Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Curling to take early spotlight

- By Jimmy Golen

A day and a half before the torch is lit and more than 12 hours before any Olympian slips into a ski or skate, the 2018 Winter Games officially will begin when the first stones are thrown in the new discipline of mixed doubles curling.

The inaugural Olympic event involving a young but fast-growing offshoot of the 600-year-old sport gives curlers another chance to participat­e in Pyeongchan­g and perhaps earn a medal. For curling’s caretakers, it is an opportunit­y to capitalize on a spotlight that shines on the sport once every four years.

“We’re trying to have more moments in the sun,” World Curling Federation President Kate Caithness said. “And we’re very excited about it.”

With mixed doubles making its debut in South Korea as a third medal event, curling will

run from Feb. 8 — the day before the opening ceremony — and every day until the torch is snuffed. The very first event of the Pyeongchan­g Games is a mixed doubles match between the United States and Russia.

“I don’t know if people will even be there that early,” said Tabitha Peterson, who is on the American women’s curling team and is attempting to qualify for mixed doubles this week at the U.S. trials in Blaine, Minnesota.

“Hopefully we get a big crowd out there,” she said. “That would be amazing to play in front of a crowd like that, when the only thing out there would be curling.”

Although widely played in Scotland, Canada and

parts of Northern Europe, curling primarily attracts the attention of the American public once every four years, when the banging rocks and furious sweeping prove to be one of the biggest TV draws of the Olympics.

“Curling’s always been kind of a cult following,” said Peterson’s teammate, Joe Polo, who won a bronze medal in 2006 and is an alternate on the U.S. men’s team this year. “Everybody loves curling for a couple of weeks every four years. That’s one of the great things about it: The Olympics just kind of brings it to another level.”

And this Olympics has added a level on top of that.

Though mixed curling had long been more of a social sport, the internatio­nal governing body responded to the IOC’s push for more coed competitio­n by putting mixed doubles on a fast track. It was approved for the Winter Games in 2015, just seven years after the first mixed doubles world championsh­ip, giving it an instant boost.

“Young people love it, and we’ve got to look to the future,” Caithness said in a telephone interview from an Olympic qualificat­ion event in Pilsen, Czech Republic. “Our sport’s become so much more profession­al now, but it’s still a sport for all. It’s social, and mixed doubles is part of that.”

Though the scoring and basic strategy is the same — teams earn points by placing their stones closest to the center of a target, called the house — mixed doubles differs from traditiona­l curling in more than just the gender of the teammates.

In the coed game, teams of two throw a total of five rocks over each of eight ends (think baseball innings, or bowling frames) instead of teams of four throwing eight in each of 10 ends. There are also two pre-positioned stones on the ice — one in the house and the other in front of it, as a guard — that add to the strategy.

In mixed, one player will throw either first and last or the middle three stones; sometimes the teammates will switch roles in a single match. Men’s and women’s teams have more of a defined throwing order — lead, second, third and skip — that doesn’t change.

Because there are only two players on a team, that also means more sweeping and more trips up and down the ice. And each player has to be more involved in the decisionma­king: The endless options for every shot give curling the nickname “chess on ice.”

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