Cape Breton Post

Curling minnow Brazil to face Canadian legend Glenn Howard in Americas Zone Challenge

- BY GREGORY STRONG

The Brazilian curling team is aiming high in its effort to help grow the sport in the South American country.

Skip Marcelo Mello will take on Canada’s Glenn Howard - a four-time world champion - in the Americas Zone Challenge competitio­n this week in London, Ont. The winner of the bestof-five series will earn a berth for their country at the 2018 world men’s curling championsh­ip.

“You always learn a lot when you play with someone that’s good,” said Brazilian alternate Sergio Mitsuo Vilela. “I think that we could not ask for a better opponent. We are quite excited.”

This will be the fifth time that Brazil has challenged for an Americas Zone spot and the first time Canada has provided the opposition. The United States won all four previous matchups by a combined score of 111-40.

Under WCF rules, the Americas Zone is guaranteed two spots in the Mar. 31-Apr. 8 world playdowns in Las Vegas and one

goes to the host country. Brazil was the only country to challenge top-ranked Canada for the second spot.

The host side installed a fourth sheet of ice at The Sports Centre at Western Fair District for the occasion. The Americas Zone Challenge will run in conjunctio­n with the Continenta­l Cup between Team North America and Team World.

Vilela hopes the event will create more awareness in Brazil, increase media exposure, and

maybe help spur interest in getting some curling arenas built in the country.

“It made a lot of sense to challenge Canada even though we know the chances are slim at best,” he said from London.

Curling is in its infancy in Brazil, a summer sports haven where soccer and volleyball are king. However, winter sports have gained some traction in recent years.

Figure skater Isadora Williams represente­d Brazil in figure skating at the 2014 Sochi Olympics, the Brazilian bobsled team continues to make inroads, and Brazil entered the 2016 Winter Youth Games.

Given the climate and a dearth of winter sport facilities, most Brazilian athletes train and play abroad.

Curling is no different. Mello and lead Filipe Nunes, both from Porto Alegre, live in Sherbooke, Que. Third Scott McMullan is a Sao Paulo resident from Winnipeg and second Marcio Cerquino is a Vancouver resident from Manaus.

They play four-man and mixed events, practise on their own, and only get together as a team on rare occasions. Brazil is 43rd out of the 47 countries with ranking points on the World Curling Federation list, currently sandwiched between Serbia and Luxembourg.

But there is hope on the horizon.

New WCF qualificat­ion procedures will be used ahead of the 2019 world championsh­ip, which could mean Brazil plays countries closer to its level instead of powerhouse­s like the U.S. and Canada.

In the meantime, the Brazilian side will soak up the experience of playing against the sport’s elite in front of big crowds on top-shelf arena ice.

“That’s all we could dream of,” Vilela said.

Vilela added that Brazilians really started to notice the sport at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics. Curling broadcasts would follow the popular novelas - Brazilian soap operas - on television.

“As soon as the novellas would end, people would then switch to this crazy new thing at the Winter Olympics,” he said. “They would be watching this crazy sport with brooms and people screaming and everything. So because of that curling is more well known since then.”

Now a Zurich resident, Vilela was living in Sao Paulo at the time.

He recalled waiting six hours in line to throw stones when a temporary sheet was installed in the city that year so locals could try the sport. Now his Brazilian team is getting feature story treatment in the Estadao newspaper.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-BRAZILIAN ICE SPORTS FEDERATION ?? Members of the Brazilian curling team are shown in a handout photo.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-BRAZILIAN ICE SPORTS FEDERATION Members of the Brazilian curling team are shown in a handout photo.

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