Toronto Star

Bottcher young but rock steady

Making Brier playoffs for second time at age 27 captures rivals’ attention

- DONNA SPENCER

Brendan Bottcher could have apprentice­d playing third or front end for more experience­d skips after he graduated from the junior curling ranks.

He had faith in his own abilities, however. Bottcher accepted he would be on the wrong end of some lopsided games as a young skip in men’s competitiv­e ranks.

He didn’t take his lumps for long. The 27-year-old has guided a team into the playoffs at the Canadian men’s curling championsh­ip for a second year in a row.

“It’s really nice to look around the other top skips in curling and know that I’m six, eight, 10 years younger than some of them,” Bottcher said. “That is good on the ego.

“It feels like we’re doing the right things. I’m just fortunate I can compete with a lot of these guys that have been doing this on an elite level for15, 20 years. I think it’s just amazing we’re even in the mix.”

Three-time national champion Kevin Koe observed in Brandon that Bottcher is ahead of his years throwing fourth stones.

“He’s not afraid of having the big shot and making it or taking the chance when it presents itself,” Koe said.

“He’s only going to get better. He’s still young. Hopefully he doesn’t get to be his best for a few more years.”

Alberta’s Koe (10-1) and Northern Ontario’s Brad Jacobs (9-2) locked down berths in Saturday’s Page playoff between the top two seeds at the Tim Hortons Brier.

The winner goes directly to Sunday evening’s final, while the loser drops to the afternoon semifinal. Defending champion Brad Gushue and Bottcher’s wildcard team from Edmonton (8-2) will square off in the playoff between the third and fourth seeds in a reprise of last year’s Brier final. The victor is a semifinali­st. Bottcher eliminated Ontario’s Scott McDonald from playoff contention with a 6-4 win Friday afternoon.

Jacobs edged Gushue 7-6 in an extra end and Koe downed Saskatchew­an’s Kirk Muyres 9-3 to get into the one-two game.

Bottcher skipped Alberta to last year’s final in Regina and lost 6-4 to Gushue.

Ousted by Koe in this year’s Alberta’s playdowns, Bottcher had to beat Toronto’s John Epping in a sudden-death game to gain entry into the Brier.

Bottcher and second Brad Thiessen, 29, have been teammates since their junior days.

Karrick Martin, the 29-yearold son of hall of famer Kevin Martin, has been Bottcher’s lead since they won a national university championsh­ip for Alberta in 2012.

Moulding, 36, came on board as vice midway through the 2016-17 season. They went 3-8 in their Brier debut in St. John’s N.L., where Gushue took the title in his hometown.

They’ve steadily gained biggame experience as a foursome via a fourth-place finish at the 2017 Olympic trials and reaching the Brier final.

Moulding believes Bottcher will push the envelope in Canadian men’s curling.

“I honestly believe fully he’s the best in the world and I believe he’s the best in the world right now,” Moulding declared.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Ontario skip Scott McDonald and his Kingston-based rink were ousted from the Tim Hortons Brier in Brandon, Man., on Friday.
JONATHAN HAYWARD THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario skip Scott McDonald and his Kingston-based rink were ousted from the Tim Hortons Brier in Brandon, Man., on Friday.

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