National Post (National Edition)

Officer still feels curling’s pull

Jones’ ex-second not yet ready to ‘go cold turkey’

- Ted Wyman in Winnipeg Twyman@postmedia.com Twitter.com/ ted_wyman

For someone who has taken a step back from curling, Jill Officer sure has found herself around a lot of high-level events lately.

Officer, a world champion and Olympic gold medallist who played second for Winnipeg’s Jennifer Jones for more than two decades, announced at the end of last season she would not be a regular member of the team for the next Olympic quadrennia­l.

The grind of the game was simply too much for the mother of a seven-year-old girl and she simply couldn’t do it any more.

However, that didn’t mean she wanted a complete departure from the game, the team and the curling community.

“It’s certainly a huge step back from what I was doing, but I also knew I couldn’t kind of go cold turkey,” said Officer, a 43-year-old known as one of the best seconds to ever play the game.

“I just said that I couldn’t make the four-year commitment, but I would be willing to help out the team and be part of it and be fifth player.

Part of what I wanted to still do with curling was some travel as well as just staying connected to the game and the people on tour. It’s all I’ve known for almost 15 years. It would be hard to completely cut myself off from what has become my community.”

As such, Officer found herself travelling to China last month to fill in at lead for Dawn Mcewen. The Jones team earned a bronze

medal at the China Open.

Officer also will play with the team at the World Cup event in Sweden in late January and intends to play in four events in total over the course of the season. And she’ll play in a few mixed doubles events.

“One of my goals was to keep my connection to my team because, again, that’s all I’ve known for so long,” she said. “It would have been a lot weirder to not have any

sort of connection with them or with curling in general.”

It has certainly helped that Officer has signed on with CBC to provide colour commentary during four Grand Slam of Curling events this season.

Her first gig was late last month in Truro, N.S., at the Masters.

Officer studied communicat­ions in college and has a background in journalism and broadcasti­ng, having worked as a TV reporter early in her career.

“I thought that maybe it would be natural transition for me,” Officer said.

As luck would have it, she called a Masters quarter-final matchup between Jones and Sweden’s Anna Hasselborg.

“Oh yeah, it was the very first one,” Officer laughed.

“It was a little weird not warming up with everybody and being out on the ice, but it was great to catch up with some people and spend some time in that atmosphere again.”

While she is keeping her hand in the game and will serve as the fifth player for Team Jones (Team Canada) at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Sydney, N.S., in February, Officer has no intentions to return full time to the team or the rigours of Olympic qualifying.

“Knowing that this is a permanent thing, it’s certainly weird,” Officer said.

“Sometimes it nags at me a little bit to want to be out there, but then I remember all the other stuff that comes with it and that reminds me why it was that I stepped away in the first place.

“Whether I ever go back to any sort of competitiv­e play or not, it remains to be seen. But right now it’s an ideal situation for me to play a little bit of mixed doubles, fill in a little bit so I get a bit of the competitio­n and I’m still around the curling and connected, but I’m not feeling the same pressure or expectatio­n to do everything else that comes with it like training and endless practice and those types of things.”

MIXING IT UP

The 2019 Canadian Mixed Curling Championsh­ip (four-player) is on in Winnipeg this week, with 14 provincial teams vying for the right to represent the country at the World Mixed Championsh­ip (establishe­d in 2015) next year.

Just last month, Canada’s Michael Anderson and his Ontario team won the world mixed title in Kelowna, B.C.

The event in Winnipeg is flying under the radar a bit, coming so quickly on the heels of the world championsh­ip, but the traditiona­l mixed game certainly is benefiting from having an internatio­nal goal to pursue.

“With the way curling is moving, it certainly doesn’t have as much attention as men’s and women’s and now mixed doubles,” said Officer, a two-time Manitoba mixed champion who did some colour commentary for online coverage at the nationals this week.

“There’s no doubt about that, but we are seeing now that there is a world championsh­ip for four-person mixed, which Canada just won a couple weeks ago.

“What I’m seeing is, from an internatio­nal standpoint, it’s probably a developmen­tal event for some of the smaller nations. Spain was in the final against Canada at that world championsh­ip and we’ve never seen Spain on the world stage at such a high level before. Because there is a world championsh­ip now it makes the Canadian championsh­ip a little more interestin­g.”

 ?? JIM WELLS / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Jill Officer, left, with Dawn Mcewen, hasn’t been able to quit the sport outright — she’s filled in at times this past year for other members of Jennifer Jones’ rink.
JIM WELLS / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Jill Officer, left, with Dawn Mcewen, hasn’t been able to quit the sport outright — she’s filled in at times this past year for other members of Jennifer Jones’ rink.

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