Truro News

Jones recruits Birchard to play third at national championsh­ip

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With third Kaitlyn Lawes bound for the Winter Olympics, Jennifer Jones has recruited Shannon Birchard to join her team at the upcoming Scotties Tournament of Hearts.

Lawes, who was Jones’s vice when they won an Olympic gold medal in women’s curling in 2014, qualified with teammate John Morris to play mixed doubles next month in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea.

So Birchard joins Jones, second Jill Officer and lead Dawn McEwen for the Canadian women’s curling championsh­ip Jan. 27Feb. 4 in Penticton, B.C.

The preliminar­y round of mixed doubles, which makes its Olympic debut in Pyeongchan­g, starts Feb. 8.

Jones won her eighth Manitoba women’s title Sunday with Lawes in her lineup and is attempting to capture a sixth national title. Jones lost in the Olympic trials semifinal to Rachel Homan in December.

Birchard, 23, skipped her team to a 3-4 record in the provincial championsh­ip.

Curling Canada is introducin­g another new format at both the women’s and men’s national championsh­ips. A 16- team tournament includes a representa­tive from all provinces and territorie­s.

Michelle Englot’s team inherited the Team Canada entry that goes to the defending champion because 2017 winner Homan will be representi­ng Canada at the Winter Olympics in women’s curling.

Englot lost to Homan in the final of last year’s Scotties in St. Catharines, Ont.

The 16th team at the national championsh­ip will be a wild-card entry determined by playoff game between the top two rinks in the Canadian Team Ranking System who didn’t qualify via their provincial and territoria­l championsh­ips.

So Calgary’s Chelsea Carey and Winnipeg’s Kerri Einarson will square off Jan. 26 in Penticton for the right to join the main draw.

This format replaces the unpopular four- team qualificat­ion tournament that sent three rinks home before the main draw began the last three years.

The national championsh­ip now consists of two pools of eight, with the top four from each advancing to a championsh­ip round determinin­g the four playoff teams.

Pool A will consist of Jones, the wild-card team, Northern Ontario’s Tracy Fleury, Nova Scotia’s Mary-anne Arsenault, Saskatchew­an’s Sherry Anderson, New Brunswick’s Sylvie Robichaud, Kerry Galusha of Northwest Territorie­s and Yukon’s Chelsea Duncan.

Alberta’s Casey Scheidegge­r, Ontario’s Holly Duncan, British Columbia’s Kesa Van Osch, Stacey Curtis of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, Prince Edward Island’s Robyn Macphee, Quebec’s Emilia Gagne and Nunavut’s Amie Shackleton will make up Pool B.

The tournament winner represents Canada at the world championsh­ip March 17-25 in North Bay, Ont.

The Tim Hortons Brier that will determine this year’s Canadian men’s champion is March 3-11 in Regina.

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