Ottawa Citizen

Laycock hopes to end long Sask. Brier drought

Young rink takes on Team Canada in 3-4 game Saturday in Calgary

- DONNA SPENCER

A curling-mad province that hasn’t won a Canadian men’s championsh­ip in 35 years has produced a sort of fatalism there, according to this year’s skip from Saskatchew­an.

Steve Laycock says he doesn’t feel the weight of expectatio­n heading into Saturday’s playoff game against a team with a former Saskatchew­an skip.

“It’s almost got to the point where it’s been so long since we’ve won a Brier, there are no expectatio­ns anymore,” Laycock said Friday. “When it’s been that long, people are probably betting against it more than for it.

“It would be remarkable if we could pull that off. Maybe we could start a string of wins for Saskatchew­an.”

The last Saskatchew­an team to win a Brier was Rick Folk in 1980.

Laycock doubled B.C.’s Jim Cotter 4-2 to claim the one playoff berth still empty in the final draw of the preliminar­y round Friday morning.

Northern Ontario’s Brad Jacobs (10-1) and Brad Gushue of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador (9-2) held the top two seeds and were to square off later Friday night for a berth in Sunday’s championsh­ip game. Laycock and Team Canada, skipped by Pat Simmons of Moose Jaw, both finished 7-4. Saskatchew­an gained the higher ranking by virtue of a round robin win over Canada.

The winner of Saturday’s playoff match will face the loser of the Jacobs-Gushue game in semifinal action later Saturday night.

Team Canada went 4-1 after John Morris demoted himself to third on the fourth day of the tournament. He handed skip duties to Simmons, who hadn’t played that position since 2010.

Simmons skipped Saskatchew­an in four consecutiv­e Briers from 2005 to 2008 before he began curling out of Alberta. Laycock played lead for Simmons in the 2007 and ’08 Canadian championsh­ips.

“Pat’s a great skip,” Laycock said. “I know that from first-hand experience from a lot of years ago.”

The 32-year-old compensati­on specialist at the University of Saskatchew­an skipped his province at two previous Briers, but made the final four for the first time here.

Laycock, third Kirk Muyres, second Colton Flasch and lead Dallas Muyres represent the Nutana Curling Club in Saskatoon. They came agonizingl­y close to playoffs last year in Kamloops, B.C.

Tied coming home with the hammer in their final game, they gave up a steal of three to New Brunswick in a 9-7 loss. The foursome finished just outside the playoffs at 6-5.

“All four of us missed numerous shots,” Muyres recalled. “The big thing is we recognized it and learned how to deal with that and made sure it didn’t happen again.

“We said to ourselves ‘If we get a chance to have this game again, we’re going to do better.’ We’ve done a ton of work in the last 12 months.”

 ??  LEAH HENNEL/CALGARY HERALD ?? Saskatchew­an skip Steve Laycock lets go with a rock in Friday’s 4-2 win over British Columbia at the Brier.
 LEAH HENNEL/CALGARY HERALD Saskatchew­an skip Steve Laycock lets go with a rock in Friday’s 4-2 win over British Columbia at the Brier.

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