Huguette Jullien

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Huguette Jullien
 
Team
Curling clubMont d'Arbois CC, Megève,
Club de sports Megève, Megève[1]
Curling career
Member Association France
World Championship
appearances
7 (1979, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986)
European Championship
appearances
7 (1978, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985)
Medal record
Curling

Huguette Jullien is a French curler.[2]

At the international level, she competed for France on seven World and seven European championships.

Teams[edit]

Season Skip Third Second Lead Events
1978–79 Paulette Delachat Huguette Jullien Suzanne Parodi Erna Gay ECC 1978 (4th)
Erna Gay (fourth) Paulette Delachat (skip) Suzanne Parodi Huguette Jullien WCC 1979 (5th)
1979–80 Huguette Jullien Suzanne Parodi Jean Albert Sulpice (?)[3] Erna Gay ECC 1979 (4th)
Paulette Sulpice Agnès Mercier Huguette Jullien Anne-Claude Wolfers WCC 1980 (6th)
1981–82 Huguette Jullien (fourth) Agnès Mercier Paulette Sulpice (skip) Anne-Claude Kennerson ECC 1981 (5th)
Huguette Jullien (fourth) Agnès Mercier Paulette Sulpice (skip) Eva Duvillard WCC 1982 (6th)
1982–83 Huguette Jullien (fourth) Agnès Mercier Paulette Sulpice (skip) Monique Tournier ECC 1982 (5th)
WCC 1983 (5th)
1983–84 Huguette Jullien (fourth) Agnès Mercier Monique Tournier Paulette Sulpice (skip) ECC 1983 (6th)
Huguette Jullien (fourth) Agnès Mercier Andrée Dupont-Roc Paulette Sulpice (skip) WCC 1984 (7th)
1984–85 Huguette Jullien (fourth) Andrée Dupont-Roc Paulette Sulpice (skip) Monique Tournier ECC 1984 (6th)
Huguette Jullien (fourth) Paulette Sulpice (skip) Andrée Dupont-Roc Jocelyn Lhenry WCC 1985 (8th)
1985–86 Paulette Sulpice Huguette Jullien Isabelle Quere Jocelyn Lhenry ECC 1985 (10th)
Huguette Jullien (fourth) Paulette Sulpice (skip) Isabelle Quere Jocelyn Lhenry WCC 1986 (9th)

References[edit]

  1. ^ Club des sports de Megève Archived 2021-04-14 at the Wayback Machine(in French)
  2. ^ Huguette Jullien on the World Curling database Edit this at Wikidata
  3. ^ Mistake in WCF results and statistics database, because Jean Albert Sulipice is a man competed for France on three World Curling Championships (1966, 1967, 1970).

External links[edit]