PEI Curling Championships – upcoming events and entry deadlines

The Juniors, Women’s. Masters, Men’s and Women’s championships are now complete, but a number of provincial curling championships remain, and will be held in February and March.

Entries have now closed for the following events:
PEI Credit Unions Senior Men (age 50+), Feb. 10-13 in Crapaud. Nine teams are entered.
PEI Credit Unions Senior Women (age 50+), Feb. 17-20 at the Western Community Curling Club in Alberton. Eight teams have signed up

Provincial age 17 and Under, Feb. 17-20 at the Silver Fox Curling and Yacht Club in Summerside. 4 men’s and 6 women’s teams are entered.

Ferguson Funeral Homes Provincial Stick Curling Championships, Feb. 21-23 at the Silver Fox. 12 teams have signed up for the Men’s and Mixed division, while four teams are entered in the Women’s section.

Entries close on February 3 for the Provincial age 15 and Under, February 24-25 at the Crapaud Community Curling Club. Eight boys and four girls teams have signed up to-date.

Closing date has been extended to February 10 for the KFC Provincial age 12 and Under Curling Championships on Feb. 26, as well as the new “12 and Under Fun Tournament” on March 4. Both events are at the Crapaud Community Curling Club.

Closing date for the Junior Mixed, March 9-12 at the Montague Curling Club, is also Feb. 10.

Entries close on February 23 for both the Provincial Mixed, March 16-19 at the Silver Fox, and for The Dominion Provincial Curling Club Championships, March 22-25 at the Montague Curling Club. Most clubs are holding their club championships over the next few weeks to determine their entries.

Entry fees for each event, and online entry form are at PEICurling.com. Payment for each event may be made online or by cheque, and must reach the PEICA by one week after the entry deadline.

Montague looking for more entries for Curl for Cancer this weekend

The Phillip Curley Memorial Curl for Cancer Bonspiel takes place Saturday Feb. 4 from 10 am to 6 pm. More curlers are needed!
This year’s Curl for Cancer is in memory of Phillip Curley. His brother Pat will throw the first stone in his memory. But we need many curlers to make this year’s event a huge success.

Please sign up as soon as possible, teams or single entry, for two – six end games. The first game will start at 10, there will be Trivia with Amy Campbell and lots of a great prizes! All for only a tax deductible $20.00 entry fee per person.

We are also looking for donations to the bake sale table, these are to be
dropped off on Saturday morning by 10am.

Thank you in advance for you continued support of this important
fundraiser.

Char-la-bel Mixed Funspiel to have Mardi Gras theme this year

The 27th Char-la-bel “Fun Mixed” Bonspiel takes place at the Charlottetown Curling Club, from February 24-25, 2012.

$160.00 Team Entry Includes:

Mardi Gras Theme!

Three games (six ends, skins format)

A chance at a draw to the button to win a NEW CAR!

$3,000 prize pool (based on full entry)

Friday Night: Chicken Dinner & Entertainment

Saturday: Pancake Breakfast, Soup & Sandwich Buffet,

Trivia, and Prize Auction

2 Complimentary Beers per participant 

Draw to the Button for a chance to win a 2012 Ford Fusion!

Click for Entry Form

Hearts features slice of same-old (QMI Agency)

(by George Karrys)

The field for the Canadian women’s championship, the Tournament of Hearts, is now set for Red Deer, Alta., from Feb. 18-26 (TSN) and for better or worse, it’s a big slice of same-old.

Event organizers and fans will likely be pleased to see Jennifer Jones (Manitoba), Kelly Scott (B.C.) and Marie-France Larouche (Quebec) making yet another appearance. Michelle Englot (Saskatchewan) and Kim Dolan (P.E.I.) have even more veteran savvy. Last year’s surprise bronze medallists led by Heather Smith-Dacey (Nova Scotia) are a youthful crew with a schooled skipper at the helm. The other Atlantic teams, Newfoundland’s Heather Strong and New Brunswick’s Andrea Kelly, have become synonymous with the championship in recent years.

