Tracy Fleury

With Homan, she won the 2024 Scotties Tournament of Hearts and later the 2024 World Women's Curling Championship representing Team Canada.

She has competed at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Canada's national women's curling championship seven times (2012, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2022, 2023, 2024), winning the event in 2024 and reaching the playoffs in 2018 and 2022.

[15] Also during the 2009–10 season, Fleury won the Northern Ontario Mixed Championship with Jordan Chandler, Clint Cudmore and Lindsay Miners.

The team lost just two round robin games, and would eventually upset the previously undefeated Rachel Homan rink in the final.

There, they defeated higher seeds Liudmila Privivkova and Jennifer Jones in their first two games before losing three of their last four matches, ultimately being eliminated.

[25][26] Later that year at the 2013 Pomeroy Inn & Suites Prairie Showdown, the team went all the way to the finals before losing in an extra end to Mirjam Ott, the World Champion at the time.

[37] Team Fleury had a successful start to their 2014–15 season, finishing third at the Stroud Sleeman Cash Spiel[38] and qualifying for the playoffs of a Grand Slam event, the 2014 Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic for a second time in their career making it to the quarterfinal before losing to former provincial rival Rachel Homan of Ottawa.

[44] During the relegation round at the 2015 Scotties Tournament of Hearts, Fleury defeated Kerry Galusha from the Northwest Territories 10–5 and then beat Sarah Koltun from the Yukon 7–5.

[45] In the pre-qualification final, they once again defeated the team from Yellowknife, 7–6, securing the right to represent Northern Ontario in the main draw at the Scotties for the first time.

[46] In the main event, they found some success defeating higher seeds such as Ontario's Julie Hastings and Saskatchewan's Stefanie Lawton.

[55][56] Up 4–3 without hammer in the eighth and final end, the team forced Rachel Homan to execute a difficult draw to the four-foot through a port to win, which was made.

[85] The team had a nearly full schedule in Grand Slam events, beginning the season at the Elite 10, where they missed the playoffs after winning just one game.

[86] Outside of the Grand Slam tour, they were invited to represent Canada at the second leg of the Curling World Cup, which they finished with a 4–2 record, narrowly missing the final.

[89][90] A week after provincials, Fleury's played in at the 2019 TSN All-Star Curling Skins Game where they lost to Jennifer Jones in the final.

At the 2020 Manitoba Scotties Tournament of Hearts, the provincial championship, Team Fleury lost the semifinal to Jennifer Jones.

[111] Fleury did not compete at the Hearts, as she wanted to stay home with her baby daughter, who was diagnosed with infantile spasms, a rare form of epilepsy.

After finishing 4–0 through the round robin, they defeated Cory Christensen, Kim Eun-jung, and Kerri Einarson in the quarterfinals, semifinals and final respectively to win their second title of the season.

[119] After a quarterfinal finish at the 2021 Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Curling Classic, the team played in the first slam event of the season, the 2021 Masters.

[123] At the second Grand Slam of the season, the 2021 National, the team posted undefeated record until they reached the final where they were defeated by Sweden's Anna Hasselborg 9–6 in an extra end.

[142] In November, the team won their second Tour event of the season at the Red Deer Curling Classic, defeating Casey Scheidegger in the final.

[147] In February, Fleury teamed up with her brother Jacob Horgan to win the Northern Ontario Mixed Doubles provincial title.

[148] This qualified the pair to represent Northern Ontario at the 2023 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship, where they finished just outside the playoffs with a 4–3 record.

In April, Team Homan played in the 2023 Players' Championship, missing the playoffs, but rebounded to win the 2023 Champions Cup to cap off the season.

The team beat their rivals in the Kerri Einarson rink in the final, coming back from a 4–0 deficit to win the championship 6–5, giving Fleury her fourth career Grand Slam title.

[151] Homan returned to her team for the 2023 PointsBet Invitational, where they made it to the final, beating Kerri Einarson there 9–7 to claim the title, and $50,000 in the process.

[154] A week later, the team played in the Red Deer Curling Classic again, winning their second straight title after easily defeating the Selena Sturmay rink in the final, 8–1.

[156] A month later, the team won their second slam title in a row, and Fleury's sixth in her career when the rink downed Tirinzoni again in the final of the 2024 Canadian Open.

[160] Their only defeat came against South Korea (skipped by Gim Eun-ji) in the last draw, a meaningless game for the team, as they had clinched first place and a bye to the semifinals.

[2] She started curling when she was five years old when her father Gerry Horgan put her in the little rocks program with her sister Jennifer Wylie at the Idylwylde Golf & Country Club in Sudbury.

Since joining the Rachel Homan rink, Fleury has won six Slam titles: the 2022 Tour Challenge, 2023 Champions Cup, 2023 Masters, the Canadian Open in January 2024 and November 2024 and the 2024 National.