Cape Breton Post

Brier experience proves invaluable for Team Nunavut

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

Expectatio­ns were kept in check for Team Nunavut at the Tim Hortons Brier.

The scoreboard was not a major focus for the Iqaluit Curling Club foursome led by 61-year-old skip Jim Nix. The main goal during the qualificat­ion round was to learn from the experience of competing at a national men’s curling championsh­ip.

“We can go back and take these lessons and build on it, come back next year and be more competitiv­e,’’ said Nunavut coach Donalda Mattie.

The territory’s second appearance at a Brier ended Friday at Mile One Centre the same way it did last year in Ottawa — with a third straight loss.

The defeats are growing pains for a program still in its infancy.

“It’s a challenge for sure for us to get competitio­n, so every game we get is huge,’’ Mattie said. “For the round-robin that we play here, they’ll never get that experience in Iqaluit.’’

Nix opened with an 11-4 loss to Prince Edward Island’s Eddie MacKenzie on Thursday night. On Friday, Nix dropped a 17-4 decision to Nova Scotia’s Jamie Murphy before falling 10-1 to Yukon’s Craig Kochan in the round-robin finale.

There are only a few curling clubs in Nunavut. Players rarely travel to bonspiels so most try to improve by playing the usual opponents at the club level.

“I don’t want to say it’s the impossible dream,’’ Nix said. “But right now it almost is.’’

Nunavut is trying to build the sport by getting more youngsters involved with curling programs. There have been signs of progress.

The territory has earned victories at the Canadian junior championsh­ip level. Nunavut also won a game in its debut at last year’s Scotties Tournament of Hearts.

Mattie, who has run clinics and high-performanc­e camps in the territory, has seen a jump in interest among young players.

“We just need more people in the clubs that exist,’’ she said. “I was up there two weeks ago to do a learn-to-curl (session) and we saw 406 kids go through the program that week. So the people are there.

“I think just given a little more time and a little more help, these clubs will come out and produce some pretty good teams in the future.’’

This is the final year for the qualificat­ion round at the Brier. A 16-team field — two pools of eight teams — will play at next year’s competitio­n.

Instead of playing for two days and departing before the big show, Nunavut and every other team will play in the main draw against top rinks.

Nix fully supports the inclusion of the territory.

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