The Standard (St. Catharines)

B.C.’s Morris skips from third position

- GREGORY STRONG THE CANADIAN PRESS

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — Three-time champion John Morris is the only skip in the Tim Hortons Brier main draw who throws third but still calls the game.

It’s a setup that has worked well for Morris and B.C. fourth Jim Cotter since they reunited last spring.

“There’s people in this world that you work really well with and there’s people that you don’t,” Morris said. “That’s not a knock on anyone. It’s just sometimes you work really well with people. Jim and I are just two peas out of the same pod.

“Just two sort of old-school guys and really good friends on and off the ice. He’s a pleasure to play with so I’ve always enjoyed my time with him.”

The B.C. team started slowly at this year’s national men’s curling championsh­ip but has rebounded with five wins in its last six games. The latest victory was a 9-1 rout of Jamie Koe of the Northwest Territorie­s on Wednesday morning.

At 5-3 after 11 draws at Mile One Centre, Morris remains in the playoff mix. The top four teams at the end of round-robin play Friday morning will advance to the Page playoffs.

“We’re feeling strong,” Morris said. “We feel like we’re making a pile of shots out there.”

Manitoba’s Mike McEwen leads the standings at 5-1. Northern Ontario’s Brad Jacobs defeated New Brunswick’s Mike Kennedy 6-5 to move into second place at 6-2.

Quebec’s Jean-Michel Menard was alone in third place at 5-2 after defeating Alberta’s Brendan Bottcher 8-5.

Local favourite Brad Gushue of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador was tied with Canada’s Kevin Koe at 4-2. Morris was percentage points behind with Saskatchew­an’s Adam Casey — an 8-7 winner over Nova Scotia’s Jamie Murphy — at 5-3.

Morris was a skip until moving to third when he joined forces with Kevin Martin in 2006. They teamed with Ben Hebert and Marc Kennedy to win Brier titles in 2008 and 2009 before adding an Olympic crown in 2010.

Morris left the team in 2013 and teamed with Cotter the following season. They made it to the final of the Olympic Trials and reached the final of the 2014 Brier.

Morris took some time off before joining the team Koe had left after the 2013-14 season. They were the Canada entry at the 2015 Brier and won the title after Morris swapped positions with third Pat Simmons midway through the event.

When that team went its separate ways at the end of last season, Morris returned to the Cotter rink. It has been a good fit with the intense Morris and laid-back Cotter playing nicely off each other.

“I’ve always felt like I could get a good mental map of the ice and have a good strategy,” Morris said. “I feel like it utilizes my strengths the most and also with Jim, he’s just a really good pure rock thrower.”

A handful of elite teams have had a non-skip throw fourth stones. Randy Ferbey, who anchored the Ferbey Four teams with Dave Nedohin throwing last, is the most well-known example.

At this year’s Brier, skip Craig Kochan threw third rocks for Yukon behind Jon Solberg. Kochan lost the qualificat­ion final to Murphy and did not reach the main draw.

Morris feels it’s a positional setup that gives his team the best possible chance to win and Cotter agrees.

“John is so keen on all the details,” Cotter said. “He’s just unbelievab­le at reading ice. I trust him 100 per cent completely with that role. I really enjoy throwing the last rock. I think it takes a little bit of pressure off me.”

With a steady front end in second Tyrel Griffith and lead Rick Sawatsky, it did not take long for the team’s chemistry to return.

“I think we’ve got a pretty good balance and equilibriu­m on this team and we’re getting really close to finding a really good groove,” Morris said. “Right now it feels like we can beat anyone so it’s feeling pretty good.”

The playoffs begin Friday night. The Brier winner will represent Canada at the men’s world curling championsh­ip next month in Edmonton.

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