Times Colonist

Canadian Homan picks up two more wins at women’s curling worlds

- GREGORY STRONG

SYDNEY, N.S. — When coach Don Bartlett started working with Rachel Homan’s team this season, he wanted the foursome to aim for a winning percentage of at least 80 per cent.

Mission more than accomplish­ed so far.

Homan picked up two more victories Tuesday to remain unbeaten at the world women’s curling championsh­ip at 6-0. She edged Italy’s Stefania Constantin­i 8-7 and followed it up with an 8-5 victory over Switzerlan­d’s Silvana Tirinzoni in the evening for her 22nd straight win.

The top-ranked Ottawa-based side is now 55-5 on the campaign for an eye-popping victory clip of 92 per cent.

Tirinzoni (6-1), who has earned four straight world titles, had her 42-game winning streak at this competitio­n come to an end.

In a marquee matchup between the top two women’s teams in the world rankings, Homan, Tracy Fleury, Emma Miskew and Sarah Wilkes scored four points in the seventh end to turn the game. The players shook hands after a Swiss single in the eighth.

“They played so great, I think nobody would have been able to beat them today,” Tirinzoni said. “We tried everything, but not today. So 42 it is.”

Homan set the tone in the second end with a highlight-reel double angle-raise takeout for a deuce. In the fifth, she used control weight for a long double-takeout to set up another pair.

Uncharacte­ristic errors from the Swiss back end of Tirinzoni and fourth Alina Paetz led to Canada’s first four-point end of the event. Paetz wrecked on a guard with her first shot and rolled out after her second stone was wide.

Homan had hammer and made the draw to the delight of the partisan crowd.

“To see her playing like this is a joy to watch,” said national team coach Viktor Kjell. “She’s feeling it.”

In the morning, Canada forced the Italians to a single in the 10th end and secured the win in the extra end when Constantin­i’s final throw overcurled, leaving the opposing rock as shot stone.

The Canadians shot 86 per cent to Italy’s 84 per cent in the back-and-forth battle. Fleury was slightly off in the early going — she shot a game-low 72 per cent — as Italy scored deuces in the first and fifth ends and took a 4-3 lead into the break.

Homan regained the lead with a pair in the sixth and added singles in the seventh and ninth ends. Her squad put the pressure on in the 10th while up one without hammer.

Canada sat five after Homan’s final throw, forcing the Italians to make a draw to force an extra end.

“We stuck together,” Homan said. “We figured out the rocks and the ice. Once we did that, we started making more shots.”

Fleury rebounded late, making all four of her shots over the last two ends. Her final peel in the 11th left Italy without guards in play.

Constantin­i’s final throw — a soft raise attempt — stopped short and Homan didn’t need to return to the hack.

“You’re going to get games like this where you’re not quite sharp and you’ve got to rely a little bit too much on your skip,” Bartlett said. “But Rachel is the best skip in the world. Her record shows it this year.”

South Korea’s Eunji Gim improved to 5-1 with a 10-3 rout of Turkey’s Dilsat Yildiz in the evening. Scotland’s Rebecca Morrison outscored Estonia’s Liisa Turmann 12-8 and Sweden’s Anna Hasselborg topped Denmark’s Madeleine Dupont 6-5 in an extra end.

After 11 draws, Italy and South Korea were tied in third place. Denmark fell to 5-2 and Sweden was alone in sixth place at 4-3.

 ?? DARREN CALABRESE, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Canada skip Rachel Homan delivers a stone during World Women’s Curling Championsh­ip action against Italy in Sydney, N.S. on Tuesday.
DARREN CALABRESE, THE CANADIAN PRESS Canada skip Rachel Homan delivers a stone during World Women’s Curling Championsh­ip action against Italy in Sydney, N.S. on Tuesday.

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