Sue Anne Bartlett

[5] Later that season, Bartlett won a provincial mixed title in 1971, playing third on a team skipped by Horst Illing.

Exhausted, the team managed to beat Saskatchewan 12–10 after Despins missed an open hit in the last end, and promoted a Newfoundland stone.

[10] Seven and half hours later, Bartlett was back on the ice for the semifinal against 1978 Canadian champion Chris Pidzarko rink representing Manitoba.

[4] At the newly named 1980 Canadian Ladies Curling Association Championship, the team finished with a disappointing 4–6 record, tied for seventh overall.

Bartlett downed Manitoba 6–5 in front of 2,890 fans, after Ingram missed an "almost impossible shot" in the last end, giving up a steal.

[4] The team represented Newfoundland at the 1985 Scott Tournament of Hearts, where they finished with another 7–3 record, in a three-way tie for second with Alberta and Nova Scotia.

[16] Bartlett easily defeated Seitz 8–2, putting them into the semifinal against Nova Scotia, skipped by Virginia Jackson.

Newfoundland easily beat Nova Scotia as well, sending Bartlett to the final against British Columbia's Linda Moore rink.

This put them into the semifinal against Team Canada (the defending champion Linda Moore rink), in a rematch of the 1985 final.

Bartlett missed a blank attempt in the eighth, forcing her to take one, giving Moore the hammer in the ninth in a 2–2 tie.

[19] Four years later, Bartlett won her 11th provincial title with Wendy Chaulk now at lead, and Porter throwing second stones, replacing Narduzzi.

[21] Bartlett won her final Newfoundland provincial women's championship in 1992 with a new team consisting of Marcie Brown, Helen Nichols and Kathy Combden.

In her first trip in 1994, she and her rink of Ruby Crocker, Gertrude Peck and Betty McLean made it to the final where she lost to Alberta, skipped by Cordella Schwengler.

Representing Nova Scotia for the first time, Bartlett led her team of Penny LaRocque, Karen Hennigar and Jane Brett to a 7–4 record at the 2004 Canadian Senior Curling Championships.

And, at the 2005 Canadian Senior Curling Championships with new lead Marjorie MacKay, the team again finished with a 7–4 record, but lost in a tiebreaker.