Medicine Hat News

Edmonton’s Kevin Martin inducted into World Curling Hall of Fame

- DONNA SPENCER

LAS VEGAS Not content to be one of the best curlers in the world, Kevin Martin went rogue to make the sport more lucrative for athletes and more marketable.

The 51-year-old from Edmonton was inducted into the World Curling Hall of Fame on Tuesday at the 361 World Men’s Curling Championsh­ip in Las Vegas.

“I’m proud to be part of that group who have loved the sport and seen it grow and helped build it to where it is today,” Martin said following his induction ceremony at the Orleans Arena.

“There’s so many people in this Hall of Fame that have done a lot for game, yes on the ice, there are many curlers, but some great builders.”

Martin joined Elmer Freytag of the United States Curling Associatio­n, who was inducted posthumous­ly, and World Curling Federation board member Young C. Kim of South Korea in this year’s class of inductees.

An Olympic and world champion and four-time Canadian champion, Martin might have won more titles had he not been a ringleader of a player-led boycott of the Canadian championsh­ip from 2001 through 2003 to wring financial concession­s out of what was then the Canadian Curling Associatio­n.

He championed the World Curling Tour, where curlers are paid to wear their teams’ sponsors crests and win prize money. Martin wanted curlers to have similar financial compensati­on at the Brier.

The WCT’s Grand Slam is now eight events offering just over $2 million in prize money.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada