David Nedohin
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Medal record
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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
Nedohin joined the Randy Ferbey rink in 1997 and was a part of that team's four
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
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
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
Season | Skip | Third | Second | Lead | Events |
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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 WCC
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2001–02 | David Nedohin (fourth) | Randy Ferbey (skip) | Scott Pfeifer | Marcel Rocque | 2002 WCC
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2002–03 | David Nedohin (fourth) | Randy Ferbey (skip) | Scott Pfeifer | Marcel Rocque | 2003 WCC
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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 WCC
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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 |
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2013–14 | Kevin Martin | David Nedohin | Marc Kennedy | Ben Hebert | 2013 COCT, 2014 Alta. |
References
- ^ "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.
- ^ "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) - ^ 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