The Herald on Sunday

Heat of the moment

Bad boy Greg Drummond caused controvers­y last year when he lauched a stone handle into a packed crowd, reports Kevin Ferrie

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RARELY has a mishit by an 18 handicap golfer caused such a stir, but this time last year Greg Drummond was the bad boy of curling as a result.

The Olympic silver medallist’s misdemeano­ur went viral after he swiped at a curling stone with his broom following his team’s defeat in the final of the Scottish Championsh­ips and broke the handle off the stone, sending it sailing over the barrier separating the players from the spectators.

At no point was there the slightest threat to life or limb, but it was decidedly not the done thing within curling culture and the 28-year-old who plays third in Team Murdoch, effectivel­y second-in-command to three-time Olympian Dave Murdoch, accepts that, while admitting some bad luck was at play, petulance had been involved.

“To be honest what happened wasn’t meant to happen. I had every intention of breaking my broom but I topped the shot and the handle came flying off,” he explained, noting that, ironically, he immediatel­y headed off on holiday to Portugal where he played his best two rounds of golf of the season.

There was some more official tutting and harrumphin­g when he subsequent­ly appeared in a promo for a Grand Slam event in Canada simulating a golf swing, but in reality all Drummond had done was demonstrat­e that curlers, like all elite sportspeop­le, are passionate about what they do and his own generation recognised that.

“We were out at a Grand Slam in Canada and every curling player I spoke to had no issues with it and actually said: ‘Oh, it got people talking about the sport,’” he noted. That expression of frustratio­n, following the defeat at the hands of his former skip Tom Brewster’s new rink, was a consequenc­e of a lengthy wait to get back to a major championsh­ips since that Olympic final in Sochi, increased domestic competitio­n having shut them out.

“It was a big final and a chance to go to the World Championsh­ips,” said Drummond.

“It was just frustratin­g at the time because we’d made a little strategica­l error with the last couple of shots, but since then I think I’ve mellowed slightly.”

Victory in last month’s Scottish Championsh­ips, earning an ideally timed return to the World Championsh­ips, the last ahead of next year’s Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, was consequent­ly a reward for well-directed effort.

“We knew this was an important year in the Olympic cycle and we just re-evaluated our entire schedule leading up to the national championsh­ips and did everything we needed to do to give ourselves the best chance, by refining the quality of our work. This is the week before we go to the World Championsh­ips and every one of us is knocking out PBs in the gym,” said Drummond.

“I think being physically strong also gives you a mental edge, so if you’re in a tight game and it’s coming down to the wire, you feel as if you’re stronger than your opposition which really showed in a few games at the Scottish Championsh­ip.”

As Drummond acknowledg­ed, such physicalit­y has become an essential component of curling’s transforma­tion from what was previously widely considered a pastime, into a full blown athletic pursuit as a result of acquiring Olympic status.

“Since 2011 when we first went to a World Championsh­ip. We’re bigger, we’re stronger, we’re technicall­y better, we’re more experience­d, we’ve been to the big show a few times, we know we can win big games. Even from the Olympics we’re a different team,” he said.

The men’s World Championsh­ips take place in Edmonton from April 1-9.

 ?? Photograph: British Curling ?? Greg Drummond is keeping both hands firmly on that broom handle
Photograph: British Curling Greg Drummond is keeping both hands firmly on that broom handle

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