Toronto Star

McDonald, Homan win Ontario titles

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Considerin­g the strength of the field, Scott McDonald would have done well just to make the playoffs at the Ontario curling championsh­ip.

He did much more than that. McDonald took out some of the sport’s biggest names over the week and put an exclamatio­n mark on his effort with an emphatic 8-2 rout of John Epping in Sunday’s final.

“We just rode a high the entire week,” McDonald said in a phone interview. “Fortunatel­y for us, we were able to perform when it mattered the most.”

The result gave the London-based skip a berth in the March 1-10 Tim Hortons Brier in Brandon, Man.

It will be the first appearance at the national playdowns for McDonald and Kingston-based third Jonathan Beuk, second Wesley Forget and lead Scott Chadwick. The rink is in its first season together as a foursome.

“I’m not sure there’s a single word to describe it,” Forget said in a text. “Maybe a combinatio­n of honour and shock.”

Jim Cotter is also Brier-bound after a 9-4 win over Jason Montgomery in the British Columbia final, while the Northern Ontario honours went to Brad Jacobs after a 7-5 victory over Tanner Horgan.

Earlier in the day, Andrew Symonds beat Rick Rowsell 5-0 to secure the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador title. Brad Gushue, a 14-time provincial champion, was not in the field since he has a Brier berth as the defending champion.

The remaining spots in the Feb. 15-24 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Sydney, N.S., were also filled over the weekend.

Rachel Homan will represent Ontario after her 6-4 victory over Julie Tippin on Saturday. Krista McCarville took the Northern Ontario women’s crown on Sunday with an 8-7 win over Jenna Enge and Sarah Wark won the B.C. title by topping Corryn Brown 7-4.

Kerri Einarson and Casey Scheidegge­r locked up wild-card game spots at the Scotties based on their Canadian rankings.

The rest of the Brier field will be finalized over the coming weeks.

McDonald defeated the likes of Glenn Howard and Charley Thomas in Elmira before beating Epping three straight times — the round-robin finale, the Page Playoff 1-2 game and the final — to run the table at 11-0.

McDonald scored at least seven points in every game and outscored the opposition 85-38 overall.

“I don’t think anyone ever enters a tournament having played as much as we did, and put the work in that we did, to finish second or third,” McDonald said. “We wanted to go to the Brier.

“Even just saying that now — that we’re going to the Brier — that’s pretty cool.”

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