Times Colonist

Ontario scrapes by Victoria rink in opener

- DONNA SPENCER

REGINA — Howard fists pumped in triumph on the ice and on the bench at the Canadian men’s curling championsh­ip Saturday when Ontario’s Scott Howard threw a walk-off double takeout for the first Brier win of his career as a skip.

The son of four-time Canadian and world champion Glenn — who is coaching Scott’s foursome in Regina — skimmed a guard and made the double to score three for a 7-5 win over B.C.’s Catlin Schneider rink from the Victoria Curling Club.

Scott was under pressure with just 18 seconds remaining on Ontario’s time clock when he delivered his last stone.

“You want to have the rock in your hand in the 10th end and I knew the shot was there and we were running out of time,” the 33-year-old said. “I’ve always wanted to skip in a Brier and this is the time that’s come true.”

In other Pool A openers Saturday, Reid Carruthers beat Matt Dunstone 7-5 in an all-Manitoba matchup, Alberta’s Brendan Bottcher earned an 11-3 win over Andrew Symonds of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, and Northern Ontario’s Trevor Bonot defeated New Brunswick’s James Grattan 9-4.

Saskatchew­an’s Mike McEwen (2-0) grabbed the early lead in Pool B with a 7-6 win in the evening over defending champion Brad Gushue.

“I love how we played this game,” McEwen said. “It wasn’t sneaking out one. It was a solid team performanc­e. We’ve got to take advantage of when Brad and his team are not at their best, and they weren’t at their best tonight.”

Said Gushue: “Mike outplayed me. Mike played really well. I didn’t play anywhere near as good as I usually do, so take it on the chin and come out ready tomorrow.”

Alberta’s Aaron Sluchinski (1-0) had the night off. Gushue, Alberta’s Kevin Koe, Northwest Territorie­s’ Jamie Koe, Quebec’s Julien Tremblay and Prince Edward Island’s Tyler Smith were all 1-1.

Kevin Koe defeated younger brother Jamie 8-4, Tremblay beat Nunavut’s Shane Latimer 11-4, and Smith picked up an 11-7 win over Nova Scotia’s Matt Manuel (0-2).

Scott Howard played third for his father twice in five previous appearance­s at the Brier. Glenn was skipping Scott’s team until a knee injury forced him out of the lineup in December.

Scott, David Mathers and Tim March won Ontario men’s provincial­s as a three-man team before adding Mat Camm to play second in Regina.

Glenn’s fist flew into the air at the same time as his son’s Saturday.

“As soon as my knee went out in early December, the three of them raised their game exponentia­lly,” said Glenn, 61. “Scott took the helm as skip and he owns that position right now. I was just so proud of him to be able to come out and do that.

You can see he’s comfortabl­e out there. He doesn’t mind throwing the last shot.”

The top three teams in each pool of nine advance to a sixteam playoff round, from which the four Page playoff teams will emerge.

The Montana’s Brier winner March 10 represents Canada at the world championsh­ip March 30 to April 7 in Schaffhaus­en, Switzerlan­d and returns to the 2025 Brier in Kelowna as defending champion.

The victor also earns a berth in next year’s Olympic trials pending a top-six result at the world championsh­ip.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? B.C. skip Catlin Schneider delivers a rock during action against Ontario at the Brier in Regina on Saturday. The Victoria Curling Club rink lost 7-5.
DARRYL DYCK, THE CANADIAN PRESS B.C. skip Catlin Schneider delivers a rock during action against Ontario at the Brier in Regina on Saturday. The Victoria Curling Club rink lost 7-5.

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