
Jan Betker747559434713979%
Cathy Cunningham656974464811775%
Heidi Hanlon563–1708048499874%
Deb Santos562–2; 2–07473474681278%
Nancy McConnery562–2; 1–1747945517673%
Nathalie Gagnon562–2; 0–266754550101071%
Anne Dunn561–36766484781475%
Toni Fister471–06275425010973%
Barb Spencer470–17271464791173%
Dawn Moses296987504381173%

Round Robin results

All draw times are listed in Eastern Time.

Draw 1

''Saturday, February 15, 2:30 pm''

Draw 2

''Saturday, February 15, 7:30 pm''

Draw 3

''Sunday, February 16, 9:30 am''

Draw 4

''Sunday, February 16, 2:30 pm''

Draw 5

''Sunday, February 16, 7:30 pm''

Draw 6

''Monday, February 17, 9:30 am''

Draw 7

''Monday, February 17, 2:30 pm''

Draw 8

''Monday, February 17, 7:30 pm''

Draw 9

''Tuesday, February 18, 9:30 am''

Draw 10

''Tuesday, February 18, 2:30 pm''

Draw 11

''Tuesday, February 18, 7:30 pm''

Draw 12

''Wednesday, February 19, 9:30 am''

Draw 13

''Wednesday, February 19, 2:30 pm''

Draw 14

''Wednesday, February 19, 7:30 pm''

Draw 15

''Thursday, February 20, 9:30 am''

Draw 16

''Thursday, February 20, 2:30 pm''

Draw 17

''Thursday, February 20, 7:30 pm''

Playoffs

3 vs. 4

''Friday, February 21, 2:30 pm''

1 vs. 2

''Friday, February 21, 7:30 pm''

Semifinal

''Saturday, February 22, 7:30 pm''

Final

''Sunday, February 23, 2:00 pm''

Statistics

Top 5 Player Percentages

''Round robin only; minimum 6 games''

Awards

All-Star teams

PositionNameTeam
SkipSuzanne Gaudet
ThirdRebecca Jean MacPhee
SecondJoan McCusker
LeadKate Horne

[Marj Mitchell Sportsmanship Award]

The Marj Mitchell Sportsmanship Award was presented to the player chosen by their fellow peers as the curler that most exemplified sportsmanship and dedication to curling during the annual Scotties Tournament of Hearts.
NamePositionTeam
Anne DunnSkip

[Sandra Schmirler [Most Valuable Player Award]]

The Sandra Schmirler Most Valuable Player Award was awarded to the top player in the playoff round by members of the media in the Scotties Tournament of Hearts.
NamePositionTeam
Colleen Jones Skip

Colleen Jones became the first curler to win consecutive and multiple MVP awards. She would later be joined by Kelly Scott, Jennifer Jones, Chelsea Carey, Rachel Homan, and Kerri Einarson as the only curlers to win the MVP award multiple times.

Joan Mead Builder Award

The Joan Mead Builder Award recognizes a builder in the sport of curling named in the honour of the late CBC curling producer Joan Mead.
NameContribution
Vic RauterTSN broadcaster

[Ford Hot Shots]

The Ford Hot Shots was a skills competition preceding the round robin of the tournament. Each competitor had to perform a series of shots with each shot scoring between 0 and 5 points depending on where the stone came to rest. The winner of this edition of the event would win a two-year lease on a Ford Focus ZX5.
WinnerRunner-UpScore

Shot of the Week Award

The Shot of the Week Award was awarded to the curler who had been determined with the most outstanding shot during the tournament as voted on by TSN commentators.
NamePositionTeam
Cathy CunninghamSkip