Heather Nedohin (photo from CCA website)

The host province will be represented by Edmonton’s Heather Nedohin, and one can only guess as to how her team will be received in Red Deer. With Calgary’s Shannon Kleibrink and Cheryl Bernard sidelined prior to the Alberta semifinal, Nedohin’s hybrid squad — which features two former Nova Scotians in Beth Iskiw and Laine Peters — offers a breath of fresh air … although this is still another team stacked with veteran experience.

Only Tracy Horgan’s Sudbury, Ont. outfit represents a bonafide breakthrough of youthful exuberance. Of course, once Sherry Middaugh was eliminated in the provincial semifinal, Ontario was guaranteed to be sending some youngsters west.

Horgan played giant-killer in dispatching defending champion Rachel Homan, whose Ottawa foursome — with an average age of just 22 — went 9-0 during the week and led by one, with last rock, coming down to Homan’s final two stones. However, disaster struck. One double-jammed runback later, Horgan made a draw and Homan missed the target to drop a steal of three and hand the Sudbury crew an unlikely victory.

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As befits the wild nature of provincial finals (most of which are played on more unpredictable club facility ice) there were other wild finishes. In Vancouver, Scott lined up a basic peel on her first stone and flashed, giving opponent Marla Mallett an open draw to the button to apply some serious pressure. Mallett missed the rings entirely, and Scott’s draw for the win merely needed to hit the paint.

But no final was more gripping — and wacky — than Jones’ victory in Portage La Prairie.

In a nod to her rampage of last-minute victories on the way to the 2008 world championship crown, Jones needed five straight elimination wins to book her return to Red Deer — and she did it. She did it with second Jill Officer playing competitively for the first time all season, following the birth of her first child — days before the start of the provincial Officer had yet to confirm her status in the starting lineup.

Click for full story at Canoe Slam! Sports

Health and Wellness Minister congratulates Mike Gaudet rink (PEI Gov’t)

Congratulations to the Mike Gaudet rink – Island representatives at 2012 Brier

CHARLOTTETOWN, PEI— Excellent teamwork throughout the week helped the Mike Gaudet rink secure top spot at the 2012 provincial Tankard, says Minister of Health and Wellness, Doug Currie.

“The Gaudet rink showed great teamwork and focus in each of its games during the provincial championship,” said Minister Currie. “That combination, along with their experience and skill, made them the team to beat. The Province of Prince Edward Island wishes them all the best at the Brier.”

In the championship draw Monday night at the Cornwall Curling Club, Gaudet beat Brett Gallant’s rink 7-5. The team, consisting of Mike Gaudet, skip; Tyler MacKenzie, third; Tyler Harris, second; and lead Sean Clarey, now advances to the 2012 Tim Hortons Brier March 3 to 11 in Saskatoon.

PEICurling.com photo: Mike Gaudet

“Prince Edward Island is pleased to support our Islander curlers,” said Minister Currie. “The field at this year’s Tankard was incredibly strong and featured curlers who have had many years of experience at the national and international level which speaks very highly of our province’s curling community. We are confident in the strong future of curling in our province.”

Mike Gaudet claims PEI Tankard (Guardian story and video)

(by Marcel Vander Weir)

CORNWALL — It’s been eight years since Michael Gaudet has skipped a provincial curling team into the national championships.

But following a brilliant performance at the P.E.I. Tankard championship held in Cornwall this weekend, the 39-year-old has again won the chance to represent the Island at the Tim Hortons Brier.

This year’s Brier takes place in Saskatoon from March 3 to 11.

Gaudet’s rink defeated 21-year-old Brett Gallant’s rink 7-5 in what was an intense Tankard final Monday night.

(Photo no longer available at source)

TC Media photo by Brian McInnis
Skip Mike Gaudet releases his stone during action in the final game of the 2012 provincial Tankard at the Cornwall Curling Club Monday night. Gaudet curls out of the Charlottetown Curling Club and was playing clubmate Brett Gallant.

It’s a little unexpected,” Gaudet admitted after the match. “Going into the year, our goal was to obviously win this year, but when you finally play good enough and it comes true . . . it’s just hard to take in right now.”His rink of third Tyler MacKenzie, second Tyler Harris, and lead Sean Clarey play out of the Charlottetown Curling Club.

“We gelled together well all year, I found,” Gaudet told The Guardian. “We get along great and the guys . . . they played great in front of me. So it makes my job a lot easier.”

