The Standard (St. Catharines)

Edin makes history at Covid-delayed world championsh­ips

- DONNA SPENCER

Niklas Edin’s fifth world men’s curling title was memorable not only because of the history the Swede made.

That he and his teammates were able to play in a final Sunday for a third straight crown — another men’s curling record — made achieving both milestones feel even sweeter.

Sweden doubled Scotland’s Bruce Mouat 10-5 in the championsh­ip game in Calgary.

The 2021 BKT Tires and OK Tire World Men’s Curling Championsh­ip reached the finish line late Sunday night despite four participan­ts, including an athlete on a playoff team, testing positive for COVID-19. None showed symptoms of the coronaviru­s. No games were played Saturday while mass testing was carried out. Alberta Health approved the resumption of Sunday’s playoffs.

“Obviously, super, super happy we could keep playing,” Edin said. “It would have felt so awkward if the event had just ended and medals are going somewhere because of a round-robin. That just wouldn’t have been fair. That wouldn’t have felt good. I’m really happy we could play today.”

Edin and his third Oscar Erikkson are the only two men to win five world championsh­ips. Along with second Rasmus Wranaa and lead Christoffe­r Sundgren, they were the first team to win three in a row.

The men’s championsh­ip’s final day reflected the varying levels of risk tolerance around the virus clashing with a desire for sport to happen.

The athlete who competed Sunday had tested positive in an “exit” test in preparatio­n to leave the curling bubble. His subsequent test Saturday was negative.

The WCF initially barred the athlete from competing Sunday and then allowed him on the ice.

His full vaccinatio­n before arriving in Canada, and the argument he posed little risk to teammates and opponents, were the WCF’S justificat­ions for the reversal.

The WCF didn’t identify the player, but United States skip John Shuster told CBC it was his third Chris Plys.

The next three curling events in Calgary include the same virus-avoidance protocols and restrictio­ns establishe­d in the first four.

The first of two Grand Slams starts Wednesday at Winsport’s Markin Macphail Centre.

While the WCF and Curling Canada can hand off responsibi­lity for the events to Rogers Sportsnet, athletes continuing to curl in Calgary now have reason to feel uneasy about the virus’s ability to infiltrate their environmen­t.

The Canadian men’s, women’s and mixed doubles championsh­ip before the world championsh­ip ran uninterrup­ted by the virus.

During a media conference call Saturday, Curling Canada and WCF officials were visibly rattled by the virus surfacing in the latter stages of their event.

 ??  ?? Niklas Edin
Niklas Edin

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