Lethbridge Herald

HOMAN FEELING THE HEAT

SKIP CALLED OUT OVER REMOVING ‘BURNED’ ROCK

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Canada falls to 0-3 after 9-8 extra-end loss to Denmark at Olympics

On a day when Canada didn’t figure into the medals at the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Winter Games, a curling controvers­y took centre stage instead.

Rachel Homan and her Ottawa rink dropped to 0-3 in the women’s curling tournament with a 9-8 extraend loss to Denmark on Friday. That alone is a troubling start for a team heavily favoured to win gold at these Games. But Homan, who uncharacte­ristically missed on two key shots, also had her sense of sportsmans­hip come into question. She was criticized on social media by some curling fans by ordering a “burned” Danish rock removed in the fifth end.

A burned rock is one that is touched by a curler while in play. The opposing team then has three choices: They can ignore the foul, rearrange the stones to whatever position they think they would have ended up if the stone hadn’t been touched, or remove the stone from play.

Curlers often ignore the foul, but Homan’s decision had some criticizin­g the move as unsportsma­nlike.

“There are options, but we’ve burnt rocks in the past at a national championsh­ips and they’ve come off,” Homan said in her defence. “Burning a rock is not something that you can do. It’s just the rules, I guess.”

The move originally paid off, as Canada scored four in the fifth end to take a 6-4 lead. But Denmark got the last laugh, scoring two in the 10th to force and extra end and stealing the winning point in the 11th when Homan wrecked her last shot on a guard.

Also Friday, Calgary’s Kevin Koe improved to 4-0 in men’s curling competitio­n with a 7-6 win over South Korea. In figure skating, Toronto’s Patrick Chan fell on a triple Axel and sat sixth after the men’s short program. Ottawa speedskate­r Ivanie Blondin was fifth in the women’s 5,000 metres, and cross-country skier Alex Harvey of Saint-Ferreol-les-Neiges, Que., was seventh in the men’s 15-kilometre free.

With four gold, five silver and four bronze, Canada was tied for third with the Netherland­s in the overall medal standings with 13. Canada was tied for fifth with Sweden in gold medals, behind Germany (9), Norway and the Netherland­s (6) and the United States (5).

Homan will need to turn things around quickly to add to that medal total. Canada is the only women’s team without a win at the Olympic curling tournament.

Still, a couple of consecutiv­e wins should quiet any anxiety. Brad Jacobs started 1-2 at the 2014 Sochi Games before his rink from Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., won gold.

Homan and teammates Emma Miskew, Joanne Courtney and Lisa Weagle do have experience in big events on their side. They are the defending Canadian and world champions and came out of a tough field to win the right to represent Canada in December’s Olympic curling trials.

“Teams qualify with three losses all the time, so we’ve just got to keep going,” Homan said.

Homan takes on the United States today.

In men’s curling action, Koe scored three in the third end to improve his Calgary-based rink to 4-0 and atop the men’s round-robin standings.

The Canadians had a deuce in the seventh end, but gave up a deuce of their own in the ninth. Korea stole a single in the 10th end but it wasn’t enough.

Koe and company return to the ice today with a draw against Sweden, which is also undefeated at 4-0.

Chan, the three-time world champion, scored 90.01 points, 21.67 behind first-place skater Yuzuru Hanyu of Japan.

Spain’s Javier Fernandez was second with 107.58 and Japan’s Shoma Uno scored 104.17 for third.

Skating to “Dust in the Wind” by Kansas, the 27-year-old Chan opened with a huge quadruple toe loop, but the fall of his Axel cost him huge points.

“Yeah, I do, I do (hate the triple Axel),” said Chan, who’s competing in his final Olympics. “I’ve been blessed with good skating skills but not good triple Axel skills.”

Keegan Messing of Sherwood Park was 10th after the short program with 85.11 points.

Chan helped Canada win gold in the team event earlier in the Games, finally reaching the top step of the Olympic podium.

In the women’s 5,000, Blondin was in a bronze medal position with one pair left to go, but was bumped down to fifth when Martina Sablikova of the Czech Republic, a two-time Olympic champion in the distance, and Russian Natalia Voronina earned silver and bronze respective­ly.

No one could catch Esmee Visser, who won a sixth speedskati­ng gold medal for the dominant Netherland­s.

Ottawa’s Isabelle Weidemann was sixth.

Pushing for a medal, an exhausted Blondin even clipped her own skate to cause a momentary stumble down the home stretch.

“Once I’m crossing the line it’s almost as if my body’s numb,” she said. “There’s so much lactic acid ... you can’t even think straight. I don’t even know what I was thinking at the end of that race.

“It’s an odd feeling, for sure. It almost feels like you’re about to be put under for surgery.”

Canadian snowboarde­r Meryeta O’Dine was forced to withdraw from Friday’s snowboardc­ross event after suffering a concussion in training earlier this week.

The Prince George, B.C., racer said she was disappoint­ed but the decision was made for her health.

“As an athlete, you always want to push your limits, but it’s important to stop when you have to,” she said in a statement. “I am proud to have travelled here.”

No Canadians advanced to the snowboardc­ross big final. Tess Critchlow of Kelowna, B.C., finished ninth.

Dustin Cook of Lac-SainteMari­e, Que., was the top Canadian in the men’s alpine super-G with a ninth-place time of one minute 25.23 seconds. Matthias Mayer of Austria won the race.

Manuel Osborne-Paradis of Invermere, B.C., was 22nd, Broderick Thompson of Whistler, B.C., was 23rd and Toronto’s Jack Crawford skied off course early and didn’t finish.

Harvey was in a medal position midway through the men’s 15k, but admitted he didn’t have the accelerati­on to reach the podium.

“It was going well. I didn’t break, but when it’s a super day, you accelerate near the end,” he said. “Me, I just stayed at the same rhythm and there were some that accelerate­d.

“I wasn’t able to accelerate at the finish like I had to do to get on the podium.”

Switzerlan­d’s Dario Cologna won his third gold medal in the distance and fourth overall. He was dominant, beating Norway’s Simen Hegstad Krueger in 18.3 seconds. Russian Denis Spitsov was third.

In women’s skeleton, Calgary’s Elisabeth Vathje was fastest in the second run at 52.01 seconds. That brought her up to eighth place after she finished a disappoint­ing 12th in the first run.

Jane Channell was 11th after two runs, while Ottawa’s Mirela Rahneva was 13th. The final two runs go Saturday.

Kevin Boyer of Sherwood Park was the top Canadian in men’s skeleton, finishing 17th. South Korea’s Yun Sungbin won to claim the host nation’s first ever gold medal in any sliding event.

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 ?? Associated Press photo ?? Team Canada's skip Rachel Homan shouts instructio­ns during roundrobin curling action against Denmark at the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Olympic Winter Games in Korea, Friday.
Associated Press photo Team Canada's skip Rachel Homan shouts instructio­ns during roundrobin curling action against Denmark at the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Olympic Winter Games in Korea, Friday.

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