| Alternate | Courtney George |
| Lead | Maureen Brunt |
| Second | Jessica Schultz |
| Third | Jamie Johnson |
| Skip | Cassandra Johnson |
| Club | Bemidji Curling Club, Bemidji, Minnesota, United States |
Cassandra "Cassie" Johnson (born October 30, 1981) is an American curler best known for skipping the United States Women's Curling Team at the 2006 Winter Olympics and the 2005 Women's World Curling Championships.
Cassie comes from a rich curling heritage. Her grandparents and great-grandparents were curlers, her parents, Tim and Liz Johnson, won the U.S. national mixed curling title in 1980, and Cassie's older sister Jamie Johnson joined her on the United States Olympic team in Turin. Since their first competition together, Cassie has always been the skip of the Johnson girls' rink, despite being 15 months younger than Jamie. Both attribute this to the fact that Cassie was the more precocious of the two growing up. "I was a little brat when I was younger," Cassie says. "I was just like, 'I’m going to be skip and you’re going to be third' and that’s just how it ended up." One of the first times she skipped a game, at about age 10, Cassie's team was beaten badly ("she got creamed," in her mom's words) and she vowed to never skip again, but it wasn't long before she was back on the sheet, more determined to win than ever. "I'm happy Cassie took over for me as skip," Jamie says. "She does a good job with the pressure shots, the strategy... I have total confidence in Cassie that she can do last rocks."
Cassie's first Winter Olympics experience was a difficult one, though, as she and her United States team lost five of their first six matches en route to a mediocre 2-7 record in the round-robin stage of the tournament. The U.S. "Curl Girls"' showing at Turin was made that much more disappointing by both the hype surrounding them going into the Games (she and her teammates were media darlings in the weeks leading up to the Olympics -- Sports Illustrated even picked Team Johnson to win the bronze medal), and by the success of the alternatively unheralded United States men's curling team (who actually won bronze). Still, Cassie was unwaveringly upbeat despite the poor performance, and expects better things when her U.S. team returns to the Olympics in 2010.
On a personal note, Cassie became engaged the week after the Olympics ended. She recently graduated from Bemidji State University with a degree in graphic design (her fiancé also attended Bemidji State and studied in the same field.). She enjoys fishing and listening to music when she's not curling, and is a big fan of the Minnesota Twins. When she was 12, Cassie was diagnosed with a heart murmur due to a congenital heart defect in her tricuspid valve, but the condition is not severe and does not interfere with her daily life.
Despite her sport's relative obscurity, Johnson unintentionally became a bit of a sex symbol during the Turin Games. Her biography page at NBC's Winter Olympics website was among the most-viewed of any U.S. athlete , and she received countless marriage proposals from men all over the world at the U.S. Women's Curling Team's official blog , which crashed early in the Games after receiving 12.9 million hits in one day. "We were getting e-mails from Germany and Belgium saying, 'I love you,'" laughed Johnson. "I said, 'What? You just saw me on TV.'"
Immediately after the 2006 Olympics, a re-arrangement occurred on the team's roster for the 2006 U.S. World Team Trials. Due to an extended travel schedule in Europe (and her recent engagement), Cassie would become the team's alternate, while Jessica Schultz skipped the team. At the trials, the team finished in fourth place, losing the 3-4 page game to Margie Smith. Team Johnson went back to their Olympic lineup for later events, however; Cassie returned to action as the team's skip on March 23, 2006, at the House Of Hearts Bonspiel in Duluth, Minnesota.
1981 births | Living people | American curlers | Curlers at the 2006 Winter Olympics | Olympic competitors for the United States
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Cassandra Johnson".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world