Calgary Herald

Sluchinski­s chasing glory at mixed doubles nationals

- TODD SAELHOF tsaelhof@postmedia.com

History on the ice and history off the ice.

Aaron and Amanda Sluchinski hope it leads to new history for them at the 2024 Canadian mixed doubles curling championsh­ip.

A winning one, specifical­ly, is what the married couple from Airdrie aim to write up.

“Yeah … I think it’s a winning script,” said Aaron, just hours ahead of Sunday’s start to the national gala in Fredericto­n, N.B. “We have fun together anyway.” That’s good, because it’s not every day spouses can make it work as teammates and have a good time doing it.

But the Sluchinski­s are proving it can happen, recalling the magic of yesteryear — they were Alberta College Athletic Conference champions together once upon a time — to win the Alberta playdowns last month and earn a berth in the Canadian mixed doubles event.

“Yeah … it’s kind of been a good dynamic actually just in terms of her kind of being out of the game for a while,” said Aaron, 36. “She just lets me take the lead, and I tell her exactly what I need from everything, and she does it and does well at it.

“If I said that to other partners, they’d probably just tell me where to go. So it’s worked well for us so far.”

The trick now is kicking it up a notch in the pursuit of Canadian curling glory.

After all, there are some grand names at nationals.

In fact, Brent Laing and Jennifer Jones, the defending champs, will be there.

As will Calgary’s Brett Gallant and Jocelyn Peterman, the 2019 winners and finalists last year. Both are married couples, as well.

“I feel like I’m wildly unqualifie­d,” said 35-year-old Amanda, who’s spent the years since her curling-infused college life with the Macewan Griffins focusing on her career and being a mother to kids Lincoln, 8, and Evelyn, 3.

“Once I graduated out of juniors, I played a couple of years of women’s, but then I was going back to working full-time and I wanted to go back to school full-time. And when you compete, you want to be able to put all the time into it to be successful, and I didn’t feel like that was possible. So I took a step back and I’ve just been kind of playing for fun for like — gosh, I don’t know — what a decade, 15 years? I always try to keep my toe a little bit in it and still playing.”

But it wasn’t until the kids got a little older and Aaron started to fully commit to curling that the drive for the game fully arrived again for Amanda.

And it opened right up when Brittany Tran, Aaron’s partner last year at mixed nationals, had to set aside doubles provincial duties for the important task of trying to win the 2023 Scotties Tournament of Hearts with Alberta’s Kayla Skrlik.

Husband and wife teamed up for that Alberta mixed action and then decided to renew their full-time partnershi­p on the ice this season.

“When Aaron started playing doubles, I was like, ‘That looks like fun,’” Amanda said. “Then you kind of get hooked back on that competitiv­e feel of like, ‘Oh, I’m back in it; this feels really good.’ And so we were able to make it work that we played together this year.

“But it’s really fun filling out those player profiles (for the mixed doubles nationals) when it’s ‘What are your recent accomplish­ments?’ It’s like, ‘I don’t really have any … can we go back 20 years?’ So playing in provincial­s and winning them, I finally have a recent accomplish­ment to put on a player profile.”

Plus she’s got that beautiful new Wild Rose shirt and jacket, with ‘SLUCHINSKI’ stitched across the back to match her husband’s, further confirming that she’s back on the big stage.

“I finally have my own Alberta jacket,” said Amanda excitedly. “When it showed up the other day, I was pretty excited to rip into that box and try on that stuff. But I think it’ll be a little different getting there and actually wearing it at that competitio­n.”

That begins for the Sluchinski­s against Greg and Lauren Cheal — not married but siblings — from Lennoxvill­e, Que., early Sunday (7 a.m. MT, plus.curling.ca).

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