Lenentine ends with 5-5 record, MacFadyen finishes with win for 4-5 record at Canadian Juniors (Curling Canada)

Defending Jr Men’s champs B.C. still alive at 2018 New Holland Canadian Juniors 

SHAWINIGAN, Que. — Tyler Tardi is still nowhere near 100 per cent, but the skip of the defending champion B.C. men’s team at the 2018 New Holland Canadian Junior Curling Championships is feeling much better than his low point earlier in the week.

It hasn’t come easy, but Team B.C. is still alive at the 2018 New Holland Canadian Juniors. (Photo, Curling Canada/Shawinigan Host Committee)

Then, he was having, ahem, stomach issues combined with a stubborn cough that left him barely upright at times.

Friday at the Club de Curling Grand-Mére, he admitted the stomach issue has been largely overcome; the coughing is still a problem but it’s better, and, oh yes, he’d pulled a stomach muscle from coughing so much.

“Still walking,” he said with a smile. “Still breathing.”

Which pretty much sums up the situation of Tardi’s team of vice-skip Sterling Middleton, second (and brother) Jordan Tardi, lead Zac Curtis and coach Paul Tardi (Tyler and Jordan’s dad).

The team has not been near its best here this week, but has rallied in the late stages of the Canadian Juniors, and thanks to a stolen 6-5 win Friday over Northern Ontario’s Tanner Horgan (8-2; Sudbury) will be in a playoff tiebreaker Friday at 1:30 p.m. (all times Eastern).

Four teams — B.C., Manitoba’s JT Ryan (Winnipeg), Alberta’s Karsten Sturmay (Edmonton) and 2017 silver-medallist Matthew Hall (Kitchener) — finished the Championship Pool round robin with 7-3 records, behind first-place Northern Ontario.

While B.C. takes on Alberta, Ontario will play Manitoba, with the two winners advancing to Saturday’s 6 p.m. semifinal; the winner of that game will play Northern Ontario for the gold medal Sunday at 6 p.m.

“We’ve been struggling a bit, I’m not going to lie,” said Tyler Tardi, 19, who stole the winning deuce in the 10th end when Horgan was a couple inches light on his last-shot draw to the four-foot. “We’re just hanging in there, and we’ve gotten a bit lucky. That’s the way the sport goes, I guess. But we have a chance, and that’s all we wanted from the start — a chance to be in the playoffs, and mission accomplished.”

Alberta got into the tiebreaker in similar fashion, taking two in the ninth end and then stealing one in the 10th when Ryan was just heavy with his draw for the victory.

In the other men’s games, Ontario stayed alive with an 11-4 win over Nova Scotia’s Matthew Manuel (6-4; Halifax); and Newfoundland/Labrador’s Daniel Bruce (4-6; Corner Brook) defeated Quebec’s Alek Bédard (5-5; Lacolle) 7-5.

[In seeding pool play Friday afternoon, Summerside PEI’s Alex MacFadyen rink scored 5 points in the 3rd end and 4 to end with a win, and a 4-5 record for the event, beating the Liam Marin rink from Saint John NB by a 12-9 score. The NB rink, which includes PEI’s Tyler Smith, also finished at 4-5.

Nova Scotia’s Karlee Burgess has her sights set on a second gold medal. (Photo, Curling Canada/Shawinigan Host Committee)

The women’s playoff situation is cleaner, meanwhile. Nova Scotia’s Kaitlyn Jones advanced to Sunday’s women’s gold-medal game with an 8-4 win over Newfoundland/Labrador’s Mackenzie Glynn (5-5; St. John’s). Jones, backed up by 2016 world junior champs Kristin Clarke at vice-skip and Karlee Burgess at second (lead Lindsey Burgess and coach Andrew Atherton round out the team), finished with a 9-1 round-robin record.

“I think the girls are pretty excited,” said Karlee Burgess. “It’s a huge step for us this year. I think for Kris and me, the experience is huge. We’ve been in those big games before.”

Behind Nova Scotia, New Brunswick’s Justine Comeau (Fredericton) and Quebec’s Laurie St-Georges (Laval-sur-le-Lac) finished second and third respectively with 8-2 records and will play in Saturday’s 1 p.m. semifinal. The winner will play Nova Scotia for gold Sunday at 1 p.m.

Quebec finished the round-robin with a 7-1 win over Prince Edward Island’s Lauren Lenentine (5-5; Cornwall), while New Brunswick was an 8-5 winner over Ontario’s Emma Wallingford (6-4; Ottawa).

In the other women’s game Friday morning, Alberta’s Kayla Skrlik (7-3; Falher) shaded Northern Ontario’s Hailey Beaudry (3-7; Thunder Bay).

TSN/RDS2, the official broadcaster of Curling Canada’s Season of Champions, will provide live and exclusive coverage of the women?s and men?s semifinals on Saturday, Jan. 20, and finals on Sunday, Jan. 21. The same games also will be streamed live in the U.S. on ESPN3. CLICK HERE for the broadcast schedule.

The winning teams Sunday will represent Canada at the 2018 World Junior Championships, March 3-10 in Aberdeen, Scotland.

The full scoreboard can be viewed at http://www.curling.ca/scoreboard/

Click to read this story at Curling Canada

 

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