The Columbus Dispatch

Swiss rally past US with rare perfect score

- By Kristen Gelineau

GANGNEUNG, South Korea — In a sport known for its politeness, the sight of American curlers Matt and Becca Hamilton banging their brooms against the Olympic ice in frustratio­n was a bit of a rarity. But then, so was the manner in which they lost the game.

Despite holding a 4-3 lead heading into the final end, or round, of curling’s mixed doubles match Friday, the United States lost 9-4 to reigning world champion Switzerlan­d after the Swiss managed something exceedingl­y unusual in curling: a perfect score known as a six-ender. How rare is a six-ender? Think of a perfect game in baseball.

First, a bit of a primer: Mixed-doubles curling, which is making its Olympic debut in Pyeongchan­g, has different rules than standard curling. There are only two players on each team —a man and a woman —as opposed to four. There are eight ends instead of 10. And each team throws six rocks in each end instead of eight.

Although Switzerlan­d was behind by one point going into the final end, Jenny Perret and Martin Rios had an advantage known as the hammer — the right to throw the final stone of the game. They managed to get their first five stones into the house, putting the Americans in a precarious position.

Becca Hamilton threw her final rock, which needed to get to the button — the center of the bull’s-eye-shaped target — to preserve their lead. “Hard, hurry, hurry!” she screamed at her brother, Matt, who was franticall­y sweeping the ice in a bid to get the stone to the right spot. “You got to go, go, go, go, go!!” She then raced ahead and joined in the sweeping frenzy as the rock drew close to the button.

It was not to be. The stone ended up a few inches past its target, prompting the disappoint­ed siblings to slam their brooms against the ice. Switzerlan­d promptly knocked the Americans’ lone rock out of the house and kept all six of their stones within the target’s rings, giving them that rare and coveted six-ender. (In regular curling, which uses eight stones, a perfect score is known as an eight-ender or “a snowman.”)

No curling team has ever managed a perfect score at the Olympics, according to the World Curling Federation. Perfect scores in profession­allevel curling are so unusual that various countries’ curling clubs have special awards for them. Curling Canada hands out pins and certificat­es to teams that score eight-enders. The American Curling Foundation & Museum has an eight-ender patch it bestows on teams that nab perfect scores.

Rios laughed when asked whether he was aware that he and his teammate had become the first to achieve a perfect curling score at the games.

“We wanted to win the game, and that’s it,” he said. “I was making jokes about it during the last end, but just our focus was to score a deuce — that’s it.”

Despite the rough loss, the Hamiltons were gracious in defeat.

“They’re a good team,” Matt Hamilton said after the game. “They’re defending world champs, so hats off to them. They made more shots.”

 ?? [AARON FAVILA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Switzerlan­d’s Jenny Perret, right, shouts instructio­ns as siblings Matt and Becca Hamilton of the U.S. watch during their mixed doubles curling match.
[AARON FAVILA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Switzerlan­d’s Jenny Perret, right, shouts instructio­ns as siblings Matt and Becca Hamilton of the U.S. watch during their mixed doubles curling match.

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