LAWES AND MORRIS CANADA’S MATCH FOR MIXED CURLING
Dynamic duo outdoes Sweeting and Gushue to earn a shot at event’s first Olympic gold
A month ago, Kaitlyn Lawes was giving no thought whatsoever to mixed doubles curling.
The 29-year-old Winnipegger was competing in the Canadian women’s curling trials in Ottawa as the third for Jennifer Jones and was focused on getting back to the Olympics in the traditional fashion, just four years after winning a gold medal in Sochi.
When her team lost in the semifinal, it was devastating. Equally hard to handle was watching rival Rachel Homan win it all and punch a ticket to PyeongChang.
Little did she know, the Homan win was about to change her life.
Because Homan qualified for the Games, she had to bow out of the Olympic mixed doubles curling trials, where she was scheduled to play with Canmore’s John Morris.
Morris immediately placed a call to Lawes, and she agreed to join his team for the mixed doubles trials.
On Sunday, the pair qualified for the Olympic Winter Games in South Korea by beating Val Sweeting and Brad Gushue 8-6 in the trials final in Portage la Prairie.
“It’s surreal, honestly,” Lawes said. “I’m in shock. My head is spinning. I’m so proud of our efforts this week. We had a couple of tough losses and a couple of other games we had to grind out, but what an amazing journey to be able to come out on top of such an incredible field.
“It’s a dream come true. Four years ago, after Sochi, the goal was just to try and get back and I’m so proud that we’re doing this. I obviously wish I was doing this with my girls as well, but what an honour to be a part of the first mixed doubles at the Olympics.”
Morris, 39, was thrilled that a player like Lawes was available to fill in for Homan. With an Olympic gold medal already to his name — he was the third for Kevin Martin in 2010 in Vancouver — Morris saw mixed doubles as a golden opportunity to get back.
“It feels fantastic,” Morris said. “It’s been a tough year, to be honest with you. You have your sights set on winning the team trials, and that was our main goal coming into the year, but now with this new discipline it’s such a wonderful thing for our sport. It’s fun to play, it’s really athletic and we get a lot out of it.
“I just got really lucky that Kaitlyn was available. I knew we’d make a great combo. I’ve always felt our dynamic is really good and we’re good friends and she’s a heck of a shotmaker.”
The Lawes-Morris team started out 2-3 in the round robin and was in a position where one loss would end the Olympic dream. But they won their last three round robin games and ground their way to several more wins in the playoffs.
They lost the one-two Page playoff game to Gushue and Sweeting but were the better team on Sunday, with Morris providing the muscle on bigweight shots and sweeping and Lawes showing plenty of finesse in a tight game.
Morris said the fact the tournament was such a grind made winning all the more gratifying.
“You bet,” he said. “I’ve never swept so much in my life. I can’t wait to just go get a little bit of physio on my shoulder and put my feet up for some rest and recovery.”
The eight-team Olympic tournament begins on Feb. 8, a day before the opening ceremony, in the coastal town of Gangneung, South Korea.
It was a tough loss to swallow for Sweeting and Gushue, who played brilliantly all week but didn’t have their best game in the final.
“It sucks right now for sure,” said Gushue, the 2006 Olympic men’s champion and reigning world men’s champ. “Val played so good and made a couple of big shots early in the game and I kept putting her in pressure situations.
“In this event, there’s no money,” he said. “We’re no different than someone who came here and didn’t win a game. We’re going home with the same prize, which is nothing.”
Sweeting had to fight through tears but she handled the defeat with tremendous class.
“I have to leave for my provincial tonight, so it’s a quick turnaround,” she said. “I’m happy. I learned a lot this week, I learned a lot from Brad and the opportunity to play with him was unreal.
“I’m proud of us out there today. The other team played really well and kudos — they made us pay for our mistakes. But we never stopped fighting. I might be a little sore tomorrow, but I feel so good. I’m happy with how the week went and I’m happy with how far we came.”
My head is spinning. … We had a couple of tough losses and a couple of other games we had to grind out, but what an amazing journey to be able to come out on top of such an incredible field.