Toronto Star

TOUGH AT THE TOP

Jennifer Jones is once again among the favourites as the Canadian women’s curling season begins,

- GREGORY STRONG

A fresh quadrennia­l means new faces, different lineups and several unanswered questions on the Canadian women’s curling scene.

Olympic representa­tive Rachel Homan has a new coach. World champion Jennifer Jones has a new teammate. Scotties finalist Kerri Einarson has three former skips on her new rink.

Chelsea Carey has a new lineup while Tracy Fleury is skipping Einarson’s old team. Laura Walker will skip Carey’s previous team and Kelsey Rocque is reuniting with some of her junior teammates.

Break out the lineup cards. It may take a little time to get used to who’s playing with who this season.

Roster moves are quite common in an Olympic year as teams tinker with lineups for the next four-year cycle. Factor in player retirement­s — Michelle Englot is a notable example — and the list of changes can be a long one. Jones and Homan appear to once again be the best bets for success in the 2018-19 campaign.

“It very much is a two-horse race between Jennifer and Rachel and then you’ve got the other players that you have to kind of see,” longtime broadcaste­r and six-time national champion Colleen Jones said. “Where do they land and how do they shape up, and what is the gap between the top two and the rest of the field. “Right now that gap looks pretty big.” Jones is second on the World Curling Tour’s order of merit behind Sweden’s Anna Hasselborg and leads the pack of 10 Canadian teams in the top 20.

After winning her sixth career Scotties Tournament of Hearts title last winter, she went on to beat Hasselborg for her second career world title. The Jones team has brought on Jocelyn Peterman at second after Jill Officer stepped away from competitiv­e curling.

Peterman won a Scotties title in 2016 with Carey and they reached the final of the Olympic Trials together last December.

Homan, meanwhile, missed the podium at the Pyeongchan­g Games. She closed last season with a Grand Slam win at the Champions Cup and kicked off the new campaign with a World Cup victory.

“Looking in the rear view, we get a lot of confidence from everything we’ve accomplish­ed and we’re so grateful for all the experience­s that we had,” said Homan second Joanne Courtney. “But I don’t think that anyone feels as if we’re done yet. I think we feel that there is still areas for improvemen­t in all aspects of our game.

“Looking at the next quadrennia­l, I think we’re excited to see how far we can push ourselves.”

Einarson is throwing fourth stones for perhaps the most intriguing rink this season. She’s off to a great start with former skips Val Sweeting (playing third), Shannon Birchard (second) and Briane Meilleur (lead). They stormed out of the gate this month by winning three straight bonspiels.

“I thought it was possible, we all have a lot of talent and know what it takes to win,” Einarson said.

The Elite 10 begins Wednesday at the St. Clair Campus Arena in Chatham-Kent, Ont., one of five Grand Slams on the schedule ahead of the 2019 Scotties in Sydney, N.S. Team Jennifer Jones will return to the Feb. 16-24 national championsh­ips as Team Canada.

The Scotties winner will represent Canada at the March 16-24 world women’s curling championsh­ip in Silkeborg, Denmark.

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 ?? AARON FAVILA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rachel Homan is back in pursuit of a Scotties Tournament of Hearts title after curling in the 2018 Olympics.
AARON FAVILA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rachel Homan is back in pursuit of a Scotties Tournament of Hearts title after curling in the 2018 Olympics.

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