Gaudet represented Prince Edward Island at the Brier last year as a third in Eddie MacKenzie’s rink. Alex MacFadyen was the lead.

Click for full story in today’s Guardian.

Click for video by Mitch MacDonald.

Mike Gaudet wins his 4th Tankard, beating Brett Gallant 7-5 in tonight’s final

Charlottetown’s Mike Gaudet rink beat the Brett Gallant foursome by a 7-5 score tonight at the Cornwall Curling Club to win the PEI Tankard Provincial Men’s Curling Championship. It’s Gaudet’s fourth Tankard, winning as skip in 1994 and 2004, and last year as third for Eddie MacKenzie, who in turn played third for runner-up Gallant this year. Other members of the Gaudet team are Tyler MacKenzie, Tyler Harris, and Sean Clarey. Backing up Gallant were Eddie MacKenzie at third, Anson Carmody at second, and Alex MacFadyen at lead stone, with coach Al Ledgerwood.

Gaudet rink

Photo (L-R): Mike Gaudet, Tyler MacKenzie, Tyler Harris, Sean Clarey

Photo (L-R): Al Ledgerwood (coach), Alex MacFadyen, Anson Carmody, Eddie MacKenzie, Brett Gallant, PEICA President George Koke

In tonight’s game, Gallant blanked the first two ends, and opened the scoring with a deuce in the third. Gallant ran into trouble in the next end when he elected to pick a Gaudet stone out from several of his own stones, and missed the mark, handing Gaudet an open hit for three.

Photo: 4th end – Gaudet picks up three

Gallant picked up a single in the next end to the the game 3-all at the half. The sixth end was blanked, and Gallant stole a single in the seventh to lead 4-3. Gaudet then manages to remove a Gallant shot stone which was behind cover and touching the four foot, and stays to count two, to take the lead 5-4.

Photo: Tyler MacKenzie lines up Gaudet’s final shot in the 8th

Photo: Gaudet picks up a deuce in eight

Gallant then makes a tough final shot in end nine, to score one and tie the game at 5-5 by going through a port to remove the Gaudet counter, but lose last rock advantage in the final end, where Gaudet removes the the only Gallant stone in the house with his first skip rock to lie two. Gallant’s final stone is heavy, handing Gaudet, who doesn’t have to throw his final rock, the 7-5 win.

Photo: Gallant’s final stone is heavy

Photo: Handshakes

Both teams got to the final with wins over Charlottetown clubmate Rod MacDonald.

The Gaudet rink beat them 9-4 to win the Page 1-2 game and a bye to the final.

Gallant, a former Canadian Junior champion, came from behind to steal a deuce in the last end of the afternoon semi-final over MacDonald, whose last two rocks didn’t perform as expected, giving Gallant a 7-6 win and an opportunity to play in the PEI Tankard final.

The Gaudet foursome now advance to the Tim Hortons Brier, March 3-11 in Saskatoon.

Mike Gaudet wins his 4th Tankard

Charlottetown’s Mike Gaudet rink beat the Brett Gallant foursome by a 7-5 score tonight at the Cornwall Curling Club to win the PEI Tankard Provincial Men’s Curling Championship. It’s Gaudet’s fourth Tankard, winning as skip in 1994 and 2004, and last year as third for Eddie MacKenzie, who played third for runner-up Gallant this year. Other members of the Gaudet rink are Tyler MacKenzie, Tyler Harris, and Sean Clarey. Backing up Gallant were MacKenzie at third, Anson Carmody at second, and Alex MacFadyen at lead stone, with coach Al Ledgerwood.

The Gaudet foursome will advance to the Tim Hortons Brier, March 3-11 in Saskatoon.

More later…

Brett Gallant scores deuces in last two ends to advance to tonight’s Tankard final against Mike Gaudet

Things were looking good in the latter ends of this afternoon’s PEI Tankard semi-final for Rod MacDonald and his rink, who have a combined total of 26 Tankards to their credit. The game had been tied up 3-3 at the half against their Charlottetown clubmates the Brett Gallant foursome, when MacDonald stole a single in end six to take the lead, followed by a deuce in the eighth end to pull ahead 6-3. However, the Brett Gallant team scored a deuce in the ninth, and stole another two in the 10th end to win the game 7-6 and advance to the final, tonight at 6:30 at the Cornwall Curling Club, against the Mike Gaudet squad, also from the Charlottetown Curling Club.

