Lethbridge Herald

Scheidegge­r in Scotties wild-card game today

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Lethbridge’s Casey Scheidegge­r and Kerri Einarson of Gimli, Man. kick off the the Scotties Tournament of Hearts with the wild-card game today at 4:30 p.m., local time.

The winner will earn the final berth in the event Preliminar­y round-robin play begins Saturday. Jennifer Jones is back at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts on an exemption as Team Canada. Rachel Homan had a guaranteed spot, too, before locking up the Ontario berth.

Both teams had players at the 2018 Winter Games in Pyeongchan­g, which weakened the field at last year’s national women’s curling championsh­ip.

There are no Olympic conflicts this time around and the Scotties field is more robust as a result.

Homan and Jones headline an entry list that includes the top seven teams in the Canadian rankings.

“You have your favourites,” said Manitoba skip Tracy Fleury. “Homan is always tough, Jones is always tough, of course. But then there’s a lot of other teams too that if they get hot in that week, they can definitely win it, too. “So I really think anything can happen.” Homan is the clear No. 1 this season after three Grand Slam victories and a World Cup win. Einarson is next, followed by Jones, Alberta’s Chelsea Carey, Fleury, Scheidegge­r and seventhran­ked Robyn Silvernagl­e of Saskatchew­an.

“It’s the strongest (field) I can remember in a long time,” said Carey. “I think the addition of a wild-card team immediatel­y makes it stronger than it used to be.

“There really weren’t any major upsets in any provincial championsh­ips and typically there is at least one. It’s going to be a great field.”

Other teams include British Columbia’s Sarah Wark, Northern Ontario’s Krista McCarville, Nova Scotia’s Jill Brothers, Quebec’s Gabrielle Lavoie, Nunavut’s Jenine Bodner, Suzanne Birt of P.E.I., Kerry Galusha of the Northwest Territorie­s, New Brunswick’s Andrea Crawford, Yukon’s Nicole Baldwin and Kelli Sharpe of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador.

Curling Canada created an exemption last spring to allow Jones to come back as defending champion despite having only two returning members, one short of the minimum.

The Winnipeg skip won last year’s Scotties with lead Dawn McEwen, second Jill Officer and substitute Shannon Birchard, who filled in for Kaitlyn Lawes at third. Lawes did not play because she was representi­ng Canada in mixed doubles in Pyeongchan­g.

Officer, who stepped away from competitiv­e curling after last season, was replaced at second by Jocelyn Peterman.

The national federation created a different exemption for Homan’s team, which represente­d Canada last year in Pyeongchan­g and couldn’t return to the Scotties to defend its 2017 title.

Homan would have been given an automatic berth in the wild-card game had she not won the Ontario title. Even if she would have been eliminated in provincial playdowns, her strong ranking would have secured a play-in spot.

Einarson beat Carey last year to become the first Team Wild Card in Scotties history.

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