It was tough summer for Carey
Skip will probably find herself on the outside looking in this season
Curling’s free-agent frenzy wasn’t kind to Chelsea Carey.
All three members of her rink moved on last March, leaving the two-time Scotties champion without a team entering the most critical season of the quadrennial.
Carey remains the biggest name available on the market, but her hopes of competing in the Olympic Trials appear slim. Teams have essentially locked in their lineups and barring an unexpected development, Carey will likely find herself on the outside looking in despite being one of the best skips in the country.
“It’s going to be really, really tough for her, to be honest,” said curling commentator Mike Harris, who won Olympic silver in 1998. “So I think the teams that are established have a chance (at qualifying) and then I think you might have to just kind of wait for the next cycle.
“It’s really tough for anyone that’s a free agent right now.”
Curlers are essentially independent contractors, and they’re not afraid to make major lineup changes if they feel it’ll improve their chances of representing Canada at the Winter Games.
The days following the national championships in late winter usually see the most player movement and this year was no exception.
One of the more high-profile moves saw vice Sarah Wilkes leave Carey to join Team Rachel
Homan. Carey’s front end of Dana Ferguson and Rachel Brown then moved to Team Kelsey Rocque.
The changes left Carey in an unenviable position where her options were limited to bringing three new players in — a stiff challenge this late in the quadrennial — or hope a vacancy pops up elsewhere.
Making things more challenging is the uncertain nature of the 2020-21 season.
Several events have been cancelled or postponed and the ranking point system is on hold for at least six more weeks. The qualifying process for remaining berths in the Olympic Trials, set to begin Nov. 27, 2021, is under review by Curling Canada.
“It’s hard to do much because we don’t know what the rules are,” Carey said from Calgary.
“We don’t know how qualification is going to work for the Trials anymore. If there’s going to be a pre-Trials event, if there isn’t, what the doubles qualification looks like, because we don’t know if we’re going to have the Scotties and (Grand) Slams and things to be able to do that. So it’s hard to plan much.”
Carey declined to discuss specifics on her potential plans for four-player competition.
Her first Scotties title came in 2016 with third Amy Nixon, second Jocelyn Peterman and lead Laine Peters. She won again in 2019 with the team that disbanded last March.
Carey is planning to play some mixed doubles events with Colin Hodgson over the coming weeks. The two-player discipline may be her best bet to get to the Beijing Games.