Waterloo Region Record

Down goes Koe

Canada won’t repeat in men’s curling after loss to Americans in semifinal

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

PYEONGCHAN­G — Perennial gold-medal favourites in Olympic team curling, the best Canada can now hope for at the Pyeongchan­g Winter Games is a solitary bronze.

John Shuster of the United States beat Calgary’s Kevin Koe 5-3 in the men’s semifinal Thursday, busting open a chess match between the North American rinks with a steal of two in the eighth end.

Canada came to South Korea having won three straight Olympic gold medals in men’s curling, and had never failed to reach the final since the sport was reintroduc­ed 20 year ago.

“It’s hugely disappoint­ing,” Koe said. “What more can you say? You don’t have to say much else.”

Canada’s latest setback at Gangneung Curling Centre came on the heels of Rachel Homan’s inability to even reach the playoff round — the first time the country has failed to medal in the women’s draw.

John Morris and Kaitlyn Lawes did win gold for Canada in mixed doubles, which made its Olympic debut last week.

The American men will now take on Niklas Edin in Saturday’s final after Sweden downed Switzerlan­d’s Peter de Cruz 9-3 in eight ends in the other semi.

Shuster (91 per cent), third Tyler George (83 per cent), second Matt Hamilton (89 per cent) and lead John Landsteine­r (86 per cent) outcurled Koe (85 per cent), Marc Kennedy (80 per cent), second Brent Laing (78 per cent) and lead Ben Hebert (84 per cent) at every position Thursday.

Still, the Canadians felt in control tied 2-2 in the eighth end until the U.S. stole two. Koe hit the guard with his first rock before a followup draw fell way short, allowing the Americans to take a 4-2 lead.

“If my first rock doesn’t rub and we get by, we’re probably getting two,” said Koe, who lost 8-6 to Switzerlan­d in the round robin. “We weren’t really in trouble that end at all. That’s kind of what’s frustratin­g.”

Holding the hammer in the ninth, Canada was looking to score two with a tap-back, but had to settle for one after Koe’s last rock rolled out to trail 4-3.

The Americans held the hammer in the 10th, and secured their gold-medal berth when Shuster hit and stuck for the win.

“You play a game that comes down to millimetre­s,” Kennedy said. “It’s a really (expletive) hard game at this level, right? You’re playing guys that are playing really well. You’re not going to win every game. That’s just the way it is.

“Sorry about the F-bomb.” Competing at his fourth Olympics, Shuster was 1-9 against Koe before this season in all competitio­ns, but has since ripped off three straight wins.

Canada had combined for 10 medals (five gold, three silver and two bronze) in team curling heading into Pyeongchan­g, but Kennedy said anyone paying attention to the sport internatio­nally knows other countries have closed the gap.

“It’s overplayed that Canada’s a favourite,” he said. “We come from a rich history of curling where we won everything, and that’s not the way it is anymore.

“This is the new normal for Canada, and people need to get used to that. Canada will be fine. We’ve still got the best curlers in the world. When it comes down to one game here and there, it happens.”

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Canadian skip Kevin Koe looks dejected as members of the U.S. rink celebrate their victory in the semifinal on Thursday.
NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadian skip Kevin Koe looks dejected as members of the U.S. rink celebrate their victory in the semifinal on Thursday.

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