Rasmus Wranå

Rasmus Bele Åke Wranå (born 15 November 1994) is a Swedish curler from Karlstad.[2] He currently plays second for the Swedish national team, skipped by Niklas Edin. With his teammates Edin, Oskar Eriksson, and Christoffer Sundgren, Wranå became part of the first and only team in history to win four consecutive gold medals at the World Men's Curling Championship (2018, 2019, 2021, 2022). In 2017, Wranå and these same teammates also became the first non-Canadian men's curling team to win three Grand Slam tournaments and the Pinty's Cup. Along with Anders Kraupp, he is one of only two male curlers in Sweden to have won all three Swedish national championships in which he was eligible to compete in the senior division – men's team curling, mixed curling, and mixed doubles. In 2018 he was inducted into the Swedish Curling Hall of Fame.

Rasmus Wranå
Born (1994-11-15) 15 November 1994 (age 29)
Team
Curling clubKarlstads CK,
Karlstad, SWE[1]
SkipNiklas Edin
ThirdOskar Eriksson
SecondRasmus Wranå
LeadChristoffer Sundgren
AlternateDaniel Magnusson
Mixed doubles
partner
Isabella Wranå
Curling career
Member Association Sweden
World Championship
appearances
7 (2017, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024)
World Mixed Doubles Championship
appearances
2 (2022, 2024)
European Championship
appearances
7 (2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023)
Olympic
appearances
2 (2018, 2022)
Grand Slam victories4 (2016 Masters, 2016 Tour Challenge, 2017 Players', 2022 Tour Challenge)

Teams

edit

Men's

edit
SeasonSkipThirdSecondLeadAlternateCoachEvents
2011–12Rasmus WranåJordan WåhlinDaniel LövstrandAxel SjöbergPatric Mabergs (WJCC)WJCC 2012
2012–13Rasmus WranåJordan WåhlinDaniel LövstrandAxel Sjöberg
2013–14Rasmus WranåJordan WåhlinAxel SjöbergDaniel LövstrandMats Wranå
2014–15Rasmus WranåJordan WåhlinAxel SjöbergDaniel LövstrandMax Brooks
2015–16Rasmus WranåFredrik NymanJordan WåhlinJoakim FlygMax BäckSMCC 2016
SJCC 2016
Rasmus WranåFredrik NymanJordan WåhlinMax BäckAxel SjöbergMats WranåWJCC 2016 (6th)
2016–17Niklas EdinOskar ErikssonRasmus WranåChristoffer SundgrenHenrik LeekECC 2016
CCC 2017
WCC 2017
2017–18Niklas EdinOskar ErikssonRasmus WranåChristoffer SundgrenHenrik Leek (ECC, WOG, WCC)Fredrik LindbergECC 2017
WOG 2018
SMCC 2018
WCC 2018
2018–19Niklas EdinOskar ErikssonRasmus WranåChristoffer SundgrenDaniel Magnusson (ECC, WCC)Fredrik LindbergCWC/1 (5th)
ECC 2018
CWC/2
SMCC 2019
CWC/3
WCC 2019
CWC/Final (4th)
Fredrik NymanRasmus WranåAxel SjöbergMax BäckOlle BrudstenWUG 2019 (5th)
2019–20Niklas EdinOskar ErikssonRasmus WranåChristoffer SundgrenDaniel MagnussonECC 2019
SMCC 2020
2020–21Niklas EdinOskar ErikssonRasmus WranåChristoffer SundgrenDaniel MagnussonWCC 2021
2021–22Niklas EdinOskar ErikssonRasmus WranåChristoffer SundgrenDaniel MagnussonECC 2021
WOG 2022
WCC 2022
2022–23Niklas EdinOskar ErikssonRasmus WranåChristoffer SundgrenDaniel MagnussonECC 2022 (4th)
SMCC 2023
WCC 2023 (5th)
2023–24Niklas EdinOskar ErikssonRasmus WranåChristoffer SundgrenDaniel MagnussonECC 2023
WCC 2024

Mixed

edit
SeasonSkipThirdSecondLeadCoachEvents
2011–12Rasmus WranåAmalia RudströmJordan WåhlinJohanna HeldinWYOG 2012 (4th)
2013–14Rasmus WranåAmalia RudströmJoakim FlygJohanna HeldinSMxCC 2014
2014–15Rasmus WranåZandra FlygJoakim FlygJohanna HeldinMats Wranå (WMxCC)SMxCC 2015
WMxCC 2015
2015–16Rasmus WranåJennie WåhlinJoakim FlygJohanna HeldinSMxCC 2016

Mixed doubles

edit
SeasonFemaleMaleEvents
2011–12Kerli ZirkRasmus WranåWYOG 2012 (9th)
2012–13Johanna HeldinRasmus WranåSMDCC 2013
2015–16Isabella WranåRasmus WranåSMDCC 2016
2016–17Karin RudströmRasmus WranåSMDCC 2017 (5th)
2019–20Agnes KnochenhauerRasmus WranåSMDCC 2020
2021–22Isabella WranåRasmus WranåWMDCC 2022 (5th)
2023–24Isabella WranåRasmus WranåWMDCC 2024 ()

Grand Slam record

edit
Key
CChampion
FLost in Final
SFLost in Semifinal
QFLost in Quarterfinals
R16Lost in the round of 16
QDid not advance to playoffs
T2Played in Tier 2 event
DNPDid not participate in event
N/ANot a Grand Slam event that season
Event2016–172017–182018–192019–202020–212021–222022–232023–24
Tour ChallengeCSFQQFN/AN/ACQF
The NationalSFDNPQFFN/AQFFF
MastersCFSFQN/AQFQFQ
Canadian OpenFFSFQN/AN/AFQ
Players'CFQFN/AQFFQFQF
Champions CupSFQSFN/AQFSFSFN/A
Elite 10QQQN/AN/AN/AN/AN/A

Personal life

edit

His father is Mats Wranå,[3] Swedish curler and coach. His sister is Isabella Wranå, Swedish curler.

References

edit
  1. ^ "Team Wrana/Wrana". Facebook. Svensk Curling. September 1, 2020. Retrieved September 2, 2020.
  2. ^ 2020 Continental Cup Media Guide: Team Edin
  3. ^ Mats Wranå on the World Curling database
edit