Montreal Gazette

Alberta’s Bottcher better prepared for Brier this time around

- TERRY JONES Regina tjones@postmedia.com

It’s like one of those Carnac The Magnificen­t sketches on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson.

The envelope goes to the temple of Carnac. “Stu Beagle of Blackie,” Carnac divines from under his bejewelled head garb.

Carnac The Magnificen­t then rips open the envelope and reads the question: “Name the only skip to represent Alberta at the Brier and finish with a worse record than Brendan Bottcher last year.”

In 1949, Beagle of Blackie had one win and eight losses. Bottcher’s 2017 effort (3-8) takes over the No. 2 spot on the list, slotting in just ahead of Calgary’s Harold Breckenrid­ge in 1990 and Greg Ferster of Leduc in 1993, who were both 4-7.

Now Bottcher, third Darren Moulder, second Brad Thiessen and lead Karrick Martin are back with more free spaces on the new Brier bingo card.

After that 3-8 Brier debut, should Bottcher be considered one of the free spaces?

He’s Team Alberta. That should make him a favourite. But last year’s 3-8 would suggest he’s a free space, along with Nunavut and all those other pretenders, as the Tim Hortons Brier begins here Saturday with a politicall­y correct 16-team, two-pool field.

The 16 teams play seven games each. Eight teams move on from each pool, while the remaining eight play a draw to determine who finished ninth through 16th, then go home.

Nobody paid much notice last year after Bottcher became the first skip not named Randy Ferbey, Kevin Martin or Kevin Koe to represent Alberta at the Brier, because Koe was there as defending Brier and world champion wearing Team Canada colours and made it to the final.

Bottcher was in the same role Greg Smith will play this year for Newfoundla­nd as defending champ Brad Gushue wears the Team Canada uniform. Olympian Koe will not be here.

In the past 30 years, Alberta teams have won the Brier 14 times, with Ontario and Manitoba tied for second with five each. Alberta finished second in another four of those Briers, third twice and fourth three times, including once by Martin after finishing in a three-way tie for first at 9-2 only to lose the bronze medal game.

That’s 23 of 30 years in the top four. Expectatio­ns are always high.

“It’s not like we’re playing Brad Gushue first in his hometown like we did last year,” Karrick Martin said.

True. In order, Alberta’s games are against Nova Scotia, the Northwest Territorie­s, British Columbia, Newfoundla­nd and the Yukon before facing Gushue’s rink and the wild card team — either Mike McEwen or Jason Gunnlaugso­n, which will be decided in a play-in-game Friday.

“Last year there were 12 teams at the Brier and we were ranked ninth. This year there are 16 teams and we’re ranked fifth,” Moulder said, referring to the CTRS (Canadian Team Ranking System) points.

“We’re better. Now we’ve been tested at the Brier, the pre-trials, the trials and the provincial­s again,” Bottcher said.

Added Moulder: “We were more competitiv­e than our Brier record indicates. People forget we beat Koe. We lost a last rock game to Mike McEwen, we lost a last rock game to Gushue and we lost a last rock game to Brad Jacobs.

“When we played the top teams we looked like we belonged there. We lost to the teams that were ranked near us or below us. We lost games you have to win if you want to make the playoffs at the Brier.”

Bottcher was 4-4 in the Roar of the Rings Olympic trials and went 5-0 to win the Alberta title in Spruce Grove.

“The Brier was different than anything we’d ever dealt with,” Bottcher said. “From the Up Close And Personal appearance at the Brier Patch, to the autograph sessions, to the sponsors, to the fans and all the distractio­ns with families and friends.

“This year, we’re focusing on just the curling. Last year, we were focusing on a lot of other things. Last year, we had about 10 days less time between the provincial­s and the Brier. Having the Olympics in the middle gave us a little more time this time.”

This year, they’re embracing it and welcoming the chance to return and fly solo for Alberta.

“There were a lot of things that seemed like almost burdens last year,” Martin said. “Those things were much easier to organize this year because we knew what was involved from having been there and had other people do it for us.”

Moulder added: “This year we know what was coming. Last year every time something came up on us it was a surprise.”

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Brendan Bottcher
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