Gallant, a former Canadian Junior champion and World Junior silver medallist, was playing with third Eddie MacKenzie, who skipped last year’s Tankard-winning team, along with Gallant’s long-time teammates Anson Carmody and Alex MacFadyen. Other members of the MacDonald rink were third Kevin Champion, second Mark O’Rourke, and lead Andrew Robinson. Gaudet played third on MacKenzie’s winning team last year, and has a total three Tankards to his credit. His rink includes third Tyler MacKenzie, second Tyler Harris, and lead Sean Clarey.

The winner of this evening’s game will advance to the Tim Hortons Brier, March 3-11 in Saskatoon.

Jennifer Jones books ticket to Scotties (Postmedia News)

REUTERS/Shaun Best

Jones (REUTERS/Shaun Best)

Four-time national women’s curling champion Jennifer Jones will be back at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts — but she had to work for it.

Jones, from Winnipeg, had to navigate five straight elimination matches over the past two days at the Manitoba provincial championship in Portage la Prairie, completing the run with a 6-5 win over Chelsea Carey of Morden on Sunday afternoon.

“It’s just crazy,” Jones said. “Sometimes I have to pinch myself. I can’t believe we get to do all these wonderful things.”

Jones was one of eight teams to qualify for the Scotties on Sunday. Joining her in Red Deer, Alta., beginning Feb. 18 will be: Heather Smith-Dacey from Nova Scotia; Andrea Kelly from New Brunswick; Marie-France Larouche from Quebec; Tracy Horgan from Ontario, Michelle Englot from Saskatchewan; Heather Nedohin from Alberta, and Kelly Scott from British Columbia.

Click for full Postmedia News story in the National Post

Carmody, Ramsay finish 3rd at Alberta Scotties, & won’t qualify for trip home to Summerside Players’ Ch’ship (Calgary Herald)

‘Incredibly disappointing’ finish for Webster’s team

 (By Allen Cameron, Calgary Herald)

It wasn’t just that Crystal Webster lost Sunday morning’s semifinal at the Scotties Alberta women’s curling championship.

It was the way she lost, 6-5 in an extra end to Edmonton’s Heather Nedohin, that will haunt Webster, third Erin Carmody, second Geri-Lynn Ramsay and lead Sam Preston for a few weeks, at the very least.

Webster’s team, the third seed heading into the provincials at the Leduc Recreation Centre, played a near perfect game for nine ends. After Nedohin was light on a draw for two in the ninth end, Webster took a 5-4 lead and the hammer into the 10th end – a situation no skip on the planet would turn down.

In the 10th, Webster had an out-turn draw to bite the four-foot for the victory – except, as she watched in desperation, the rock refused to curl. It had the right weight but hung outside, and Nedohin won a measure for the tying point to force an extra end.

And in the 11th, disaster struck, repeatedly. All four Webster players had misses, Nedohin’s team didn’t have any, and Webster was left only with an in-turn draw to bite a piece of the button to win; she was well short, and her dreams for a provincial title came to a crushing end.

“Absolutely; it’s just so incredibly disappointing after we played such a solid game,” said an emotional Webster. “We obviously felt like we were in control the whole game; the first time we were losing wasn’t until the end of the game, which is disappointing. It’s a bit heartbreaking.

“And we had the opportunity in 10 to shut it down, too. It almost looked like it fell a little bit halfway down the sheet. I guess I might have thrown it that way but it certainly ran straighter than we expected.”

Webster’s first-year team – Carmody and Ramsay moved from P.E.I. in the off-season to join forces with Webster and Preston – did well enough on the World Curling Tour during the fall to sit seventh on the Canadian Team Ranking System, but they won’t qualify for the season-ending Players’ Championships in April in Summerside, P.E.I.

