The Telegram (St. John's)

Everything you need to know about the Canadian men’s curling championsh­ip

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“You really have to beat the teams you are supposed to beat. And, even then, you really don’t have any wiggle room to have losses.” Brad Gushue

They’ve been tops in Canada all season and enter the Montana’s Brier as the No. 1 seed, but members of the stacked Brendan Bottcher foursome still feel like they have plenty to prove.

“We may be No. 1 in Canada right now, but if you asked anyone on our team, we’re not really going to feel that until we win a Brier,” third Marc Kennedy said this week ahead of the Brier in Regina.

“We’re going to have to go out there and beat the best, which is Brad Gushue, who has dominated this event for years. Until we can beat him and get to the top of that podium, I don’t think we’ll quite feel like we’re the best team.”

The Bottcher foursome, out of Calgary, dominated the Canadian Team Ranking System standings this season and is ranked second in the world after putting together a 47-16 overall record, making five tournament finals and winning three titles on Tour.

Also including second Brett Gallant and lead Ben Hebert, the foursome has great potential to win the national men’s curling championsh­ip — and perhaps even a world title this season — but as Kennedy mentioned, there’s that Gushue hurdle in the way.

Newfoundla­nd’s Gushue has won the past two Briers and five in the past seven years, and he doesn’t appear ready to relinquish his title just yet.

The veteran skip, who curls with Mark Nichols, E.J. Harnden and Geoff Walker, is fully aware of the challenge that will come from an outstandin­g Brier field this week, with not only Bottcher pushing for the title, but also No. 3 Kevin Koe, No. 4 Matt Dunstone, No. 5 Reid Carruthers, No. 6 Mike Mcewen and No. 7 Aaron Sluchinski, the surprise Alberta champion.

“All those teams are capable of beating each other,” said Gushue, the No. 2 seed based on CTRS standings. “It is pretty wide open. There are probably some A-favourites and some B-favourites, but I think any of those top seven teams are definitely capable of winning. And someone beyond that top seven can make a little bit of noise as well.”

Translatio­n, Gushue is taking nothing for granted despite all of his recent success.

The perennial champion and two-time Olympic medalist said the new format for the Brier, which includes just three teams in each pool of nine making the playoffs, makes every round-robin game more important.

“You really have to beat the teams you are supposed to beat,” Gushue said. “And, even then, you really don’t have any wiggle room to have losses. You get a couple losses and you eliminate yourself from that first or second-place spot that gives you that step ahead.

“There’s a lot of pressure now in the first part of the event. I think every game is going to have a lot of pressure because you’re playing for something in every single draw.”

Manitoba champion Carruthers, who actually is the third on his team with Olympic champion Brad Jacobs calling the game and throwing skip stones, took Gushue’s line of thinking a step further.

“You’re going to have to be almost flawless,” Carruthers said. “If you’re going to win a national championsh­ip, that’s pretty much the nature of the business.”

Three of the teams in this year’s event — Gushue (Team Canada), Dunstone (CTRS pre-qualificat­ion) and Bottcher (CTRS pre-qualificat­ion) — did not need to play in their provincial championsh­ips.

If history suggests anything, it’s that those teams should be successful at this year’s Brier, which begins Friday night and runs to March 10 at the Brandt Centre.

The last time a team that was not pre-qualified won the Brier or Scotties Tournament of Hearts was 2020, when Gushue won as Newfoundla­nd skip in Kingston, Ont., and Kerri Einarson won for Manitoba in Moose Jaw.

Kerri Einarson won the Scotties as skip of Team Canada in 2021, 2022 and 2023, and this year pre-qualified Rachel Homan took the Canadian women’s championsh­ip after beating pre-qualified Jennifer Jones in the final.

Bottcher won the Brier in the Calgary bubble in 2021, but there were no provincial championsh­ips that year because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Gushue won as a wild-card team in 2022, although his team didn’t have to play in provincial­s, and then followed it up with a win as Team Canada last year.

“We’ve known since last April that we were going to be in this event,” said Dunstone, who lost last year’s Brier final to Gushue.

“You go down the list … Brad last year had no provincial­s, Kerri had no provincial­s, Rachel had no provincial­s this year. There’s a proven track record that you don’t need to be playing in those provincial­s to come out and play your best and win this event. We’re taking a lot of confidence in that.”

It will be interestin­g to see if the Brier can match the recent Scotties in Calgary in terms of intensity and excitement. That event was memorable, with some incredible storylines, including the mysterious ineligibil­ity of Team Canada lead Briane Harris , the Jennifer Jones farewell tour , an epic match-up in the final between Jones and Homan and the capping of an historic run by the Homan foursome.

Homan went unbeaten (110) to win the Scotties in a very tough field and now has a remarkable record of 48-5 on the season.

“That’s going to be tough to match,” Kennedy said. “That was amazing curling and Jen’s swan song and all the storylines made it great. There were some really good up-and-coming teams and the level of curling was incredibly high, so we’ve definitely got our work cut out for us to make it as entertaini­ng.

“There is some inspiratio­n just in the way that the Homan team played. Rachel had a killer instinct about her and the way she was making shots and refusing to lose.”

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