Toronto Star

A weekend of Scotties surprises

Manitoba starts 0-2, Newfoundla­nd laughs at ‘brain-dead moment’

- GREGORY STRONG

SYDNEY, N.S.— Some surprising results and a couple eyebrowrai­sing moments made for an interestin­g opening weekend at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts.

Second-ranked Kerri Einarson shot just 56 per cent in a wild-card game loss to open the competitio­n at Centre 200. Fifth-ranked Manitoba skip Tracy Fleury dropped her first two games and curling minnow Nunavut recorded its first main draw victory. Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s Kelli Sharpe really got people talking Sunday afternoon with a shot she’d like to have back. She stunningly didn’t realize she had an open hit for six points in the fourth end of her game against Yukon’s Nicole Baldwin.

Sharpe decided to draw for four instead and missed it to settle for three. She could smile about it after completing a 12-4 victory.

Sharpe, a resident of Torbay, N.L., scored four in the seventh end and tacked on three more points in the eighth to improve to 1-1. Teammates Stephanie Guzzwell, Beth Hamilton and Carrie Vautour didn’t notice the opportunit­y in the fourth end either.

“Everybody on the ice, all four of us, missed it,” Sharpe said. “Our coach didn’t. I said (after) to my coach, ‘Jump up and down, do something.’

“But yeah, we just took a little time to breathe (after). I mean you’re so into it out there. It was just a brain-dead moment, that’s all I can say. We’ll just pay a little bit more attention next time.”

Sharpe is making her seventh career appearance at the Scotties and first since 2007. She realized the missed opportunit­y once she returned to the rings area after her throw.

“This was a new experience for me,” she said. “I honestly usually see everything and that was just stupid. But you know what, laugh it off, move on and that’s all we can do.”

Earlier, Fleury fell into an 0-2 hole after dropping a 7-5 decision to British Columbia’s Sarah Wark. Needing a deuce to tie, Fleury’s first stone went through the house in the 10th end and the teams shook hands.

“We’re just a little bit off our game right now,” Fleury said. “But (we’re) optimistic we’re going to find our groove and bounce back.”

In other early games, Ontario’s Rachel Homan defeated Nunavut’s Jenine Bodner 12-4 and Alberta’s Chelsea Carey edged Nova Scotia’s Jill Brothers 6-5. Northern Ontario’s Krista McCarville needed only eight ends to complete an 8-2 rout of Quebec’s Gabrielle Lavoie.

In afternoon play, Canada’s Jennifer Jones scored three in the ninth end for a 7-4 win over Kerry Galusha of the Northwest Territorie­s. Team Wild Card’s Casey Scheidegge­r beat Prince Edward Island’s Suzanne Birt and Saskatchew­an’s Robyn Silvernagl­e topped New Brunswick’s Andrea Crawford 6-4. Draw 5 was scheduled for Sunday night.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Newfoundla­nd and Labrador skip Kelli Sharpe, left, and third Stephanie Guzzwell chat strategy. The rink overlooked a hit for six.
ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS Newfoundla­nd and Labrador skip Kelli Sharpe, left, and third Stephanie Guzzwell chat strategy. The rink overlooked a hit for six.

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