Calgary Herald

Koe's brilliance became evident early on, former teammate says

- TODD SAELHOF tsaelhof@postmedia.com Twitter.com/toddsaelho­fpm

Mickey Pendergast knows the brilliance of Kevin Koe first-hand.

For three years back in the '90s, Koe was Pendergast's third, honing his craft on the Calgary curling scene and chasing the dream of reaching the Brier.

That's finally happened for both men at this year's national championsh­ip in Regina, albeit on two different teams, with skip Koe now making his 12th Brier appearance as one of Canada's best ever curlers, while Pendergast is enjoying his maiden voyage to the iconic event.

“Pretty excited,” said Pendergast, who coaches the Alberta champions skipped by Airdrie's Aaron Sluchinski. “I'm 66, and there are a couple of things that still excite me about curling.”

One is watching Koe toss the rocks around, just as he's doing this week at the Brier in a bid to become a five-time champ.

Pendergast still gets a kick out of watching his former henchman.

“We met Kevin totally by accident,” said Pendergast, recalling his first meeting with Koe. “We were at the big bonspiel in Vernon back in the day. And there was this team there from the Northwest Territorie­s that was doing well. It was Klaus Schoenne — he went to the Brier a few years and usually won two or three games. Good guy and good player, but he doesn't have the depth on his team.

“And it looks like he's playing with his 12-year-old nephew or something. He had this skinny little kid with him on the team. It's Kevin, he was probably 16 or something, but he was skinny as hell and didn't look very old. But they're beating everybody and they're winning the bonspiel.

“Anyway, so a couple of years later, I turn the TV on and here's this kid in the final of junior Canadians from the Territorie­s.”

That was 1994, when a burnedrock controvers­y, on an accidental kick by N.W.T. second Mark Whitehead, kept Koe's rink from a deserved win over Alberta's Colin Davison in what ended up a 6-5 Alberta triumph in the final at the Canadian Junior Curling Championsh­ips in Truro, N.S.

“So a year or two later, Koe moved to Calgary to go to school,” said Pendergast, a Curling Alberta director and co-author of the curling strategy book What's Your Call? that features a forward written by Koe.

“And he calls my brother, (also named) Kevin, who was on my team at the time — he got to know him from a couple of bonspiels where we ran into him. He says, `I'm moving to Calgary. Do you know any men's team that's looking for a player?' And our team had kind of run its course, so we said, `Yeah, we kind of know a men's team looking for a player.' Especially a kid who can play like that.

“So we hooked up and played together for three years and made a couple of provincial­s, but didn't really make any noise. We made it to a couple of tour championsh­ips and did OK on the bonspiel trail. “We had fun.”

After the 1998 season, Koe went his own way, jumping into the skip's position and embarking on an amazing career in the sport.

“When he started doing well, my brother Kevin and I would joke that, `We taught him everything he knows,' ” said Pendergast of Koe. “Then, you realize it's `I taught him everything I know' ... and he surpassed that and more.”

And how.

Koe represente­d Canada at the 2018 Winter Olympic Games.

He's a two-time world champion and a four-time Brier kingpin.

And he's the owner of eight Alberta men's titles. Only Kevin Martin has more with 12.

His charge for No. 13 was, ironically, cut down by the Sluchinski rink coached by Pendergast last month in Hinton.

Sluchinski & Co. then beat Koe again in Draw 1 at the Brier in an 8-4 decision that was closer than the score indicated.

But the recent run of hiccups, including another loss on Sunday, a 6-5 setback to Saskatchew­an's Mike Mcewen, doesn't make Koe any less dangerous out there, says Pendergast.

“He sees the game differentl­y,” said Pendergast, himself a twotime Canadian masters champion in 2018 and '19 and provincial runner-up in 1990 to Harold Breckenrid­ge and 2000 to Martin. “Even though we beat him twice here at provincial­s, Koe called some interestin­g shots. He's still got that strategic edge and knows how to basically build off that and make things happen.

“He's fun to watch.”

EXTRA ENDS

Koe and his Alberta crew from The Glencoe Club in Calgary (12) meet Quebec's Julien Tremblay (1-2) on Monday morning (8 a.m., TSN) before facing Canada's Brad Gushue (2-1) later Monday (6 p.m., TSN) ... In the meantime, Sluchinski (2-0), who toppled Nunavut's Shane Latimer (0-2) 12-10 on Sunday afternoon thanks to a four-ender 10th, gets Nova Scotia's Matthew Manuel (0-3) in Monday's early draw and Prince Edward Island's Tyler Smith (11) on Monday night . ... The other Alberta crew, skipped by Brendan Bottcher (2-0) out of The Glencoe Club, faced Ontario's Scott Howard (1-1) late Sunday, ahead of meeting northern Ontario's Trevor Bonot (2-0) on Monday afternoon (1 p.m., TSN).

 ?? MICHAEL BURNS/CURLING CANADA ?? Kevin Koe in action against Alberta rival Aaron Sluchinski's rink in the opening draw at the Brier in Regina.
MICHAEL BURNS/CURLING CANADA Kevin Koe in action against Alberta rival Aaron Sluchinski's rink in the opening draw at the Brier in Regina.

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