Bobby Lammie

Robert "Bobby" Lammie[2] (born 10 February 1997 in Dumfries)[1] is a Scottish curler, originally from Stranraer,[3] who now resides in Glasgow.

[11][12] The team won their first tour event at the 2015 Dumfries Challenger Series, defeating previous Scottish champion Tom Brewster in the final.

[13] They also reached the semifinals of the Challenge Chateau Cartier de Gatineau following wins over established men's teams such as John Epping, Sven Michel and Rasmus Stjerne.

[14] As they had won the 2016 World Juniors, the team was invited to compete in their first Grand Slam of Curling event, the 2016 Humpty's Champions Cup.

[15] With wins over Niklas Edin and John Shuster, the team earned a tiebreaker berth where they lost to Steve Laycock.

[16] In their final season of juniors, the team qualified for the 2016 Tour Challenge Tier 2 event where they again lost in a tiebreaker to Mark Bice.

[21] In the new year, the team ran the table to win the 2018 Scottish Men's Curling Championship, defeating the Greg Drummond rink in the final.

[22] They then faced the Kyle Smith Olympic team in a best-of-three playoff to determine who would represent Scotland at the 2018 World Men's Curling Championship.

[24] At the world championship in Las Vegas, Nevada, the team lost just one game in the round robin to Sweden's Niklas Edin.

[25] The team ended the season at the 2018 Players' Championship and 2018 Humpty's Champions Cup Slam events where they reached the quarterfinals and semifinals respectively.

[28] After finishing the round robin with a 7–2 record, the rink beat Italy's Joël Retornaz and Sweden's Niklas Edin in the semifinal and final to claim the gold medal.

[32] To wrap the season up, Team Mouat lost in a tiebreaker at the 2019 Players' Championship and made it to the semifinals at the 2019 Champions Cup.

[37] The team was set to represent Scotland at the 2020 World Men's Curling Championship on home soil in Glasgow before the event got cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

[40] For much of the 2020–21 season, there was no tour due to the pandemic, but Team Mouat won a series of domestic challenges put on by the British Curling Association.

[46] They had another stellar season in 2021–22, starting the year by winning the 2021 Stu Sells Oakville Tankard and then following it up with the 2021 Masters, their fourth Slam title.

In the playoffs, they beat the defending champion John Shuster rink from the United States before losing the gold medal to Sweden, skipped by Niklas Edin.

[55] After a quarterfinal appearance at the 2023 Canadian Open, Team Mouat went undefeated to claim their fourth Scottish men's championship, defeating the James Craik junior rink in the final.

After defeating Retornaz in an extra end, the team shot a 96 percent game in the final to down Canada's Gushue 9–3 and claim the gold medal.

After having limited success at the previous three Slams, Team Mouat claimed their sixth title with an undefeated run at the 2024 Canadian Open, defeating the Brendan Bottcher rink in the final.

After defeating the United States in the first round, they lost both the semifinal and bronze medal game to Canada and Italy, failing to defend their title and finishing fourth.

After beating Naomi Brown and Euan Kyle, they lost to Jayne Stirling and Fraser Kingan in the championship game.

[71] This qualified the pair for the 2022 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship where they continued to thrive, winning all nine of their round robin games.

After defeating Germany in the semifinals, they won 9–7 over Switzerland's Alina Pätz and Sven Michel in the final, securing the world title.

[75] Lammie won back-to-back Scottish Mixed Championships in 2015 and 2016 with teammates Cameron Bryce, Katie Murray and Sophie Jackson.