Rasmus Bele Åke Wranå (born 15 November 1994) is a Swedish curler from Karlstad.[2] He currently plays second for the Sweden 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.
Teams
editMen's
editSeason | Skip | Third | Second | Lead | Alternate | Coach | Events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011–12 | Rasmus Wranå | Jordan Wåhlin | Daniel Lövstrand | Axel Sjöberg | Patric Mabergs (WJCC) | WJCC 2012 | |
2012–13 | Rasmus Wranå | Jordan Wåhlin | Daniel Lövstrand | Axel Sjöberg | |||
2013–14 | Rasmus Wranå | Jordan Wåhlin | Axel Sjöberg | Daniel Lövstrand | Mats Wranå | ||
2014–15 | Rasmus Wranå | Jordan Wåhlin | Axel Sjöberg | Daniel Lövstrand | Max Brooks | ||
2015–16 | Rasmus Wranå | Fredrik Nyman | Jordan Wåhlin | Joakim Flyg | Max Bäck | SMCC 2016 SJCC 2016 | |
Rasmus Wranå | Fredrik Nyman | Jordan Wåhlin | Max Bäck | Axel Sjöberg | Mats Wranå | WJCC 2016 (6th) | |
2016–17 | Niklas Edin | Oskar Eriksson | Rasmus Wranå | Christoffer Sundgren | Henrik Leek | ECC 2016 CCC 2017 WCC 2017 | |
2017–18 | Niklas Edin | Oskar Eriksson | Rasmus Wranå | Christoffer Sundgren | Henrik Leek (ECC, WOG, WCC) | Fredrik Lindberg | ECC 2017 WOG 2018 SMCC 2018 WCC 2018 |
2018–19 | Niklas Edin | Oskar Eriksson | Rasmus Wranå | Christoffer Sundgren | Daniel Magnusson (ECC, WCC) | Fredrik Lindberg | CWC/1 (5th) ECC 2018 CWC/2 SMCC 2019 CWC/3 WCC 2019 CWC/Final (4th) |
Fredrik Nyman | Rasmus Wranå | Axel Sjöberg | Max Bäck | Olle Brudsten | WUG 2019 (5th) | ||
2019–20 | Niklas Edin | Oskar Eriksson | Rasmus Wranå | Christoffer Sundgren | Daniel Magnusson | ECC 2019 SMCC 2020 | |
2020–21 | Niklas Edin | Oskar Eriksson | Rasmus Wranå | Christoffer Sundgren | Daniel Magnusson | WCC 2021 | |
2021–22 | Niklas Edin | Oskar Eriksson | Rasmus Wranå | Christoffer Sundgren | Daniel Magnusson | ECC 2021 WOG 2022 WCC 2022 | |
2022–23 | Niklas Edin | Oskar Eriksson | Rasmus Wranå | Christoffer Sundgren | Daniel Magnusson | ECC 2022 (4th) SMCC 2023 WCC 2023 (5th) | |
2023–24 | Niklas Edin | Oskar Eriksson | Rasmus Wranå | Christoffer Sundgren | Daniel Magnusson | ECC 2023 WCC 2024 | |
2024–25 | Niklas Edin | Oskar Eriksson | Rasmus Wranå | Christoffer Sundgren | Daniel Magnusson | ECC 2024 |
Mixed
editSeason | Skip | Third | Second | Lead | Coach | Events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011–12 | Rasmus Wranå | Amalia Rudström | Jordan Wåhlin | Johanna Heldin | WYOG 2012 (4th) | |
2013–14 | Rasmus Wranå | Amalia Rudström | Joakim Flyg | Johanna Heldin | SMxCC 2014 | |
2014–15 | Rasmus Wranå | Zandra Flyg | Joakim Flyg | Johanna Heldin | Mats Wranå (WMxCC) | SMxCC 2015 WMxCC 2015 |
2015–16 | Rasmus Wranå | Jennie Wåhlin | Joakim Flyg | Johanna Heldin | SMxCC 2016 |
Mixed doubles
editSeason | Female | Male | Events |
---|---|---|---|
2011–12 | Kerli Zirk | Rasmus Wranå | WYOG 2012 (9th) |
2012–13 | Johanna Heldin | Rasmus Wranå | SMDCC 2013 |
2015–16 | Isabella Wranå | Rasmus Wranå | SMDCC 2016 |
2016–17 | Karin Rudström | Rasmus Wranå | SMDCC 2017 (5th) |
2019–20 | Agnes Knochenhauer | Rasmus Wranå | SMDCC 2020 |
2021–22 | Isabella Wranå | Rasmus Wranå | WMDCC 2022 (5th) |
2023–24 | Isabella Wranå | Rasmus Wranå | WMDCC 2024 |
2024–25 | Isabella Wranå | Rasmus Wranå |
Grand Slam record
editKey | |
---|---|
C | Champion |
F | Lost in Final |
SF | Lost in Semifinal |
QF | Lost in Quarterfinals |
R16 | Lost in the round of 16 |
Q | Did not advance to playoffs |
T2 | Played in Tier 2 event |
DNP | Did not participate in event |
N/A | Not a Grand Slam event that season |
Event | 2016–17 | 2017–18 | 2018–19 | 2019–20 | 2020–21 | 2021–22 | 2022–23 | 2023–24 | 2024–25 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tour Challenge | C | SF | Q | QF | N/A | N/A | C | QF | Q |
Canadian Open | F | F | SF | Q | N/A | N/A | F | Q | QF |
The National | SF | DNP | QF | F | N/A | QF | F | F | |
Masters | C | F | SF | Q | N/A | QF | QF | Q | |
Players' | C | F | QF | N/A | QF | F | QF | QF | |
Champions Cup | SF | Q | SF | N/A | QF | SF | SF | N/A | N/A |
Elite 10 | Q | Q | Q | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Personal life
editHis father is Mats Wranå,[3] Swedish curler and coach. His sister is Isabella Wranå, Swedish curler.
References
edit- ^ "Team Wrana/Wrana". Facebook. Svensk Curling. 1 September 2020. Retrieved 2 September 2020.
- ^ 2020 Continental Cup Media Guide: Team Edin
- ^ "Mats Wranå". results.worldcurling.org. World Curling.
External links
edit- Rasmus Wranå at World Curling
- Rasmus Wranå at Olympics.com
- Rasmus Wranå at Olympedia
- Rasmus Wranå at the Swedish Olympic Committee (in Swedish)
- Rasmus Wranaa at the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics (archived)
- Rasmus Wranå on Instagram
- Line-Up | Team Edin official site