Windsor Star

NATIONAL PROGRAM BIG BOOST TO CURLERS

- TED WYMAN

Like all the other top skips in Canada, Casey Scheidegge­r is taking part in the Grand Slam of Curling stop this week in Truro, N.S., competing for a healthy $125,000 purse in the Canadian Beef Masters event.

Until the last couple of years, the closest she and her teammates came to such an elite event was watching on TV.

“In the past, our focus was just playing in Alberta events and we used to watch the Grand Slams on TV and say how cool it would be to be there,” Scheidegge­r said. “When it finally happened, it was really cool to be there. We’ve learned so much and we’re a far better team than we were before and a large part of that is due to the help we received.”

That help comes from her team’s involvemen­t in Curling Canada’s National Team Program. Scheidegge­r’s team, based in Lethbridge, Alta., is one of 15 across Canada (eight women’s and seven men’s) included in the program this season. Nine mixed doubles teams are involved. The teams receive funding based on a tier system from Sport Canada, Own the Podium and the Canadian Olympic Committee as well as access to things like highperfor­mance coaching, sports science specialist­s and health and nutrition consultati­on. For Scheidegge­r’s team, which includes third Cary-Anne McTaggart, second Jessie Haughian and lead Kristie Moore, the funding and the access to coaching are the reason they can compete on the Grand Slam circuit.

“For a team like us it’s super beneficial. The funding obviously helps and we’ve been able to come to places like Truro and Chatham, Ont., and Thunder Bay because of that assistance. We wouldn’t have been able to pay for our flights to the next city if that wasn’t the case. It has definitely taken some of the pressure off.” The National Team Program has been around for years with the goal of identifyin­g Canadian teams that have potential to represent the country and support them in their quest to do so. All the big names are part of the program, including defending Brier champ Brad Gushue and Olympian Kevin Koe, world champion Jennifer Jones and 2018 Olympian Rachel Homan.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Casey Scheidegge­r is part of Curling Canada’s National Team Program
SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Casey Scheidegge­r is part of Curling Canada’s National Team Program
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