The Standard (St. Catharines)

Canadian curler Gushue wants to win big in Las Vegas throwing rocks, not dice

Team believes cards are right for world championsh­ip

- DONNA SPENCER

LAS VEGAS — A world curling championsh­ip is about to be held at the most southern latitude ever, where temperatur­es will hit 30 degrees poolside.

The men’s championsh­ip starting Saturday at the 8,000-seat Orleans Arena in Las Vegas will test not only curlers’ shotmaking, but their resolve not to shift into a vacation mindset over the nine-day event.

No other host city has offered such a dizzying array of gambling and entertainm­ent options, in addition to summer heat.

After repeating as Canadian champions, Brad Gushue, Mark Nichols, Brett Gallant and Geoff Walker from St. John’s, N.L., will attempt the first back-to-back world titles since Canada’s

Randy Ferbey in 2002 and 2003.

Gushue went undefeated to win his first world championsh­ip last year in Edmonton. The Canadians open defence of their title Saturday against former world junior champion Bruce Mouat of Scotland.

Gushue acknowledg­ed after winning the Tim Hortons Brier in Regina earlier this month that Las Vegas will be a unique host city, and added he hoped his team will have a little fun and sun.

But winning curling games requires the same mindset whether you’re in the sunbelt or Sudbury, he said.

“Once the event starts and we get into a routine of two games a day, it’s going to feel like any other event other than it’s going to be 25 or 30 degrees when we walk to the rink instead of minus-5,” Gushue said on a conference call this week.

Gushue’s vice wasn’t in a party mood heading to Las Vegas. Nichols’ mother Helen died Saturday at the age of 63.

“Obviously a heavy heart for sure,” Nichols said. “But it’s life. We get thrown stuff at us. Obviously, my mom was not well. It was a tough week for sure.

“I’ve got a great support system around me. I know they’re going to help me through it. Obviously the focus is on winning a world championsh­ip.”

Helen Nichols played second for Sue Anne Bartlett in the 1992 Canadian women’s curling championsh­ip.

Gushue and Nichols won an Olympic gold medal in 2006, which gives the skip and third experience on dealing with distractio­ns surroundin­g an internatio­nal competitio­n.

The traditiona­l beer tent or hall that accompanie­s a Canadian championsh­ip, the “Brier Patch,” will be poolside at The Orleans.

Olympic silver medallist Niklas Edin of Sweden, Dejia Zou (China), Alexander Baumann (Germany), Joel Retornaz (Italy), Jaap van Dorp (the Netherland­s), Steffan Walstad (Norway), Marc Pfister (Switzerlan­d), Greg Persinger (U.S.), Aleksei Timofeev (Russia), Changmin Kim (South Korea) and Go Aoki (Japan), round out the field.

With Beijing the host city of the 2022 Winter Games, China is putting money into winter sport.

The title sponsor of the men’s world championsh­ip is 361 Degrees, which is a Chinese sporting goods and apparel company.

The WCF has changed the playoff format this year to include six teams instead of four.

The top two teams in the preliminar­y round earns byes to the semifinals, while three to six play in quarter-finals.

John Shuster of the U.S., beat Edin to win gold last month in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea.

But Shuster didn’t compete in U.S. nationals and thus won’t represent the host country in Las Vegas.

“What John Shuster’s team has done since then, opening the stock exchange, to going on Jimmy Fallon and all the stuff they’ve done to bring awareness to the game has been great,” Gushue said.

“Throwing the first pitch at the Minnesota (Twins) game, all those things are going to bring a little more awareness to the sport of curling, that’s going to provide more value to the whole sport in general than if they had played in the nationals and eventually Las Vegas.”

The Orleans Arena was the site of the Ryder-style Continenta­l Cup of Curling in 2014, ’16 and ’17 pitting North America versus an internatio­nal roster.

Gushue, Gallant and Walker haven’t curled in Las Vegas, although Nichols did in ’14 when he was Jeff Stoughton’s lead.

Canada was shut out of Olympic medals in team curling for the first time in Pyeongchan­g, where Kevin Koe and Rachel Homan finished off the podium.

Winnipeg’s Jennifer Jones won the world women’s championsh­ip Sunday going unbeaten in North Bay, Ont.

Gushue doesn’t feel his team is under pressure to continue the restoratio­n of Canada’s internatio­nal curling reputation.

“What Kevin and Rachel did at the Olympics, it’s just one of those weeks,” Gushue said.

“They’re great teams. We sent great representa­tives.

“Anybody that knows curling knows Kevin Koe is one of the best teams in the world and knows that Rachel Homan has one of the best women’s teams in the world.

“Yeah, I don’t feel we have anything to prove.”

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Team Canada skip Brad Gushue prepares to deliver a rock against Alberta in the Tim Hortons Brier championsh­ip game earlier this year.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Team Canada skip Brad Gushue prepares to deliver a rock against Alberta in the Tim Hortons Brier championsh­ip game earlier this year.

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