Jump to content

David Nedohin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
David Nedohin
 
Nedohin (middle left) with the "Ferbey Four" in 2010
Born (1973-12-20) December 20, 1973 (age 50)
Team
Curling clubSaville Sports Centre,
Edmonton, AB
Mixed doubles
partner
Alyssa Nedohin
Curling career
Member Association Alberta
Brier appearances5 (2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005)
World Championship
appearances
4 (2001, 2002, 2003, 2005)
Top CTRS ranking2nd (2004-05 & 2005-06)
Grand Slam victories4: World Cup/Masters (Feb 2006);
Players (2006, 2009, 2014)
Medal record
Representing  Canada
Men's curling
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 2002 Bismarck
Gold medal – first place 2003 Winnipeg
Gold medal – first place 2005 Victoria
Representing  Alberta
Canadian Olympic Curling Trials
Bronze medal – third place 2013 Winnipeg
Brier
Gold medal – first place 2001 Ottawa
Gold medal – first place 2002 Calgary
Gold medal – first place 2003 Halifax
Gold medal – first place 2005 Edmonton
Silver medal – second place 2004 Saskatoon

David Nedohin (born December 20, 1973) is a Canadian curler. Nedohin was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba and now plays out of Sherwood Park, Alberta. He is best known as the longtime fourth for Randy Ferbey.

Curling career

[edit]

Nedohin joined the Randy Ferbey rink in 1997 and was a part of that team's four Brier championships and three world championships. Nedohin is renowned for his shotmaking ability - especially for making difficult combination takeout shots. Nedohin had a shooting percentage of 96% in the final of the 2003 Nokia Brier, and 95% shooting percentage in the final of the 2005 Men's Ford World Curling Championships. The team, famously named The Ferbey Four, popularized the "fourth" shooting position. Because of Nedohin's shotmaking ability, he threw the last two stones in each end, or the skip rocks. This meant that Ferbey, the skip, threw third stones while the front end positions remained the same. Because Nedohin was not the skip, he was labeled as the "fourth".

In 2010, The Ferbey Four split up with Ferbey joining the Brad Gushue. However, when Ferbey was dropped by the Gushue rink near playdown time, Ferbey and Nedohin re-joined forces again. They made it to the 2011 Boston Pizza Cup.

The 2011/2012 season saw Nedohin and Ferbey try to repeat their previous success by bringing Ted Appelman and Brendan Melnyk to the new team. After a very successful World Curling Tour season in which they qualified for every event they played in except for the Grand Slams, the team failed to qualify for the Northern Alberta Regionals. They lost the Edmonton Zone to Kevin Park. The result saw the team disband as Ferbey retired from competition. Nedohin would announce shortly later that the 2012/2013 season would see him playing with Colin Hodgson, Tom Sallows and Mike Westlund. There were many comparisons made between the newly formed team and early days of 'The Ferbey Four' based on age and experience. Nedohin joined Kevin Martin's team in the 2013–14 curling season after the departure of John Morris, throwing third stones.

He has not officially announced retiring, but has curled very little since the 2014 season, focusing both on family life and curling commentary work.

In 2023 Nedohin and his Team Ferbey rinkmates (Randy Ferbey, Scott Pfeifer and Marcel Rocque) were inducted into Canada's Sports Hall of Fame.[1]

Personal

[edit]

Nedohin is the founder and president of Scope AR, a developer of augmented reality solutions and products for field maintenance, manufacturing, and training. He is married to Heather Nedohin and has two daughters.[2] He was also an analyst for CurlTV.com.[3] He attended Oak Park High School in Winnipeg and the University of Manitoba.

Teams

[edit]
Season Skip Third Second Lead Events
1995–96 Arnold Asham David Nedohin Sean Nedohin Don Rudd
1996–97 Dale Duguid James Kirkness David Nedohin Doug Armstrong
1997–98 David Nedohin (fourth) Randy Ferbey (skip) Carter Rycroft Pat McCallum
1998–99 David Nedohin (fourth) Randy Ferbey (skip) Scott Pfeifer Carter Rycroft
1999-00 David Nedohin (fourth) Randy Ferbey (skip) Scott Pfeifer Marcel Rocque
2000–01 David Nedohin (fourth) Randy Ferbey (skip) Scott Pfeifer Marcel Rocque 2001 Alta., Brier, WCC
2001–02 David Nedohin (fourth) Randy Ferbey (skip) Scott Pfeifer Marcel Rocque 2002 Alta., Brier, WCC
2002–03 David Nedohin (fourth) Randy Ferbey (skip) Scott Pfeifer Marcel Rocque 2003 Alta., Brier, WCC
2003–04 David Nedohin (fourth) Randy Ferbey (skip) Scott Pfeifer Marcel Rocque 2004 Alta., Brier
2004–05 David Nedohin (fourth) Randy Ferbey (skip) Scott Pfeifer Marcel Rocque 2005 Alta., Brier, WCC
2007–08 David Nedohin (fourth) Randy Ferbey (skip) Scott Pfeifer Marcel Rocque 2008 Alta.
2008–09 David Nedohin (fourth) Randy Ferbey (skip) Scott Pfeifer Marcel Rocque 2009 Alta.
2009–10 David Nedohin (fourth) Randy Ferbey (skip) Scott Pfeifer Marcel Rocque 2009 COCT, 2010 Alta.
2010–11 Randy Ferbey David Nedohin Blayne Iskiw David Harper 2011 Alta.
2011–12 David Nedohin (fourth) Randy Ferbey (skip) Ted Appelman Brendan Melnyk
2012–13 David Nedohin Colin Hodgson Mike Westlund Tom Sallows
2013–14 Kevin Martin David Nedohin Marc Kennedy Ben Hebert 2013 COCT, 2014 Alta.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Virtue and Moir lead star-studded group of inductees into Canada's Sports Hall of Fame". CBC Sports. 19 October 2023. Retrieved 20 October 2023.
  2. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-06. Retrieved 2013-12-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ CurlTV.com - your house. online. - CurlTV.com is your source for curling news, events, scores, video, and more Archived 2008-06-10 at the Wayback Machine
[edit]