Toronto Star

Four skips, one strong team

Einarson’s rink is proving doubters wrong by showing leaders can embrace other roles

- DONNA SPENCER

Kerri Einarson heard the comments and questions. Four skips on one curling team, how is that going to work?

Einarson, Val Sweeting, Shannon Birchard and Briane Meilleur, who all skipped their own teams in 2017-18, have won four World Curling Tour events to open this season.

The team’s most recent victory was beating reigning world champion Jennifer Jones in Monday’s final of the Curlers Corner Autumn Gold Classic in Calgary.

“Everyone was kind of like ‘Well, let’s see how four skips can sweep’ or ‘Who is going to call the game? Who is going to call the shots?’ ” Einarson told The Canadian Press prior to the final.

“I think we have kind of put that to rest now. We’ve proven four skips can come together and can play different positions.”

Now Einarson’s vice, Sweeting twice skipped Alberta to the final of the Canadian women’s championsh­ip. She lost to Rachel Homan in 2014 and Jones in 2015.

The 31-year-old from Vegreville, Alta., is the out-of-province member of the Einarson rink with the rest from the Winnipeg area.

Birchard, 24, is playing second after skipping teams the last several years.

She subbed in at third on Jones’ team that won February’s national championsh­ip, while Kaitlyn Lawes prepared to play mixed doubles at the Winter Olympics.

Meilleur, 26, is playing lead for the first time in her life.

Several women’s and men’s teams disbanded and re-formed after last season for a run at the next Olympic trials in 2021.

Not only did the four women on Team Einarson have to adapt to each other’s personalit­ies, three of them had to adjust to unfamiliar positions.

“I didn’t think it was risky at all,” Einarson said. “We’re all still really young and have many years of curling left in us. We were all on board with it and determined to make this work.

“We all have pretty much the same personalit­ies. We’re all pretty laid-back and not overbearin­g which is good.”

Meilleur always knew lead stones were important when she skipped, but the impact of misses really hits home now that she’s throwing the first stones for her team.

“If I’m struggling a little bit, it makes it harder on everyone else all through the end,” she explained. “I have to watch it unfold and think ‘I did this.’ ”

After years of shoulderin­g the pressure and responsibi­lity of skipping, Sweeting admits it’s a little bit of a relief to hand that off to the 31-year-old Einarson.

What’s changed for her throwing third stones is making sure if Plan A doesn’t materializ­e with her shots, she’s left Einarson a Plan B.

“I’m really enjoying the more supportive role that I can play on the team,” Sweeting said.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Kerri Einarson leads a team made up of four players who skipped their own teams in the 2017-18 season.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS Kerri Einarson leads a team made up of four players who skipped their own teams in the 2017-18 season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada