Three weeks ago Lockerbie curler, Anna Sloan, was part of the Team GB win the gold medal at the European Youth Olympic Winter Festival in Poland.

Today she helped the Scottish team win the World Junior Championships in Vancouver with an 8-6 win over Kaitlyn Lawes’ Canadian team in today’s final.
 
For the Scots, led by Eve Muirhead, it was their third consecutive World Junior Championship. They won a tight, well-played affair at the venue that will host curling and wheelchair curling at next year's Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games.
 
Anna Sloan, playing third, is a new member of the team. Sisters Vicki and Kay Adams, at second stone and alternate position, won their second global title.
 
“All I can say is it’s amazing, I just can’t believe it,” said 18 year old Sloan, who is supported by the West of Scotland Institute of Sport.  “We have all worked so hard throughout the year and it has been hard with us playing in our separate teams but it paid off in the end.”
 
Lead Sarah McIntyre shares in Muirhead's glory of three straight titles, which is unprecedented in world junior women's championship history.
 
"I'm very happy, that was an excellent game," said the 18-year-old Muirhead. "We're very pleased to win titles in a row.
 
"We've gone up and up since the start of the competition. We played well in the first half but we stepped up even more in the second half."
 
Scotland started with a deuce in the first end, and Canada responded with two in the third and a steal in the fourth.  Scotland then added two deuces to a single for Canada through the seventh end, and when Canada scored another pair in the third, Scotland had regained control of the game, tied at six with the hammer and two ends to go.
 
"We just really tried to take or twos and force the ones," said Muirhead. "We sat back and waited and took the opportunities. There's no point in going gung ho right at the start."
 
In the ninth end, Sloan flashed a peel attempt and Canada buried behind cover. Muirhead made the runback double on her first stone, and faced a simple blank attempt on her last rock but missed, scoring the unintentional point to move ahead 7-6.
 
In the 10th end Canada played hard for the deuce and the house soon filled with Scottish granite. Canada continued to pour on the offense and with the hosts lying one on the back eight-foot rings, Muirhead threw a fantastic come-around draw to the edge of the button on her first stone.
 
After lengthy discussion, the two-time Canadian junior champion tried a come-around tap for two and the win, but was wide by a fraction. The Scots erupted into the air while Lawes slumped to the ice.
 
Muirhead leaves Monday morning for Gangneung, Korea and the 2009 Mount Titlis World Women's Curling Championship, which begins on Saturday.  She will skip Scotland.