Crystal Webster and her rink fell in the Scotties Alberta provincials semifinal Sunday to eventual champion, Heather Nedohin, in extra ends when she allowed Nedohin to steal one to tie the game in the 10th end.
Crystal Webster and her rink fell in the Scotties Alberta provincials semifinal Sunday to eventual champion, Heather Nedohin, in extra ends when she allowed Nedohin to steal one to tie the game in the 10th end.
Photograph by: Stuart Gradon, Calgary Herald

Mike Gaudet rink advance to Monday evening PEI Tankard final. Rod MacDonald will play Brett Gallant in semi-final.

The Mike Gaudet rink scored a triple in end two, deuces in ends four and six, and stole singles in the next two ends to beat the Rod MacDonald rink by a 9-4 score this evening and win the Page 1-2 game at the PEI Tankard provincial men’s curling championship. The Gaudet foursome now advances to the PEI Tankard final, Monday at 6:30 pm at the Cornwall Curling Club. MacDonald, who was undefeated until this game, will now play in the semi-final, Monday at 1:30 pm. Other members of the Gaudet rink are Tyler MacKenzie, Tyler Harris, and Sean Clarey, while MacDonald’s teammates are Kevin Champion, Mark O’Rourke, and Andrew Robinson.

MacDonald’s opponent in the semi will be former Canadian Junior champion Brett Gallant, who eliminated Robert Campbell from the competition in this evening’s Page 3-4 game, scoring a single point with hammer in an extra end, to win by a 6-5 score. Playing with Gallant are defending PEI Tankard champion skip Eddie MacKenzie at third, along with Gallant’s long-time teammates Anson Carmody and Alex MacFadyen, with coach Al Ledgerwood. Completing the Campbell foursome were Philip Gorveatt, Eric Broderson, and Mike Dillon.

The final two qualifiers for the playoff round were selected Sunday afternoon, with Campbell scoring 3 points in an extra end to beat John Likely 10-7, and Gallant, aided by a second end triple, winning 8-6 over Jamie Newson. Rod MacDonald qualified first out of the triple knockout portion of the event on Friday, while Gaudet beat Gallant on Saturday to grab the second spot in the playoffs. All teams playing on Sunday were from the Charlottetown Curling Club. 12 teams were entered in the competition.

The PEI Tankard champion will advance to the Tim Hortons Brier, March 3-11 in Saskatoon.

Nedohin to represent Alberta at Scotties – Webster with PEI’s Carmody & Ramsay finishes third (Calgary Herald)

Kelly, Smith-Dacey win in NB, NS

Edmonton skip Heather Nedohin captured the Scotties Alberta provincial title Sunday with an 8-5 win over Jessie Kaufman.
Edmonton skip Heather Nedohin captured the Scotties Alberta provincial title Sunday with an 8-5 win over Jessie Kaufman.
 

Edmonton’s Heather Nedohin is headed back to the Scotties Tournament of Hearts Canadian women’s curling championship, and she’ll going to a city where she has some fond memories.

Nedohin clinched a fifth trip to the Scotties — and her first since 2000 — with an 8-5 win over upstart Jessie Kaufman on Sunday at the Leduc Recreation Centre. She’ll be joined by third Beth Iskiw, second Jessica Mair and Calgary-based lead Laine Peters at the Scotties, which kick of Feb. 18 at the Enmax Centrium in Red Deer — the city in which Nedohin captured the 1996 world junior women’s title.

Nedohin reached the final by beating Calgary’s Crystal Webster 6-5 in an extra end in the semifinal; then, in the final, she avenged earlier losses to Kaufman in Saturday’s Page one-two playoff and the A-event final on Thursday.

Nedohin will be among the early favourites in Red Deer in a field that includes reigning Scotties champ Amber Holland, along with four-time champ Jennifer Jones of Winnipeg, who claimed the Manitoba championship on Sunday in Portage.

Other teams qualified include Tracy Horgan of Ontario, Marie-France Larouche of Quebec, Andrea Kelly of New Brunswick, Heather Smith-Dacey of Nova Scotia, Kim Dolan of Prince Edward Island, Heather Strong of Newfoundland and Labrador and Kerry Galusha of the Territories.

The Saskatchewan and B.C. reps are being decided later today; Michelle Englot and Stefanie Lawton were in the Saskatchewan final, while Kelly Scott is up against Marla Mallett in B.C.

