The Province

New-look curling teams are set to try their luck at Grand Slam’s Elite 10. For the first time, the event also will have a women’s division

- twyman@postmedia.com Twitter: @Ted_Wyman

It’s the first big event of the Olympic quadrennia­l and the first chance for most people to get a good look at the new configurat­ions of curling teams across the nation.

The Grand Slam of Curling’s Elite 10 event will be played Wednesday to Sunday in Chatham-Kent, Ont., (games will be shown on Sportsnet, starting Thursday) and will feature many of the world’s best teams, who are invited based on the World Curling Tour’s Order of Merit.

For the first time there will be a women’s division added to the event, which is played using alternativ­e match-play rules and features a $100,000 purse for each division.

“It’s a different format and it’s kind of neat,” Calgary skip

Chelsea Carey said. “It was kinda fun watching it on TV and it will be even better to actually play in it. Definitely looking forward to that.”

Carey is one of those skips who has a new-look team to start the season after making it to the Olympic trials final last December, before losing to Rachel Homan.

Her team has three new players — third Sarah Wilkes, second Dana Ferguson and lead Heather Rogers ,whois subbing in for Rachel Brown.

Also among the women’s teams with new players is the one skipped by 2018 world champion Jennifer Jones, who has replaced long-time second Jill Officer (taking a break)with Jocelyn Peterman, formerly of Carey’s team.

“Jocelyn is just such a great person,” Jones said. “She’s so easy to get along with and she has fit in amazingly well. Jill is still going to play a couple of events with us. Although Jill’s not around all the time, I still talk to her all the time so it hasn’t felt like we’ve had to be make a big adjustment.”

Tracy Fleury of Sudbury, Ont., is now curling out of Winnipeg and Laura Walker (formerly Crocker) of Edmonton also starts the sea- son with a new team. Among the Canadian teams in the women’s event, only Rachel Homan of Ottawa and Casey

Scheidegge­r of Lethbridge, Alta., have the same lineups.

“It’s an interestin­g year … the first year of the Olympic cycle is always that way,” Carey said. “Everybody has new permutatio­ns and combinatio­ns and it’s always a bit of guess work as far whether or not the chemistry is going to be there and all that kind of stuff.”

On the men’s side, five of the seven Canadian teams come in with new looks, including Olympian Kevin

Koe of Calgary, who has replaced third Marc Kennedy and second Brent Laing with third B.J. Neufeld and second Colton Flasch.

The new foursome already won the inaugural World Cup for Canada earlier this month in China and Koe is excited about the possibilit­ies going forward.

“That takes a bit of pressure off us for sure, having won that event with the good field that it was,” Koe said.

“When you put a new team together, there’s a bit of pressure there. You want to do well for your new teammates and you want everyone to think it was a good decision.”

Neufeld was available after Olympic trials runner-up

Mike McEwen broke up his team and joined fellow Winnipegge­r

Reid Carruthers, throwing fourth stones. John Epping of Toronto,

Jason Gunnlaugso­n of Winnipeg and Glenn Howard of Penetangui­shene, Ont., will debut new foursomes as well. The only teams coming in with the same lineups are those skipped by two-time defending Brier champion

Brad Gushue of St. John’s, Nfld., and 2014 Olympian

Brad Jacobs of Sault Ste.

Marie, Ont.

“Koe’s team is a really intriguing one,” Carruthers said. “Koe represente­d us at the Olympics and to see him change two teammates, it will be interestin­g to see how that team does. It looks like they have some really good chemistry.”

Koe is interested in seeing how Carruthers and McEwen, both high-level skips, do as teammates.

“They’re, on paper, one of the top teams,” Koe said. “Looking back, they were both successful as skips. It will be interestin­g to see how it works with how they’ve laid out the positions and how they get along.”

Historical­ly, the year after an Olympics is a transition year for curling.

“When you make these teams, a lot set out to try to win the Olympic gold,” Carruthers said. “This first year of the quadrennia­l is one of those ones where you take it seriously, but it’s not the be-all, end-all. No team is going to win the Olympic gold this year. We’re four years out and it’s about learning and building.”

Other teams competing in the Elite 10 this week include world champion Niklas Edin

of Sweden, and Scottish skips Ross Patterson and Bruce Mouat on the men’s side along with Olympic champ Anna Hasselborg of Sweden,

Nina Roth and Jamie Sinclair of the U.S. and Silvana

Tirinzoni of Switzerlan­d on the women’s side.

“We know all the players,” Jones said. “It’ll just be interestin­g to see how they work in their new lineups. It’s always kind of fun at the start of a quadrennia­l with a shift in teams and this year it seems to be almost every team shook things up.”

Almost every team shook things up.”

Jennifer Jones

 ?? — KEVIN KING FILES ?? Last season, the Elite 10 event was won by Team McEwen — from left, lead Denni Neufeld, second Matt Wozniak, third B.J. Neufeld, and skip Mike McEwen. As the new Olympic quadrennia­l begins, that team is no more, with McEwen joining former Manitoba rival Reid Carruthers.
— KEVIN KING FILES Last season, the Elite 10 event was won by Team McEwen — from left, lead Denni Neufeld, second Matt Wozniak, third B.J. Neufeld, and skip Mike McEwen. As the new Olympic quadrennia­l begins, that team is no more, with McEwen joining former Manitoba rival Reid Carruthers.
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