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・ Amy Millan
・ Amy Miller
・ Amy Mizzi
・ Amy Monkhouse
・ Amy Monticello
・ Amy Moore
・ Amy Morrison
・ Amy Morrison (disambiguation)
・ Amy Morton
・ Amy Murphy
・ Amy Myers
・ Amy Nauiokas
・ Amy Newman
・ Amy Nicole Tutt
・ Amy Nicoletto
Amy Nixon
・ Amy Nuttall
・ Amy O'Neill
・ Amy Odell
・ Amy of Garmoran
・ Amy Okuda
・ Amy Oliver
・ Amy Osmond Cook
・ Amy Palant
・ Amy Palmer
・ Amy Palmiero-Winters
・ Amy Parks
・ Amy Pascal
・ Amy Paulin
・ Amy Pearson


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Amy Nixon : ウィキペディア英語版
Amy Nixon

Amy Nixon (born September 29, 1977) is a Canadian curler from Calgary. At the age of four she moved with her family to Regina, Saskatchewan, where she grew up. She moved to Calgary in 1995, where she now resides. Nixon is an alumnus of the University of Calgary with three degrees in kinesiology, women's studies and law. She was admitted to the Alberta bar in November 2006.
==Curling career==
Nixon began curling competitively at fourteen. Her first notable success was being a Gold Medal winning skip at the Saskatchewan Winter Games in 1994. As a third for Shannon Kleibrink, Nixon shared in several successes, including winning the Canada Cup in 2005 and 2009 and representing Canada and won a bronze medal in Turin for the 2006 Winter Olympic Games. Nixon captured her first Scotties Tournament of Hearts title in 2012 as an alternate for the Heather Nedohin team after previous appearances in 2004, 2008, and 2011 with Kleibrink.
At the end of the 2011/2012 curling season, Nixon announced she would leave her longtime teammate and skip Shannon Kleibrink, effective at the end of the 2012 Pomeroy Inn & Suites Prairie Showdown, to form her own team. Nixon's father, Daryl, was the coach of the 2006 Olympic women's curling team.

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