Regina Leader-Post

Jones’ Manitoba rink looks for curling trifecta

- GREGORY STRONG THE CANADIAN PRESS

Jennifer Jones didn’t let up after winning her first Olympic women’s curling title last year in Sochi.

She has been in peak form throughout the current campaign and recently added her fifth career Scotties Tournament of Hearts title to her stacked resumé. Next up for Jones and her Winnipeg teammates: a shot at Canadian curling history.

Jones has a chance to become the first reigning Olympic champion to win Canadian and world championsh­ips the following season. She’ll go for the rare trifecta at the world women’s curling championsh­ip, which kicks off Saturday in Sapporo, Japan.

“I haven’t really thought of that, but I just honestly pinch myself,” Jones said in a recent interview.

“I can’t believe all of the success that we’ve had. We worked so hard and to have it all come to fruition, it’s just unbelievab­le.”

Jones and her team of lead Dawn McEwen, second Jill Officer and third Kaitlyn Lawes did not compete at last year’s national playdowns as they overlapped with the Winter Olympics. Ottawa’s Rachel Homan won the 2014 Scotties and then took silver at the world championsh­ip after losing to Switzerlan­d’s Binia Feltscher in the final.

A Canadian team hasn’t won gold at the women’s worlds since Jones took the 2008 title with Cathy Overton-Clapham at third. Lawes replaced Overton-Clapham in 2010. The late Sandra Schmirler of Regina was the only other Canadian women’s skip to hold all three titles at the same time.

She won national and world championsh­ips in 1997 before winning Olympic gold at the Nagano Games the following year.

Jones will have some stiff competitio­n at the 12-team event at the 2,321-seat Tsukisamu Gymnasium.

Russian veteran Anna Sidorova is back and Sweden will again be skipped by four-time world silver-medallist Margaretha Sigfridsso­n. Eve Muirhead, who beat Homan en route to a world title in 2013, will lead the Scotland entry.

Alina Paetz will handle skipping duties for Switzerlan­d this year. She won a world championsh­ip as Mirjam Ott’s alternate in 2012.

“It’s a tremendous field with so many of the teams from the Olympics,” Jones said. “So we’re expecting it to be very tough and we know that we’re going to have to play our very best in order to make it to the playoffs.”

Denmark skip Lene Nielsen will be making her sixth career world championsh­ip appearance. Kristin Moen Skaslien will represent Norway for the fifth time at this event, but first as skip.

Japan received an automatic entry as the host country. Other teams in the field include the United States, Finland, China and Germany.

A round-robin format will be used with the top four teams moving on to the Page playoffs. The final is set for March 22.

Jones won a world silver in 2010. She made her world championsh­ip debut in 2005, but didn’t make the podium that year.

“We’ve learned and grown so much (since then),” Jones said. “We have a lot more experience, but we’ve also worked so much harder on our game and we know what to expect. I feel like we’re a lot more consistent than we were back then.”

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/The Canadian Press ?? Manitoba’s Jennifer Jones will be wearing Team Canada colours for the women’s world curling championsh­ip
beginning Saturday in Sapporo, Japan.
JONATHAN HAYWARD/The Canadian Press Manitoba’s Jennifer Jones will be wearing Team Canada colours for the women’s world curling championsh­ip beginning Saturday in Sapporo, Japan.

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