Team GB's Curling Teams for Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games

One Olympic champion, four Olympic silver medallists and four Olympic debutants.

It's official, Team GB's curling team for Milano Cortina 2026 has been announced.

Team Mouat and Team Morrison have been announced as the first athletes to be selected for the upcoming Winter Olympics in February, with Bruce Mouat and Jennifer Dodds returning for the mixed doubles competition.

With the secret out, meet the athletes set to take to the ice at the Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium next year.

Bruce Mouat: The Skip

DOB: 17.08.1994

Hometown: Edinburgh

Olympic record: Beijing 2022 (Silver)

Bruce Mouat was just eight-years-old when he became obsessed with Granite, the first and only curling video game.

Less than 20 years later, he skipped his rink to a silver medal at Beijing 2022 after becoming the first person to represent Team GB in both the men's and mixed doubles curling.

Mouat saw immediate success on the ice as a child, winning a maiden world bronze in 2018.

He went on to underline his status as one of the world’s best curlers a year out from his Olympic debut after winning men’s world silver and mixed doubles world gold alongside childhood best friend Jen Dodds.

In 2023 and 2025, Mouat led his team to historic golds at the World Championships in Canada, whilst also claiming four successive European titles throughout his career.

It saw him become the first openly gay curler to be crowned a world champion.

Hammy McMillan Jr: The Lead

DOB: 29/05/1992

Hometown: Stranraer

Olympic record: Beijing 2022 (Silver)

At Beijing 2022, Hammy McMillan Jr managed a feat his three-time Olympian father never did by winning silver.

Growing up the Scot only needed to look to his father, Hammy McMillan Sr, who represented Team GB at three Games, to inspire his journey to Winter Olympic greatness.

Whilst it's true McMillan Jr has the sport in his blood, he has also carved out a path of his own at every stage of his career, winning the world junior title in 2013.

The curler has made six World Curling Championship appearances as part of Team Mouat, winning bronze in 2018, silver in 2021 and brilliant golds in 2023 and 2025.

His involvement in curling goes well beyond just competing on the ice, his role as a curling development officer seeing him firmly at the forefront of the efforts to grow the sport.

Bobby Lammie: The Second

DOB: 10.02.1997

Hometown: Dumfries

Olympic record: Beijing 2022 (Silver)

Six years on from winning a world junior title with close friend and skip Bruce Mouat, Bobby Lammie clinched silver at Beijing 2022 to mark one of his finest achievements.

The Dumfries star attracted silverware early in his career, winning his first senior world medals with a bronze in April 2018 and silver in 2021.

In 2023, he helped Team Mouat to a brilliant gold medal at the World Curling Championships before reclaiming their title in 2025.

The youngest member of Team Mouat, Lammie also has a degree in Sport and Exercise Science from the University of Stirling.

Grant Hardie: The Third / Vice-Skip

DOB: 17.03.1992

Hometown: Dumfries

Olympic record: Beijing 2022 (Silver)

With a masters degree in Civil and Environmental Engineering from Strathclyde University, Grant Hardie takes a scientific approach to curling success.

Vice-skip Hardie won silver at Beijing 2022 and has a keen interest in Team Mouat's use of data in formulating strategy, which has played a big role in their success.

Curling isn’t the only sport Hardie obsesses over, being a regular skier and enjoying a round of golf or a tennis match.

However, with parents who curl and an uncle who was crowned world champion in 1999 - with cousin Hammy McMillan Jr joining him in Team Mouat - the game of stones was always likely to be his main passion.

Kyle Waddell: The Alternate

DOB: 15.12.1993

Hometown: Bellshill

Olympic record: PyeongChang 2018

Kyle Waddell will return to the Olympic stage for the first time in eight years at Milano Cortina 2026.

Waddell made his Olympic Winter Games debut at PyeongChang 2018 off the back of a successful end to 2017 with the Olympic rink taking silver at the European Championships.

Waddell, whose grandfather Jimmy Waddell was European curling champion in 1979, also enjoyed success at youth level, winning World Junior Championship gold and World Universiade silver in 2013 as well as the Scottish Junior titles in 2012 and 2013.

