Backup plan
Mixed doubles an afterthought for Canada’s elite curlers
Canada may be a dominant country in curling, but not in a version of the sport making its Olympic debut.
When the International Olympic Committee said less than two years ago that mixed doubles would be in the 2018 Winter Games, Curling Canada went into hurry-up mode.
Canada helped develop mixed doubles by including it in the annual Continental Cup of Curling since 2002. But the game featuring teams of one man and one woman, who chase their own rocks down the ice to sweep them, was seen as a novelty behind the traditional four-person teams.
In nine years of world mixed doubles championships, Canada won a bronze medal in 2009. Hungary has twice won gold and also a silver. This year’s world championship is April 22 to 29 in Lethbridge, Alta.
So who might wear the Maple Leaf in the Olympic debut of mixed doubles in less than a year in Pyeongchang, South Korea?
Canada’s elite curlers are interested in mixed doubles, but it’s their Olympic backup plan.
If their team doesn’t make it to the Games through December’s Olympic team trials in Ottawa, there’s the doubles trials in January.
“Everyone is going to try to be with their regular four-person team and it’s just more of a Plan B if things don’t go right,” said Ryan Fry, the third on the reigning men’s Olympic champion
team skipped by Brad Jacobs. “But that’s going to be something way back in your mind. The person who’s going to be looking forward to it is the people who are out of the trials. That’s the furthest thing I want to think about.
“I can speak for everyone that’s in this league that no one is really looking at it until the qualification process for the regular curling is over with.”
Emma Miskew, third for Canadian women’s champion Rachel Homan, echoes Fry’s sentiment.
“If we aren’t successful at the trials, you kind of have a second chance for the Olympics,” she said. “It’s not on the forefront of my mind by any means.”
Mixed doubles games are
eight ends instead of 10 with each team delivering five stones.
The big wrinkle is a stone belonging to each team is positioned before the end – one a centre guard and the other on the back edge of the button – with both eligible to count towards scoring.
So strategy is different from the traditional team game.
Curling Canada appointed former Canadian and world champion Jeff Stoughton the manager of the mixed doubles program in the summer of 2015.
“We felt the mixed doubles was pushed into the Olympics,” Stoughton said. “I think the WCF (World Curling Federation) was surprised they got it this time around.”