Montreal Gazette

A ROLLER-COASTER YEAR FOR CANADIAN CURLERS

The bubble tested their love for the game, but the Olympic trials restored the romance

- TED WYMAN twyman@postmedia.com twitter.com/ted_wyman

It was a year like no other in the world of curling, with events played in bubbles in the early part of 2021 and an eventual return to something that looked more like normal, despite the persistent threat of COVID -19 in the fall and winter months.

Ask any Canadian curler to look back at 2021 and they'll be plagued by memories of spending weeks on end in Calgary hotel rooms, without their families or social contact, in order to compete last winter and spring at Canada Olympic Park.

Eventually those memories would give way to something much more positive, with the Olympic curling trials being successful­ly staged in front of fans in Saskatoon in November, but it was never quite the same as it was in the before times, with players undergoing regular coronaviru­s testing and being asked to avoid outside contacts as much as possible.

“If you asked anyone who was in that bubble, that was an event we would never want to replicate,” said John Morris, who competed in the Brier, a couple Grand Slam events and the mixed doubles nationals in the bubble.

“We were happy to be curling, but the bubble experience was hopefully a one and only. You can get in a dark place in there, not being around family, and missing one of the main parts of the game, which is being able to socialize with other teams. That was one of the toughest parts of that bubble.”

That was an event we would never want to replicate. We were happy to be curling, but the bubble experience was hopefully a one and only.

Brad Gushue, who curls out of St. John's, N.L., started 2021 isolated on the Rock, with no real opportunit­ies to play the game at an elite level. Eventually he got into the bubble for a good three months of events and capped his year by winning the Olympic curling trials and booking a ticket to Beijing for the 2022 Olympic Winter Games.

“I've loved it and I've hated it,” Gushue said. “I loved the fact that we had the opportunit­y to curl in the bubble, but my experience of being away from my family for 3½ months, to be honest, made me hate curling for about a month after I got back. I didn't want to talk about it, I didn't want to think about it. It took me away from my family for such a long period of time.

“The fact that we were able to play in front of fans again in Saskatoon brought back that love, that excitement. It's been a roller-coaster to be honest. It went from high, to very low, to high again. That's the kind of thing you've got to expect, I guess, in a pandemic. We've just got to roll with it right now.”

The big winners of the year were Kerri Einarson (women's national champion), Brendan Bottcher (men's national champion), Einarson and Gushue (mixed doubles champs) and Gushue and Jennifer Jones (Olympic trials champs). The Bottcher team didn't even make it to the end of the year without a breakup, as third Darren Moulding was turfed in a controvers­ial move that came just after the Olympic trials. Canada did not fare well on the internatio­nal stage, finishing sixth in women's play, fifth in men's play and fourth in mixed doubles at the world championsh­ips, all leading to concerns over the country's place in the world curling hierarchy.

“Expectatio­ns shouldn't be as high for Canada as what they were in the past, to be quite honest,” Gushue said at the Olympic trials. “That doesn't mean we shouldn't be medal favourites going into the Olympics, just not overwhelmi­ng gold-medal favourites.

“Curling fans understand that, but general fans probably don't because they don't know what Bruce Mouat (of Scotland) has done over the last 18 months or what Niklas Edin (of Sweden) has done over the last four years. Hopefully, the fans who are tuning in for the first time in four years at the Olympics know that we're good, but we're not as dominant as we were.”

Everyone wants to see Canada do well at internatio­nal events, particular­ly the Olympics. Canada (Kevin Koe) finished fourth in men's play in 2018 in South Korea, sixth in women's play (Rachel Homan) and won gold in mixed doubles (Morris and Kaitlyn Lawes).

Some people, including Gushue, have suggested Canada should move its Olympic trials from late November/early December of the Olympic season, to April of the previous season, in order to give the winners more time to prepare as Team Canada. Morris doesn't agree. At least, he thinks the timing of the trials is the least of Canada's worries.

“It should be exactly how it has been,” said Morris, who played second with Koe in men's play and will play with Homan at the upcoming mixed doubles Olympic trials in Portage la Prairie, Man. (Dec. 28-Jan. 1).

“Historical­ly, in Canada, we've had great Olympians and been very successful. It's not the timing of the Olympic trials that's why Canada is finding it harder to win gold medals. It's because we're falling behind some of these other countries in our progressio­n. These other countries have full-time athletes and they've really made some progressiv­e changes over the last decade. In Canada, we've maybe rested on our laurels and rested on the fact that we have a lot of depth in our men's and women's teams. That's what needs to be addressed.”

Morris believes the wheels are in motion now to get the appropriat­e changes made. People in the right positions at the World Curling Federation and Curling Canada are aware of the concerns and are addressing them at high levels.

“It's probably happening a little bit too late, because if you look at our last world championsh­ip, we came sixth, fifth and fourth,” Morris said.

“We're definitely starting to play a little catch-up here. Curling Canada is starting to involve the athletes more, and there are no better people to involve than the athletes, because we live it, we see it, and we see what these other countries are doing. We have some really good insight and a great cross-section of athletes, so we can pool our resources to help create a good solution moving forward.

“I have faith in that.”

 ?? MICHAEL BURNS/CURLING CANADA ?? Skips Jennifer Jones and Brad Gushue display their gold medals after November's Olympic trials in Saskatoon, where they won the right to represent Canada at the Beijing Winter Games.
MICHAEL BURNS/CURLING CANADA Skips Jennifer Jones and Brad Gushue display their gold medals after November's Olympic trials in Saskatoon, where they won the right to represent Canada at the Beijing Winter Games.

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