Waddell missed out on a spot at Beijing 2022 but has teamed up with the successful Team Mouat since then and will return for a second Games in Italy.

Rebecca Morrison: The Skip / Lead

DOB: 22.08.1996

Hometown: Glasgow

Olympic record: Olympic debut

Rebecca Morrison will be part of a new-look Team GB women’s curling side at Milano Cortina 2026 on her Olympic debut.

A keen snowboarder and traveller, Morrison – who was born in Bristol and lives in Glasgow – took up curling aged eight when a new rink was built in Aberdeen.

The 28-year-old is now a two-time European Curling Championship bronze medallist and has also claimed two Scottish Women’s Championships in 2022 and 2023.

On top of that, Morrison has four World Championship appearances to her name and helped the team bearing her name to a sixth-placed finish at the 2025 edition.

Morrison also has a MSc in Human Resource Management from the same city’s Robert Gordon University.

Sophie Jackson: The Lead / Skip

DOB: 22.07.1996

Hometown: Dumfries

Olympic record: Olympic debut

Sophie Jackson will make her Olympic bow at Milano Cortina with a wealth of experience under her belt.

Having taken up the sport as an 11-year-old whilst at primary school in Dumfries, Jackson hasn’t looked back since.

The 28-year-old from Dumfries has known a lot of success in the town of her birth, winning two of her three Scottish Women’s Championship crowns there in 2022 and 2023.

She has also won two bronze medals at the European Curling Championships in 2022 and 2024, and skippered Team Morrison at the 2025 World Championships, guiding Scotland to a sixth-place finish.

Her sporting role models are Sir Chris Hoy and Serena Williams, both of whom she describes as 'absolute heroes of their sports'.

Sophie Sinclair: The Second

DOB: 05.04.1997

Hometown: Edinburgh

Olympic record: Olympic debut

Former equestrian Sophie Sinclair will make her Olympic debut at Milano Cortina 2026.

Sinclair first stepped on the ice at the age of seven, introduced to the sport by her dad, who still plays along with her brother at Mid Calder Curling Club.

She has competed at four European Championships and six World Championships and was named in the World Women’s All-Star team in 2025.

Competing in Team Morrison, Sinclair finished with the best final round robin percentage of all the seconds at the 2025 World Championships to earn the individual recognition.

Away from the ice, the Edinburgh native also used to compete in the equestrian sports of eventing and show jumping.

Jennifer Dodds: The Third

DOB: 01.10.1991

Hometown: Edinburgh

Olympic record: Beijing 2022 (Gold)

Jen Dodds will return to the Olympic stage with gold already around her neck.

The Scot competed in two events during her first Olympic Winter Games at Beijing 2022 and picked up a gold medal as part of Eve Muirhead's victorious rink.

Since making the switch from office assistant to full-time curler, Dodds has won a gold in the 2021 and a silver in the 2019 European Championships with Team Muirhead, as well as a World Mixed Doubles gold alongside Mouat.

She was the longest-serving member of Eve Muirhead's gold medal winning rink, having teamed up with her in 2018 before both vice-skip Vicky Wright and lead Hailey Duff.

Dodds joined Rebecca Morrison's rink post-Beijing 2022 and will return to the Olympics alongside the newly formed side.

Fay Henderson: The Alternate

DOB: 28.12.2001

Hometown: Dumfries

Olympic record: Olympic debut

Fay Henderson and her lucky socks with make their Olympic debut in 2026.

The curler has a superstition of wearing the same pair of socks throughout a competition, a ritual years in the making as she has been curling since the age of 10 when she was first introduced to the sport through her primary school.

Henderson’s education has continued alongside her sporting career as she went on to study Geography at the University of Glasgow.

The Scot skipped her team to World Junior Curling Championships gold in 2023 and has won back-to-back Scottish Curling Championship titles with Dumfries, alongside fellow Team GB curler and Olympic gold medallist Hailey Duff.

Curling begins on 4 February 2026 with the mixed doubles, before the men's and women's team take to the ice a week later.