Lethbridge Herald

Gushue goes undefeated to clinch first seed at worlds

- Gregory Strong THE CANADIAN PRESS — EDMONTON

Canada’s Brad Gushue is the first to admit his St. John’s side is not known as a high-scoring team. You wouldn’t know it by looking at the scoresheet at the Ford World Men’s Curling Championsh­ip.

The veteran skip locked up the first seed in the playoffs and capped an undefeated round-robin Thursday at the Northlands Coliseum. Gushue (11-0) dumped Italy’s Joel Retornaz 9-2 in the morning and topped Norway’s Steffen Walstad 8-4 in the evening.

“We basically try to control the scoreboard,” Gushue said. “We’re more than happy being tied up with the hammer coming home. So this week has been a little bit odd for us to have these lopsided games.

“But I think it just comes down to how well we’re playing and we’re getting some misses out of the other teams.”

Gushue’s last eight victories have been either routs or comfortabl­e wins. He hasn’t really been tested since an 8-6 win over Sweden’s Niklas Edin last Sunday.

The 2006 Olympic champion has scored a whopping 94 points on the week against just 35.

“I’m a little bit surprised by it, but we’re playing at a very high level,” Gushue said. “I’m a little bit surprised that some of the teams haven’t played a little bit better against us.

“I think maybe we’ve put the pressure on them and maybe they’re trying a little bit too hard and trying some different things. I’ve seen some different calls.”

Against Italy, Gushue scored a pair in the second end and put the game out of reach with five points in the fourth. The teams shook hands after the minimum six ends.

In the nightcap, Gushue wasn’t threatened after pulling away with four points in the third end.

Gushue, third Mark Nichols, second Brett Gallant and lead Geoff Walker will have hammer in today’s Page playoff 1-2 game against Sweden.

Edin (9-2) dropped a 7-3 decision to American John Shuster in the afternoon draw and closed out his round-robin with an 8-2 rout of Dutch skip Jaap Van Dorp.

Third-seeded Swiss skip Peter de Cruz (8-3) will play Shuster (8-3) in the Page 3-4 game on Saturday.

“Those (playoff teams) are capable of curling 95 per cent games,” Gushue told reporters after the morning draw. “So even if we have control of the ice, even if we continue to play the way we’re playing, someone could still play better.

“You guys know the nature of curling. One bad miss, an untimely miss, it can all switch around.”

China dumped Japan 9-2 to move into fifth place at 6-5. Japan and Norway finished at 5-6, ahead of Italy (4-7), Germany (3-8) and the Netherland­s (110).

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