The Province

Canadians ‘gutted’ by loss

WORLD CHAMPIONSH­IPS: Carey rink fails to make the podium on home soil

- DANIEL AUSTIN daustin@postmedia.com twitter.com/DannyAusti­n_9

SWIFT CURRENT, Sask. — With tears in her eyes and her daughter in her arms, Amy Nixon wasn’t trying to hide her disappoint­ment.

A 9-8 loss to Russia on Sunday morning meant Nixon and her Canadian teammates would be leaving the world women’s curling championsh­ip without a medal.

An up-and-down week left Canada with plenty of positives and the team still has an automatic berth at next year’s Scotties thanks to their win at the national championsh­ips in February, but none of that made Sunday’s disappoint­ment any more palatable.

“I’m not gonna lie, I’m gutted. I’m gutted,” Nixon said after Russia scored one in the 10th to earn the bronze medal. “One of the hardest losses of my career, personally, and it happens and it’s just a sport, but right now, that’s hurting.”

Skip Chelsea Carey’s team — including second Jocelyn Peterman and lead Laine Peters — put up a strong fight against Anna Sidorova’s Russian rink. After falling behind 5-2 in the fifth end, the Canadians put their rocks exactly where they wanted them over the next two ends to take a 6-5 lead.

In the eighth, though, a couple missed shots allowed Russia to take three and put themselves in the driver’s seat for the win. Canada tied things up with two in the ninth, but Sidorova made no mistake with her last stone in the final end.

The victory earned the Russians their third bronze medal from the past three world championsh­ips, as well as their third win over Canada in Swift Current.

“They made lots of shots, but we had lots of opportunit­ies and just couldn’t take advantage of them in all of those games,” Carey said. “We had chances and we just couldn’t capitalize. We steal two and get the lead and then we give three back ... we rolled just too far on Amy’s (shot) and then mine doesn’t curl.

“It was just that little bit off and when you get down to (the Russians) they’re tough because they hit really well.”

There’s unforeseen pressure that comes with representi­ng Canada at a world championsh­ip — especially one on home soil — and Carey admitted the experience of having gone through it once will likely help her should she get the opportunit­y to skip Canada again.

Unlike her rookie skip, though, Nixon wasn’t eager to turn her attention to next year.

“I can’t even, the work that goes into making it this far and knowing it took me 10 years to get back in this situation, it’s a huge drain personally,” said Nixon, who won bronze with Shannon Kleibrink’s rink at the 2006 Olympics. “For me to put in what I’ve put in again and again, it’s exhausting mentally for me to even imagine getting back, honestly.

“I just feel like this was maybe my chance. I’m looking forward to standing with the girls next year in St. Catharines and wearing the maple leaf at the Scotties, but these chances don’t come along that many times in peoples’ careers and I’m well aware of that.”

The fourth place finish means Canada finished off the podium at a world championsh­ip for the first time since 2009, while no Canadian team has won gold at the women’s worlds since 2008.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Canada third Amy Nixon wears a pair of bunny ears prior to the start of the bronze medal game against Russia at the women’s world curling championsh­ip in Swift Current on Sunday. Russia’s Anna Sidorova’s rink won the match 9-8 in the 10th.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS Canada third Amy Nixon wears a pair of bunny ears prior to the start of the bronze medal game against Russia at the women’s world curling championsh­ip in Swift Current on Sunday. Russia’s Anna Sidorova’s rink won the match 9-8 in the 10th.

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