Business Day

Curling athletes straighten out ‘Valium’ jokes

- Agency Staff Pyeongchan­g

Tired of being the butt of jokes, Olympic curlers have hit back over accusation­s their sport is boring and requires little physical effort.

An ancient pursuit said to date back to medieval Scotland, where teams armed with brooms furiously rub the ice while screaming at an inanimate object, it triggers excitement once every four years.

But curlers at the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Olympic Winter Games are fed up with armchair fans likening the slowburner sport to Valium on ice or suggesting you don’t need to be especially athletic to participat­e.

“People tend to think that we just throw our stones, a bit like darts,” bristled Finland’s Tomi Rantamaeki, drawing a comparison to a game frequently associated with portly pub-goers.

“The difference in darts is that you don’t move the ones you threw earlier,” he sniffed. “They’re not reading the game in the same way that we do.”

A strangely hypnotic sport often referred to as “chess on ice”, curling requires lots of patience, cold calculatio­n and a beady eye.

But Rantamaeki and his fellow competitor­s insist that sliding and the explosive bursts of brushing in the sport also call for sinewy strength.

“We tend to look very relaxed because our brains are already programmed to move in those ways and get into those positions,” he explained, with no hint of irony.

“But for someone trying curling for the first time, it’s a totally new way of moving so their muscles will be at full power all the time, trying to keep them in that position.” Still not convinced? British curlers at previous Olympics have reportedly been ordered to abstain from sex during competitio­n in order to preserve energy, such are the sport’s apparent rigours.

Canada’s John Morris said even NHL superstar and double Olympic gold medallist Sidney Crosby was amazed at how tough curling was.

“A month before the [2010] Vancouver Olympics, the Canadian ice hockey team went curling as a team-building activity,” said former Olympic champion Morris. “A few weeks later Crosby admitted: ‘I thought I was pretty athletic and then I tried curling. The next few days, there were muscles that I didn’t even think I had which hurt’.

“It’s something that looks very graceful and easy on TV,” said Morris. “But give it a go and it’s definitely a challenge.”

Curlers also claim they are

BRITISH CURLERS AT PREVIOUS OLYMPICS HAVE REPORTEDLY BEEN ORDERED TO ABSTAIN FROM SEX DURING COMPETITIO­N IN ORDER TO PRESERVE ENERGY

crazy cats, every bit as wild as those wacky snowboarde­rs.

“Things are changing. I never thought I’d go on Jimmy Fallon,” said American curler Matt Hamilton, who lost a mini competitio­n on the talk show partnering the popular comedian.

“That was Jimmy Fallon’s fault, not mine,” he wisecracke­d. “I get pretty emotional out there.”

Meanwhile, Swiss curler Martin Rios is not happy.

“One of my teachers at school would always joke — ‘you go sweep the ice’, things like that,” said Rios huffily.

Momentaril­y dropping his guard, however, Rios conceded that in fact the esoteric sport perhaps was not the most demanding Olympic sport. “Some do look difficult too, I suppose,” he shrugged. “Snowboard halfpipe — I’m not gonna try that!”

 ?? /Reuters ?? Clean sweep: Canada’s Kaitlyn Lawes watches as John Morris works up a sweat as he sweeps during the opening round of the curling event at the Winter Olympics.
/Reuters Clean sweep: Canada’s Kaitlyn Lawes watches as John Morris works up a sweat as he sweeps during the opening round of the curling event at the Winter Olympics.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa