June 28th, 2008 / posted by admin No Comments
National Scottish coach Derek Brown, who was in overall charge of the squad at the Ford World Women’s Curling Championship in Vernon, British Columbia, in March, will face a Royal Club ‘Conduct Panel’ next Monday. This results from the complaint lodged against him by Gail Munro and Lyndsay Wilson, who were initially blamed by Brown for the fiasco which saw Scotland field just three players for the last two round robin matches in Canada.
Full Story - Curling Today
June 28th, 2008 / posted by admin No Comments
Scottish curling officials (and soon the WCF) will be on the lookout for those curlers who have been placing their fingers, hands and other body parts on the ice after releasing a stone. Those found continually breaking this rule face severe consequences: ejection from the game.
Full Story - Curling Today
Tags: Scotland, WCF
Posted in: World
May 21st, 2008 / posted by admin No Comments
Jeff Stoughton is used to wearing the black hat and playing the bad guy.
But this time around, the difference is that the Winnipeg skip’s been thrust into the role of the villain, instead of authoring himself the part as he normally does with his brutally honest talk.
With Ryan Fry’s sudden announcement yesterday that he’s defecting as third for Stoughton to curl next season with 2006 Olympic gold medallist Brad Gushue of Newfoundland, Stoughton must now take on the role of home-wrecker if he’s going to salvage something of next season for his own team.
Full story - Winnipeg Free Press
May 21st, 2008 / posted by admin No Comments
Brad Gushue and Mark Nichols will have a new front end next year and sources tell Transcontinental Media one of those curlers will be a familiar face.
Dave Noftall and Chris Schille, who threw lead and second stones for the Olympic gold medallists this season, won’t be returning next year and will be replaced by Jamie Korab, who was a member of that 2006 Torino team, and Ryan Fry, who curled third for Winnipeg’s Jeff Stoughton this year.
Full story - The Western Star
May 21st, 2008 / posted by admin No Comments
A two-time Brier champ is reeling, while Alberta has a new team to watch next season — all the result of Sunday’s news that Chris Schille is returning home to Red Deer.
Schille, who announced Sunday that he was leaving Brad Gushue’s Newfoundland team because of revised residency restrictions in that province, will play next season on a potential powerhouse team featuring two-time world junior champ Charley Thomas of Airdrie, Adam Enright of Edmonton and D.J. Kidby, another former world junior champ out of Saskatchewan, who’s moving to Alberta later this year.
Full story - Calgary Herald
May 21st, 2008 / posted by admin No Comments
It’s been quite the compelling year for Canadian curling this season. Edmonton’s Kevin Martin dominated this year as the Men’s World Champion. Martin also picked up the top spots at the Casino Rama Curling Skins Game, Flint Energy Curling Classic, Cactus Pheasant Classic, The Grand Slam of Curling: BDO Canadian Open, The Grand Slam of Curling: The National, and went 13-0 at the Tim Hortons Brier. Martin’s team also holds the number one spot on the WCT’s money list with $127,000.
Full story - CurlTV
May 21st, 2008 / posted by admin No Comments
Winnipeg curler Kerry Burtnyk revealed the worst kept secret in town at a news conference this afternoon — that he has recruited Edmonton’s Don Walchuk to curl with him next season.
“For us to have the opportunity to get him is a real coup for us,” Burtnyk told reporters.
Walchuk returned the compliment via a conference call. “I’ve known Kerry for a long time, I’ve played with Kerry before and I like Kerry,” said Walchuk.
“I think he’s one of the best players who ever played.”
Full story - Winnipeg Free Press
April 16th, 2008 / posted by Cary No Comments
Regina’s Ben Hebert is still flying high after sharing in the 2008 men’s world curling championship.
Hebert flew from Grand Forks, N.D., to Toronto on Monday, a day after Canada’s Kevin Martin, John Morris, and Marc Kennedy beat Scotland’s Dave Murdoch 6-3 in the gold-medal final at the world championship.
It’s been one ’sweet ride’
April 16th, 2008 / posted by Cary No Comments
Ever since curling became sanctioned as an official Olympic sport, we Canadians have been inundated with propaganda that Americans are flocking to this “cross between shuffleboard and cleaning your kitchen” in droves. Supposedly, this is why Grand Forks was chosen to host the 2008 Men’s World Curling Championships.
Yes, Grand Forks attracted the largest crowds ever to a curling championship held in the U.S., and the World Curling Federation may be pleased. But that is more due to proximity to the Canadian border as evidenced by the dominance of red and white flags over red, white and blue.
Grand Forks Herald | IN THE MAIL: Where were all the American curling fans?
April 16th, 2008 / posted by Cary No Comments
He doesn’t have the hardware to prove it, but Glenn Howard believes his curling team has played just as well this winter as it did during its world championship run last season.
“I actually feel this year we’ve probably played better for the entire year. The only blemish on the resume was the Brier
Howard wears bull’s-eye