Penticton Herald

Englot downs Homan again, Manitoba moves into final

Ontario favourite loses 2nd straight, drops to semi

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ST. CATHARINES, Ont. — As experience­d a skip as Michelle Englot is, she’ll join her teammates in uncharted curling territory.

Manitoba punched their ticket to the final of the Canadian women’s curling championsh­ip with a 9-8 playoff win over Ontario’s Rachel Homan on Friday.

Englot, third Kate Cameron, second Leslie Wilson and lead Raunora Westcott will all play in the first Scotties Tournament of Hearts final of their careers Sunday.

At 53, Englot would be the oldest skip to win it. She’s skipped Saskatchew­an seven times at the Hearts in almost three decades of competitiv­e curling, but never in a final. The trophy is tantalizin­gly close.

“It would be incredible,” Englot said. “I have put a lot of time into it.”

The winner of the final represents Canada at the women’s world championsh­ip next month in Beijing. Englot’s team can also secure a berth in December’s Olympic trials with a victory Sunday.

Homan, a two-time Canadian champion, must win tonight’s semifinal to gain a rematch and a chance to win a third crown.

“We got to play on the playoff sheet, learned a little bit and just keep that moving forward,” Homan said.

“They played awesome. Kudos to them making it to the final. Hopefully we’ll see them there again.”

Manitoba and Ontario had 10-1 records in the preliminar­y round.

Defending champion Chelsea Carey (9-2) and Northern Ontario’s Krista McCarville (8-3) meet in a playoff between the third and fourth seeds today.

The winner meets Homan in the semifinal while the loser plays for bronze Sunday.

The team that wins the Page playoff between the top two seeds has won the Canadian championsh­ip nine of the last 15 years.

Homan took the direct route to the final when she won titles in 2013 and 2014, but she will have to take a different path to win it a third time.

In her first Hearts playoff game in 28 years, Englot stole a point in the fourth and scored three in the sixth en route to a second win in as many nights over the tournament favourites.

Manitoba had beaten Ontario 9-5 in the round-robin finale for both teams Thursday. That victory was key as it gave Englot hammer to start Friday’s playoff between the top two seeds.

Manitoba made the most of it by scoring two in the first end.

“Getting a deuce right off the get go against this team is pretty important,” Englot said.

“Rachel made a few big shots against us in that game, but if we keep putting the pressure on, she’s eventually going to miss and we got a couple of misses.”

Englot led 9-7 coming home with hammer. The 25-year-old Cameron, who made her Hearts debut this year, made key hits over the final two ends to keep Ontario from setting up multi-point ends.

Englot had a simple open hit against two Ontario counters for the win.

“Being a rookie in this, I think excitement and nerves is what could hurt me so I’m just trying to stay in this game and tomorrow is the next day and Sunday comes after that,” Cameron said.

“My expectatio­ns coming in here was to play my best and see how things work out. My team is playing awesome.”

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Ontario skip Rachel Homan calls the delivery as Manitoba skip Michelle Englot looks on during the Page Playoff at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts in St. Catharines, Ont., on Friday. Manitoba won 9-8.
The Canadian Press Ontario skip Rachel Homan calls the delivery as Manitoba skip Michelle Englot looks on during the Page Playoff at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts in St. Catharines, Ont., on Friday. Manitoba won 9-8.
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