Toronto Star

Homan sweeps past Jones

Will face Carey in final for ticket to Pyeongchan­g

- GREGORY STRONG THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA— Beating Jennifer Jones in the round-robin finale gave Rachel Homan the hammer for their rematch in the semifinal at the Tim Hortons Roar of the Rings.

The victory also appeared to give Homan and her Ottawa teammates peace of mind.

Coach Adam Kingsbury noticed it as soon as he arrived at their rental house on the outskirts of town Saturday morning. That feeling carried over into their 6-3 victory over Jones in the afternoon.

“There was a sense of purpose, calmness, and I felt it,” Kingsbury said.

Homan, third Emma Miskew, second Joanne Courtney and lead Lisa Weagle seemed to own the ice before an adoring crowd at Canadian Tire Centre.

The front end was relentless, Miskew was in form, Homan was clinical. They set an early tone and never really let Jones into the game. Even Team Homan’s misses seemed to work out. It was that kind of game for the national and world champions.

Jones hung in there but was not her usual self, shooting a rather pedestrian 76 per cent.

She simply looked defeated in the seventh end. Homan forced Jones to try to hit for a single, but the stone jammed and spun out to give Homan a steal of one.

Jones closed her eyes and lowered her head, knowing the game was most likely over.

“In order to be successful, you have to make the big ones when they matter,” she said.

With a two-point lead and hammer in the 10th, Homan was in control. Jones still made the final throw mean something by sitting three and forcing Homan to hit a takeout.

Homan delivered for the single point and the win to the delight of the 7,001 in attendance.

“We definitely amped it up for that one,” Miskew said. “We knew we had to.”

Homan will next play Calgary’s Chelsea Carey, who advanced to Sunday’s championsh­ip by finishing first in round-robin play at 8-0.

The men’s semifinal between Winnipeg’s Mike McEwen and Brad Gushue of St. John’s was set for Saturday night. The winner will play Calgary’s Kevin Koe in Sunday’s final.

Homan’s lone loss of the roundrobin came to Carey last weekend. The Ottawa team won its next seven games before dashing Jones’s chances of defending the Olympic title she won at the 2014 Sochi Games.

“We’re right exactly where we need to be,” Homan said.

After an opening blank, Jones delivered a nice freeze to force Homan to a single in the second end. Jones ticked a guard in the third end and Homan stole one for a 2-0 edge.

Jones got on the board in the fourth with a nose hit for a deuce. Homan answered in the fifth with a hit of her own for two and took a 4-2 lead into the mid-game break.

The Homan win means there will be new Olympic champions in both team events at the Pyeongchan­g Games. That reality seemed to sink in as the members of Team Jones fought back tears after leaving the ice.

“Right now, I’m kind of gutted,” Jones said.

The Sochi men’s title went to Brad Jacobs of Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. He did not make the playoffs this week.

As a team, Jones, third Kaitlyn Lawes, second Jill Officer and lead Dawn McEwen shot 84 per cent overall.

Homan, meanwhile, shot an impressive 93 per cent while the team finished at 87 per cent.

Members of Team Jones could still qualify for the Games in mixed doubles. The discipline will make its first appearance on the Olympic program at the Feb. 9 to 25 Games.

 ??  ?? Skip Jennifer Jones won’t get a chance to defend the Olympic title she won at the 2014 Sochi Games.
Skip Jennifer Jones won’t get a chance to defend the Olympic title she won at the 2014 Sochi Games.

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