Mouat keen to make up for lost time in Canada
WHEN Bruce Mouat and his rink head to the World Curling Championships next month, they will have an added incentive to do well.
This time last year, Mouat and his team-mates, Grant Hardie, Bobby Lammie and Hammy McMillan, were just days away from one of the biggest weeks of their career; a home world championship. However, due to the pandemic, the event was called off at the very last minute.
It was a blow that was difficult for Mouat to come to terms with and so he has been harbouring the desire to win world silverware for an entire year ever since.
Since the cancellation of the Glasgow World Championships, the world No.5 has been forced to prepare for this year’s championships in a very different way to usual.
Mouat and his rink will travel to Calgary in Canada next month having been denied any international competition since the pandemic began but a raft of Scottish competitions in recent months, in which Mouat is undefeated, has sharpened him up nicely.
And as he prepares to head to Canada, Mouat, who is aiming to improve on his world bronze from 2018, admits the match-sharpness he has gained from playing his compatriots in recent months could well prove to be invaluable.
“Things are much more uncertain than normal because some countries have been training this whole time while others haven’t,” the Edinburgh-born skip says.
“But for us, playing against teams like Paterson and Whyte in Scotland, both of whom are top-20 in the world, means we know we’re getting extremely good competition. We always go to a world championships aiming for first place. We’ve been close on a couple of occasions so we’re going to back ourselves that we can get the gold.”
The past year has been extremely challenging for Mouat. Not only did he and his team-mates have to deal with the cancellation of their home world championships but, due to lockdown restrictions, they ended up being off the ice for months. And he admits that getting over the disappointment of the cancellation of the Glasgow Worlds didn’t happen overnight.
“As the World Champs last year got closer, you could feel the energy in the country so we’d been really looking forward to it. We’d been thinking about how much we wanted to try to win a World medal in our home country,” the 26-year-old says.
“The first few days, I really struggled to come to terms with the disappointment but then we started to hear about people who were really suffering and that put things into perspective,” he says.
“But as much as the cancellation was a tough blow for us, I do feel like the right decision was made and so we just had to deal with the disappointment.”