Medicine Hat News

Bottcher heads into playoffs on winning note

- DONNA SPENCER

CALGARY

Canada’s Brendan Bottcher capped the preliminar­y round at the men’s world curling championsh­ip with a 9-6 win over Germany, and prepared for a playoff game against Scotland later Friday that did not finish by press time.

The host country finished the round robin with a 9-4 record.

Bottcher’s team from Edmonton needed a win over Scotland’s Bruce Mouat on Friday evening to advance to Saturday’s semifinals in Calgary. The medal games are Sunday.

“You’ve got to be proud of where you’re at, but our work isn’t done here by any stretch,” the Canadian skip said. “We certainly have expectatio­ns and we all have the drive to keep playing well in the playoffs.”

Defending champion Niklas Edin of Sweden and Russia’s Sergey Glukhov topped the table at 11-2 for byes into Saturday’s semifinals.

Reigning Olympic champion John Shuster of the United States (10-4) Scotland (9-4) and Switzerlan­d’s Peter de Cruz (8-5) round out the six playoff teams.

Shuster faces the Swiss on Saturday morning in a playoff between the third and sixth seeds.

Canada was seeded fourth because of a round-robin win over the fifth-place Scots to open the tournament.

Italy and Norway finished just outside the playoff round with 7-6 records. Japan was 6-7 ahead of Germany at 4-9, Denmark at 3-10, and the Netherland­s, South Korea and China all at 2-11.

Glukhov’s official team name at the world championsh­ip is Russian Curling Federation because of World Anti-Doping Agency sanctions against that country.

Canada beat both the Scots and the Americans in the preliminar­y round, but fell to the Swedes, Russians, Swiss and South

Koreans in losses decided in either extra ends or with last rocks.

“The preliminar­y round, there were a lot of tough games,” Canada’s second Brad Thiessen said. “We learned a lot about the ice and the rocks.

“We learned a lot about the teams as well. We faced quite a bit of adversity this week I think.”

Canada has won five of the last 10 world men’s curling titles and reached the final in another three.

 ?? CP PHOTO JEFF MCINTOSH ?? Team Canada skip Brendan Bottcher, right, makes a shot as second Brad Thiessen sweeps against Germany at the Men’s World Curling Championsh­ips in Calgary, Alta., Friday.
CP PHOTO JEFF MCINTOSH Team Canada skip Brendan Bottcher, right, makes a shot as second Brad Thiessen sweeps against Germany at the Men’s World Curling Championsh­ips in Calgary, Alta., Friday.

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