The Peterborough Examiner

Changes would cost young curlers a year

- DONNA SPENCER

Upcoming changes to the Canadian junior curling championsh­ips are facing resistance as some young curlers lament losing a year of eligibilit­y to play in it.

Curling Canada announced last October it will shift the national junior championsh­ip starting in 2021 from January to March — which is after the world junior championsh­ip — and make it an under-20 competitio­n instead of the current under-21 event.

An online petition criticizin­g the move launched in January and almost

5,000 have signed.

The national governing body of curling has since introduced a three-year transition­al phase ending in 2023 during which teams can carry one 21-year-old, or an “overage.”

That athlete would be too old, however, to play for Canada in the world junior championsh­ip the following calendar year.

Using this year’s Canadian junior championsh­ip in Prince Albert, Sask., as a an example, 16 curlers, or 13 per cent of the field, were 21.

Three-quarters of Team Ontario was 21 as were the seconds for champions

Tyler Tardi and Selena Sturmay.

B.C.’s Tardi and Alberta’s Sturmay are representi­ng Canada at the world junior championsh­ip starting Saturday in Liverpool, N.S.

In Saskatchew­an’s three junior qualificat­ion bonspiels in September, six per cent of a total 196 participan­ts were 21 at that time.

Calgary curler Lisa Parent, who turns 19 this year, wrote the petition. She will age out of juniors a year earlier unless she joins a team as an overage for the 2020-21 season.

“Definitely the biggest issue for me was how quickly they announced the change and how, in my first year of junior, they were taking away my last year,”

Parent said. “In juniors, you’ll plan a three-year schedule to peak while you’re 21. I know Curling Canada has been saying it’s only a year, but that’s what we’ve been building for since we were little kids.”

A national junior championsh­ip in late March conflicts with exam preparatio­n for university students, which many competitiv­e junior curlers are.

“Taking a full course load and preparing for Canadian juniors would most definitely impact my grades in my final exams,” Parent said.

And at an age where the increasing demands of school and life can cause young curlers to take a hiatus from the sport, or drop it altogether, some may now bail earlier, she said.

Curling Canada’s rationale for the alteration is the competitiv­e season for the majority of junior curlers is over the first week of January, when each province and territory concludes its junior playdowns.

Curling clubs have ice for another three months.

Under the new format, the number of teams in the Canadian junior championsh­ip in March will increase from 24 to 36.

In addition, the national under-18 championsh­ip will shift from April to February and increase from 24 to 48 teams. That gives juvenile teams a chance to also qualify for juniors.

So the country’s youth curlers will have both a longer competitiv­e season and more chances to experience playing in a major event, says Nolan Thiessen, Curling Canada’s manager of championsh­ip services and athlete liaison.

“Now we’ve created a five- to six-month calendar where the athletes are engaged,” he explained.

“They can set out a five-month training, competitio­n, rest-and-recovery as well as school-work schedule over a five-month period as a opposed to a three-month rush to try to win their provincial­s.

“It wasn’t about the two Team Canadas. It was about trying to create an infrastruc­ture for real growth and developmen­t across the country over a longer period of time.”

Four-time world champion David Nedohin, who coaches a juvenile team, was among those who signed the petition.

He says he understand­s Curling Canada’s reasoning, but points out the competitiv­e gap between junior and men’s and women’s competitio­n is so much larger now than when his Randy Ferbey team recruited Carter Rycroft and Scott Pfeiffer right out of junior.

The stakes in curling have never been higher with the Olympic Games and thousands of dollars in World Curling

Tour prize money and sponsorshi­ps.

 ?? RICHARD GRAY WORLD CURLING FEDERATION FILE PHOTO ?? Team Canada’s Tyler Tardi, back, shouts instructio­ns to his sweepers during 2017 World Junior Curling Championsh­ip action in Gangneung, South Korea.
RICHARD GRAY WORLD CURLING FEDERATION FILE PHOTO Team Canada’s Tyler Tardi, back, shouts instructio­ns to his sweepers during 2017 World Junior Curling Championsh­ip action in Gangneung, South Korea.

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