Regina Leader-Post

Championsh­ip round at Brier could be legendary

Brilliant shotmaking in preliminar­y round hints at high drama still to come at Brier

- TED WYMAN Kingston, Ont. Twyman@postmedia.com Twitter.com/ted_wyman

In a Tim Hortons Brier that has already featured some of the greatest shots in the history of the tournament, the big boys of the game are just getting warmed up.

The championsh­ip round begins on Thursday at Leon’s Centre and it promises to be a stellar display of curling, with games featuring a who’s who of the men’s curling elite in Canada.

Led by undefeated Brendan Bottcher of Alberta (7-0), Brad Gushue of Newfoundla­nd (6-1), Mike Mcewen of Team Wild

Card (5-1) and Matt Dunstone of Saskatchew­an (5-1), the championsh­ip round could be one for the ages, especially if the curlers keep making circus shots draw after draw.

“The shotmaking has been incredible,” two-time Brier champ Gushue said Wednesday after winning games over Prince Edward Island (11-8) and Quebec (10-4).

“Not only that, but the timeliness of the shotmaking. The top level of the men’s game right now is so tough and so deep and so even and so strong. I haven’t seen anything like it.”

That’s saying something, since Gushue has seen it all. He’s playing in his 17th Brier, and when he started, it was a golden age of curling, with skips like Kevin Martin, Jeff Stoughton, Glenn Howard and Randy Ferbey dominating the scene. This week the top eight teams in the CTRS rankings are in the field, and they were all either qualified or close to qualifying for the championsh­ip round heading into the last preliminar­y draw on Wednesday night.

“I can only imagine, at home, watching all these shots being made, you’re probably coming off your couch a number of times this week,” Gushue said, alluding to game-winners by Dunstone, Team Canada’s Kevin Koe, and Manitoba’s Jason Gunnlaugso­n.

“It’s been fun and it shows the calibre of the game. It also shows the calibre of the ice. It’s been incredible, and that’s why you see so many precise shots.”

Precise barely describes how well some of the curlers have played so far.

Take Dunstone, for instance. The 24-year-old from Winnipeg, who is representi­ng Saskatchew­an, curled 100 per cent in back-to-back wins on Tuesday. That’s 20 straight ends without even a hint of a miss.

Or how about Bottcher’s team, which made it to the Brier finals in 2018 and 2019, cruising along at 7-0 despite playing in a field full of Olympic gold medallists, world champions and Brier winners?

“It’s incredible how far the game has come the last eight to 10 years,” said Marc Kennedy, the veteran third for Northern Ontario’s Brad Jacobs.

“Just when you thought it couldn’t get any better, here we go again. Skips throwing 100 per cent and doing it with no easy shots. There’s amazing shots to win games. It’s so exciting for our sport.

“Sometimes it sucks to be on the losing end of it, but at the end of the day, it’s a good feeling to be in such great games with so many great shots. For those of us who just love the sport of curling. It’s just awesome.”

Bottcher and teammates Darren Moulding, Brad Thiessen and Karrick Martin have been models of consistenc­y in a tournament where even some of the best teams have had ups and downs.

“I’m really proud of the guys,” he said after a 9-6 win over

Prince Edward Island.

“We’ve toughed out some really difficult games. That’s what it takes, though. The field is so good here that the teams at the end of the week have had their share of breaks, they’ve had their share of great shots, and they’ve toughed it out maybe a little more than some of the other guys.”

Jacobs came into the 2020 Brier with the No. 1-ranked team in the world, but sported a 1-3 record after Monday’s games and has been on the verge of eliminatio­n ever since.

Don’t look now, though, because here they come. Northern Ontario won its third straight game on Wednesday (10-3 over Nunavut) to get to 4-3 and qualified for the championsh­ip round.

“We’ve been building, getting stronger and more confident every game,” Jacobs said. “We’re feeling great at this point, but there’s a long way to go.

“It’s been up and down. It’s been a battle. We’re in a fight for our lives here, but we welcome every bit of adversity and hardship. It’s a Canadian championsh­ip, it’s not supposed to be easy.”

Also qualifying for the championsh­ip round on Wednesday afternoon was Manitoba’s Jason Gunnlaugso­n. He beat Nova Scotia’s Jamie Murphy 9-7 to get to 5-2.

The best, he says, is yet to come for curling fans.

“It’s gonna be a battle … Thursday-friday is gonna be a show,” he said. “It’s gonna be unbelievab­le the next two days. Your feature game for TSN, you’ve got eight feature teams. What do you do?”

Jacobs, the 2014 Olympic champ, believes it will get to a whole new level, as well.

“The level of shotmaking is crazy,” he said. “I can’t remember the last time I’ve seen so many spectacula­r game-winners in a week. It’s great entertainm­ent for the fans and it just speaks volumes to where the sport is at right now and where it’s continuing to go. I don’t foresee that stopping in the championsh­ip round.”

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 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Two-time Brier champ Brad Gushue says this year’s field is deep and talented and the competitio­n for the national championsh­ip has never been tougher.
SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Two-time Brier champ Brad Gushue says this year’s field is deep and talented and the competitio­n for the national championsh­ip has never been tougher.
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