Penticton Herald

Gushue keeps winning at worlds

- By The Canadian Press

Canada improves to 9-0 with easy wins over Japan, the Netherland­s

EDMONTON — The numbers are in Brad Gushue’s favour at the Ford World Men’s Curling Championsh­ip.

He posted impressive wins over Jaap Van Dorp of the Netherland­s and Japan’s Yusuke Morozumi on Wednesday to extend his unbeaten streak to nine games. Gushue has outscored his opponents 77-29 overall and seven games have been called early.

Each early finish will help Gushue and his team stay fresh for the playoffs. The St. John’s skip, who has secured a berth in the Page playoff 1-2 game, is still bothered by a hip/groin injury so any saved throws are welcomed.

“It’s a huge positive,” Gushue said. “The less I can be on it the better, to be honest. At this point I don’t need more reps or more volume. I feel comfortabl­e with the ice and I feel comfortabl­e with how I’m throwing it.

“So if I can keep the fatigue down and be ready come the weekend, I think that’s a positive.”

Gushue’s 8-3 victory in the morning was followed by a 10-2 rout in the afternoon.

Niklas Edin improved to 7-1 with a 6-4 victory over Scotland’s David Murdoch and Switzerlan­d’s Peter de Cruz (7-1) joined the Swedish skip in second place after a 6-4 win over Joel Retornaz of Italy (4-4).

John Shuster (5-3) of the United States moved into sole possession of fourth place with an 8-5 victory over Germany’s Alexander Baumann. Morozumi (5-4) fell into fifth place with the loss. China’s Rui Liu (4-4) kept his playoff hopes alive by edging Norway’s Steffen Walstad 7-6 in an extra end.

The top four teams make the playoffs.

In the early game, Gushue opened with a threepoint first end. Van Dorp was held to a single in the fourth and Gushue tacked on a deuce in the fifth end.

The Dutch side scored two points in the seventh but Gushue replied with a pair to wrap things up in eight ends.

Against Japan, Gushue’s fivepoint fourth end put the game out of reach. He iced it with a deuce in the seventh.

At least six ends must be played per game at this competitio­n. Teams can decide to shake hands early if the game has turned into a rout.

By only going the regular 10-end length on two occasions in round-robin play, Gushue has saved 21 ends overall.

That’s important for a team still feeling the effects of a long, tough grind at the Tim Hortons Brier.

“When we came in we weren’t fully recovered,” Gushue said. “So to have a few lighter games, it has certainly been a benefit.”

The 1-2 game between the top two seeds is set for Friday night. The winner advances to Sunday’s gold-medal game.

The Page 3-4 game will be played Saturday afternoon. The winner advances to the evening semifinal and the loser will play for bronze Sunday against the semifinal loser.

 ??  ?? Gushue
Gushue

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada