# James Dryburgh

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Swedish curler (born 1975)

James Dryburgh Medal record Men's Curling World Junior Curling Championships 1991 Glasgow 1996 Red Deer European Curling Championships 1999 Chamonix 1997 Füssen

**James Dryburgh** (born 27 May 1975 in [Inverness](/source/Inverness), [Scotland](/source/Scotland)) is a [Swedish](/source/Sweden) [curler](/source/Curling). He lives in [Stockholm](/source/Stockholm), where he is a physical education teacher.

Dryburgh is a two-time [World Junior Champion](/source/World_Junior_Curling_Championships). Playing for his native Scotland, he won gold in 1991 playing third for [Alan MacDougall](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Alan_MacDougall_(curler)&action=edit&redlink=1). In 1996, Dryburgh played skip for Scotland to earn his second gold medal.

After juniors, he played alternate for his brother, [Douglas Dryburgh](/source/Douglas_Dryburgh)'s team. This included a trip to the [1998 Winter Olympics](/source/Curling_at_the_1998_Winter_Olympics), playing for [Great Britain](/source/Great_Britain_at_the_1998_Winter_Olympics) which finished 7th.[1]

Dryburgh met his wife, [Margaretha Lindahl](/source/Margaretha_Lindahl) while at the Olympics. She was the alternate for the Swedish team. Dryburgh then moved to Sweden, learned Swedish and now has citizenship there. His brother, Douglas later moved to Ireland and now[*[when?](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style/Dates_and_numbers#Chronological_items)*] skips the Irish national team. His other brother, Stewart moved to Switzerland and curls there.[\[1\]](https://web.archive.org/web/20121109024048/http://www.canada.com/edmontonjournal/news/sports/worldcurling/story.html?id=3026ff27-fa6c-47a8-9c78-bfde56c1fbf4&k=32455)

While in Sweden, Dryburgh joined up with three-time World champion [Peja Lindholm](/source/Peja_Lindholm) as his third. Dryburgh went to his first [World Curling Championships](/source/World_Curling_Championships) with Lindholm in 2007.

In 2008, Lindholm retired from curling. Dryburgh now coaches the Danish national men's team.[*[citation needed](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed)*]

He also has a daughter, [Moa Dryburgh](/source/Moa_Dryburgh) who skips the Swedish junior curling team.[*[citation needed](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed)*]

## References

1. **[^](#cite_ref-1)** Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; [Mallon, Bill](/source/Bill_Mallon); et al. ["James Dryburgh"](https://web.archive.org/web/20161204000000/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/dr/james-dryburgh-1.html). *Olympics at Sports-Reference.com*. [Sports Reference LLC](/source/Sports_Reference). Archived from [the original](https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/dr/james-dryburgh-1.html) on 4 December 2016.

## External links

- [James Dryburgh](https://results.worldcurling.org/Person/Details/2244) at [World Curling](/source/World_Curling)

- [James Dryburgh](https://www.olympics.com/en/athletes/james-dryburgh) at [Olympics.com](/source/International_Olympic_Committee)

- [James Dryburgh](https://www.teamgb.com/athletes/Hd7KOJqDH7wDgYbNQVJK3) at [Team GB](/source/Team_GB)

- [James Dryburgh](https://www.olympedia.org/athletes/100318) at [Olympedia](/source/Olympedia)

- [James Dryburgh](https://intersportstats.com/athletes/3000401400) at InterSportStats

v t e European Men's Curling Champions Year: (country's flag) champion skip 1975: Knut Bjaanaes 1976: Peter Attinger Jr. 1977: Ragnar Kamp 1978: Jürg Tanner 1979: Jimmy Waddell 1980: Barton Henderson 1981: Jürg Tanner 1982: Mike Hay 1983: Amédéé Biner 1984: Peter Attinger Jr. 1985: Rodger Gustaf Schmidt 1986: Felix Luchsinger 1987: Thomas Norgren 1988: David Smith 1989: Hammy McMillan 1990: Mikael Hasselborg 1991: Roland Jentsch 1992: Andy Kapp 1993: Eigil Ramsfjell 1994: Hammy McMillan 1995: Hammy McMillan 1996: Hammy McMillan 1997: Andy Kapp 1998: Peja Lindholm 1999: Hammy McMillan 2000: Markku Uusipaavalniemi 2001: Peja Lindholm 2002: Sebastian Stock 2003: David Murdoch 2004: Sebastian Stock 2005: Pål Trulsen 2006: Andreas Schwaller 2007: David Murdoch 2008: David Murdoch 2009: Niklas Edin 2010: Thomas Ulsrud 2011: Thomas Ulsrud 2012: Niklas Edin 2013: Sven Michel 2014: Niklas Edin 2015: Niklas Edin 2016: Niklas Edin 2017: Niklas Edin 2018: Bruce Mouat 2019: Niklas Edin 2021: Bruce Mouat 2022: Bruce Mouat 2023: Bruce Mouat 2024: Marc Muskatewitz 2025: Niklas Edin 1999: Scotland (SCO) Hammy McMillan, Warwick Smith, Ewan MacDonald, Peter Loudon, James Dryburgh

v t e World Junior Men's Curling Champions Year: (country's flag) champion skip 1975: Jan Ullsten 1976: Paul Gowsell 1977: Bill Jenkins 1978: Paul Gowsell 1979: Donald Barcome Jr. 1980: Andrew McQuistin 1981: Peter Wilson 1982: Sören Grahn 1983: John Base 1984: Al Edwards 1985: Bob Ursel 1986: David Aitken 1987: Douglas Dryburgh 1988: Jim Sullivan 1989: Peja Lindholm 1990: Stefan Traub 1991: Alan MacDougall 1992: Stefan Heilman 1993: Craig Wilson 1994: Colin Davison 1995: Tom Brewster 1996: James Dryburgh 1997: Ralph Stöckli 1998: John Morris 1999: John Morris 2000: Brad Kuhn 2001: Brad Gushue 2002: David Hamblin 2003: Steve Laycock 2004: Niklas Edin 2005: Kyle George 2006: Charley Thomas 2007: Charley Thomas 2008: Chris Plys 2009: Rasmus Stjerne 2010: Peter de Cruz 2011: Oskar Eriksson 2012: Brendan Bottcher 2013: Kyle Smith 2014: Yannick Schwaller 2015: Braden Calvert 2016: Bruce Mouat 2017: Lee Ki-jeong 2018: Tyler Tardi 2019: Tyler Tardi 2020: Jacques Gauthier 2022: James Craik 2023: Fei Xueqing 2024: Lukas Høstmælingen 2025: Stefano Spiller 2026: Caden Hebert 1991: Scotland (SCO) Alan MacDougall, James Dryburgh, Fraser MacGregor, Colin Beckett 1996: Scotland (SCO) James Dryburgh, Ross Barnet, Ronald Brewster, David Murdoch, Euan Byers

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [James Dryburgh](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Dryburgh) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Dryburgh?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
