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PEI native Brett Gallant 3-0 at Mixed Doubles, Sabrina Smith/Kyle Holland are 0-3 (Curling Canada)

The 2016 Canadian Mixed Doubles Championship kicked off on Thursday with 32 teams – including some very familiar names – vying for the chance to compete at the world championship in Karlstad, Sweden in April.

National Mixed Doubles Coach Jim Waite is on site in Saskatoon, and he shares this report on the first day of action:

The ice surface is perfect for Mixed Doubles here at the Nutana Curling Club. The swing is almost five feet to get to the button and the ice is fast….exactly what is needed for great shot-making in this discipline and the players have acknowledged the work of the host club.

After three draws, there are a few teams working their way to the top of the leaderboard.

Father-daughter duo, Jim and Jaelyn Cotter (Curling Canada/Darlene Danyliw photo)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

After three games, the pairings of Laura Crocker and Geoff Walker, Rachel Homan and Mark Nichols, Dawn and Mike McEwen, Lisa Weagle and John Epping, Kalynn Park and Charley Thomas, Nancy Martin and Catlin Schneider, Joanne Courtney and Reid Carruthers, Emma Miskew and Ryan Fry, Marliese Kasner and Dustin Kalthoff, and Jocelyn Peterman and Brett Gallant are leading the way at 3-0.  Each of the four pools contains eight teams, meaning there are seven games to be played in order to complete the round robin portion of the event.

[PEI’s team of Sabrina Smith and Kyle Holland are still looking for their first win, after three losses]

There are three parent/child teams here at the Championships and two of them already have their first win.

Jim Cotter and daughter Jaelyn from B.C. are 2-1 after three games, while 2013 Canadian Champion Robert Desjardins and his daughter Emilie from Quebec are 1-2 The other pairing of Donda Lee Deis and her son Ryan from here in Saskatchewan are still looking for their first win.

Another father-daughter duo, Robert and Emilie Desjardins (Curling Canada/Darlene Danyliw photo)

The 2015 Canadian Champions, Charley Thomas and Kalynn Park, won their first game but the 2014 winners, Kim and Wayne Tuck lost their game on a measure to Ontario Mixed Doubles champions, Mike Anderson and Danielle Inglis.

There were six rounds scheduled on the first day of play. It is a grueling process playing three games each day for the first two days. Youth and fitness levels are a couple of factors that will come into play before this is all over.

Find scoring and standings, here.

Go to the event website, www.curling.ca/2016mixeddoubles/, to access the streaming link.

The Canadian Mixed Doubles competition format will feature 32 teams (each team consists of one male curler and one female curler) divided into four pools of eight, with the four pool winners after the round robin plus the eight teams with the next-best records advancing to a 12-team single elimination playoff. The four pool-winners have first-round byes.

The gold-medal game is scheduled for Sunday at 4 p.m.

For the full list of competitors, click here. And for the full schedule, click here.

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