The Prince George Citizen

Carruthers, Jacobs unbeatable at Brier

- Paige KREUTZWIES­ER Citizen news service

REGINA — Manitoba’s Reid Carruthers and Northern Ontario’s Brad Jacobs remained undefeated and tied for first place in Pool B with wins Monday afternoon at the 2018 Tim Hortons Brier.

Carruthers (4-0) and his Winnipeg rink held on for a 9-6 win over Quebec. Quebec skip Mike Fournier (1-3) was able to read the ice quickly and made some crucial draws in the first half of the game, and pulled to within a point of Carruthers after getting a steal of one in the eighth end.

Carruthers responded with two in the ninth end before Fournier conceded in the 10th.

“We had a pretty solid game. I had a chance in the eighth end to finish the game right there. There was a shot for four or five so, overall I felt we had pretty good control,” said Carruthers. “They started off with the hammer and we battled back, made it a goal for us to have the hammer tied up at halftime, you know for us, we were up one with the hammer. So, we accomplish­ed our goals we set out for ourselves.”

Jacobs kept pace with Carruthers with a 9-4 win over New Brunswick.

Oromocto’s James Grattan (1-2) struggled in the first half, allowing Jacobs to steal one in the second and fifth ends, followed by and easy three in the seventh.

Ontario’s John Epping (3-1) posted a 14-3 win over Nunavut to keep the pressure on the Pool B leaders.

The Toronto-based rink commanded the game right from the start with a deuce in the first end followed by three consecutiv­e steals to be up 9-2 heading into the sixth.

Nunavut fell to 0-4 and was the first team to be eliminated from the championsh­ip pool.

In a must-win scenario for both teams, host Saskatchew­an improved to 2-2 with a 7-6 extra-end win over P.E.I.

Charlottet­own’s Eddie MacKenzie took the lead in the third after a big double to score three. Saskatchew­an skip Matt Dunstone started to show his frustratio­n in the eighth after missing on the final rock, giving P.E.I a steal of one.

Saskatchew­an third Steve Laycock’s experience was on display at the Brandt Centre, helping to set up Dunstone for two in the ninth. MacKenzie had a chance to win it in the 10th but his final rock over-curled to push the game into an extra-end.

Dunstone was able to draw for one with the hammer in the extra end.

P.E.I. dropped to 1-3.

In the morning draw, defending champion Brad Gushue and wild-card skip Mike McEwen picked up wins to setting up a matchup of undefeated teams in the day’s evening schedule.

McEwen’s Winnipeg rink scored three in the 10th end in a 6-5 win over Nova Scotia as Jamie Murphy’s Halifax foursome suffered its first loss in Regina.

Murphy had taken a two-point lead into the final end after scoring a deuce in the seventh and stealing one in the eighth and ninth.

Gushue joined McEwen at 3-0 with an 8-4 win over Jamie Koe of the Northwest Territorie­s.

The 2017 Brier winner put the game away with three in the eighth end.

The early results set up a battle for top spot in Pool A in a rare matchup of two teams not representi­ng provinces or territorie­s. Gushue’s rink from St. John’s, N.L., is competing at this Brier as Team Canada, while McEwen entered the main competitio­n after winning the first ever Brier wildcard game on the weekend.

In other early results, Alberta edged British Columbia 9-8 and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador held on for a 7-6 win over Yukon.

McEwen and Gushue led Pool A after six draws, followed by Nova Scotia and Alberta at 2-1.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? B.C. skip Sean Geall directs his sweepers during a Monday night game against Yukon at the Tim Hortons Brier in Regina. Yukon won 8-2 and left B.C. with a 0-4 record.
CP PHOTO B.C. skip Sean Geall directs his sweepers during a Monday night game against Yukon at the Tim Hortons Brier in Regina. Yukon won 8-2 and left B.C. with a 0-4 record.

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