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Stoughton on fire as Canada steals win from USA (CCA)

Jeff Stoughton brought the hammer down on the stars and stripes Monday night in the Ford World Men’s Curling Championship, presented by Richardson.


Photo: Michael Burns Photography

In a classic confrontation with Pete Fenson of Bemidji, Minn., that the Yanks sorely needed to win in order to stay in contention for the playoffs, the Canadians notched singles on the last three ends for a 5-3 decision and Stoughton personally was on fire, scoring 97 per cent effectiveness on his shots.

The win lifted Canada back alongside idle Scotland in the unbeaten bracket at 5-and-0 and possibly set up a feature collision Tuesday night at the Brandt Centre between the leaders. Game time 7:30.

But in advance of that, Canada has a date with Thomas Dufour of France in the afternoon while Tom Brewster’s crew opens the morning against China.

Dufour’s surprise unit, with Tony Angiboust in the last-rock role for the men from the Haute Savoy, stayed within one game of the leaders, winning its fourth in five starts. The 6-5 loss for Norway further hampered the confidence of Thomas Ulsrud’s Olympic silver-winners, who head into Tuesday’s action with a 2-3 record.

Asked about his high-percentage performance, Stoughton shrugged.

“That’s what you’re there for,” he said. “You have to make all the shots to help out the team if they’re struggling a little bit and it was just an unbelievable game. You have to do what you have to do to win this thing.”

The game featured end after end of players trading spectacular shots.

“They must have made 19 runbacks probably?” Stoughton said of Fenson’s crew of Shawn Rojeski, Joe Polo and Ryan Brunt. “Pete played awesome, a couple of great doubles with some nice hits and rolls. He was phenomenal.”

The U.S. maintained control of the issue until Fenson was heavy on last rocks in the last two ends.

“We were ready to go an extra end,” said Stoughton. “You have to think the guy will make it. We were fortunate he was just a little heavy. All of us (Jon Mead, Reid Carruthers and Steve Gould) had great draw weight and I think that helped. We got lucky in the ninth and 10th and that was it.”

Fenson opened with a deuce, took a go-head single in the fourth, but that was his team’s total offensive output.

“We made a few mistakes but for the most part we played better,” said the Bemidji skip. “We have to have better rock placement. When we get around the guards they have to be in the right spots. We had a little trouble with that and it probably was the difference.

“This is the world championship . . . everybody’s great. Teams that aren’t playing real, real sharp and are missing a few big shots — a shot here and a shot there in the middle of an end and you pay for it.”

Click for full story at the CCA website.

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