Canadian university champs win gold and silver in Japan (CCA)

It was a great day for Canada at the Karuizawa International Curling Championships, with our women winning gold and our men taking home silver.

Our Canadian women have been the cardiac kids all week, and they stayed true to form in the final against Switzerland. The girls were tied without hammer heading in to the ninth end, but ended up giving up a nearly crushing three point score.

The girls obviously had their work cut out for them in the tenth, but in typical Canadian fashion they didn’t quit. After the front-end got a couple of corner guards established, third Sarah Wilkes made a terrific come-around on her last shot, leaving a small piece of her rock exposed. The Swiss skip decided to go after Sarah’s rock rather than peeling the guard, and proceeded to miss everything. Then, skip Laura Crocker played another come-around, and ended up biting top twelve, again with just a corner exposed. That left the Swiss skip with no choice but to try the same shot again, and as luck would have it, she ended up missing everything again. Laura then had an open draw to the house to score three points, and she made no mistake.

The next detail was to find a way to steal the extra end, and their formula started with virtually flawless execution. In fact, by the time the Swiss skip came to throw her last shot we had two rocks buried in the four foot, and she had no option other than to draw the button. She gave it a good effort, but her rock stopped about a foot short of the button. That left Canada with a one point steal, and the title. It was a fitting end to an outstanding week for the young Canadian team of Laura Crocker, Sarah Wilkes, Jen Gates, Pam Feldkamp, Cheryl Kreviazuk, and coach Maurice Wilson. They came out on top of a very strong women’s field, and have an extremely bright future ahead of them.

Our men’s team was also very impressive this week, and came within an eye-lash of winning it all. After trailing early in the final game against Japan Selection, the men fought back and had the score tied playing the ninth without hammer. However, when skip Colin Thomas came to throw his last rock he was looking at four opposition counters, and had no choice but to play a raise take-out to try to minimize the damage. As it turned out the raised rock rolled about a foot too far after removing the object rock, and the Japanese skip looked to have a relatively straightforward shot for three. Fortunately for us however, he ended up jamming our rock on to one of his own at the back of the house, and we escaped by giving up just a single point.

That left us one down with hammer playing the tenth end, and the team managed to set themselves up for two thanked to a terrific run-back double by third Cory Schuh. The potential for two was still there when it came to skip Colin Thomas’ last shot, but unfortunately he was just heavy on a quiet tap-back attempt. So, the guys ended up scoring one and headed to an extra end in the same tied without position as the girls.

Unfortunately, the Japanese lead made two perfect ticks, and we could never get a guard established. In the end, the best we could do was to force their skip to draw the the eight foot with his last rock, and he succeeded in doing so. All in all, it was an excellent effort for our young team of Colin Thomas, Cory Schuh, Chris Ford, Spencer Wicks, Stephen Ryan, and coach Jeff Thomas. They’re a talented young squad, who should give Brad Gushue a tussle in future years as they fight for supremacy in their home province of Newfoundland.

So, it was a very positive week for Canada in Karuizawa. Two medals, some wonderful memories, and many new friends. I couldn’t be prouder of our teams.

Rob Krepps,
Canadian University Coach

Click to read at the CCA website.

Draw one addendum

We received a number of queries about the unusual score in the Jamie Newson/Blair Jay game in draw one of the PEI Tankard, where the game was conceded in the eighth end with Newson having only a one point margin. … Continue reading

PEI Scotties starts Friday

The Scotties Tournament of Hearts provincial women’s curling championship gets underway Friday morning, with the final on Monday evening. The event was moved to a round robin format at the request of the majority of the six teams entered. Round … Continue reading

Bronze for Gray (Guardian)

(by Eric McCarthy) Winning medal highlight so far for P.E.I. curler at the Winter Youth Olympic Games in Austria It’s a week filled with one highlight after another for Maple Leaf Curling Club member Emily Gray. She’s the lead on … Continue reading

Team Canada wins Bronze!

Team Canada, which includes PEI’s Emily Gray at lead, won the Bronze medal in mixed curling at the Youth Olympic Games in Innsbruck Austria this afternoon, defeating Sweden 6-4. The game was tied at four after five ends, when Canada … Continue reading