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Watts rink picks up opening draw win at the Travelers Curling Club Ch’ship (Curling Canada)

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Charlottetown’s Dennis Watts rink picked up an 8-1 win in only six ends, over the Gary Weiss-skipped Team Ontario, from Thunder Bay in the opening draw of the Travelers Curling Club Championship in Kelowna BC.  The team includes 3rd Erik Brodersen, 2nd Andrew MacDougall, and lead Doug MacGregor. They have one game on Tuesday – against Alberta at 7 pm (all times Pacific).

The PEI women’s team, skipped by Sharon Horne, lost their opener 7-3 to Quebec, and play Manitoba (Tracy Andries) at 2 pm today and Saskatchewan (Danette Tracey) at 7 this evening. The Island squad, from the Western Community Curling Club in Alberton, also includes third stone Bobbi-Jean Boylan, second Alison Griffin, and lead stone Iva Griffin.

Here’s Curling Canada’s story on opening day:

SASKATCHEWAN COUNTING ON EXPERIENCE AS 2016 TRAVELERS OPENS

Banking on experience is key for Kory Kohuch and his Saskatchewan rink at the 2016 Travelers Curling Club Championship.

Three of the team’s four members have a key piece of experience they hope to leverage in Kelowna this week. Kohuch with second Wes Lang and lead David Schmirler were the 2014 Travelers champions in Halifax. With the addition of third David Kraichy, the rink hopes to add a second title to their curling resumes.

Travelers 2016 teams on the ice at the Kelowna Curling Club (Curling Canada/Jessica Krebs photo)

“It’s nice to come back knowing what to expect. Every year the calibre of the teams gets better, we know that. We try to get better as well. It’s a not a whole bunch difference other than we have the experience of knowing what to expect,” Kohuch said before the event began at the Kelowna Curling Club on Monday.

“Once you start the games the slate is wiped clean. It doesn’t matter what we’ve won in the past,” he added.

The addition of Kraichy to the team adds even more experience to the rink. The 32-year-old University of Saskatchewan assistant professor was runner-up in three Manitoba provincial finals. When asked about wearing the colours of another province, Kraichy said it’s just as special.

“I lost so many provincial finals in Manitoba that just winning a provincial title is good enough. I don’t care what colour the jacket is!”

Not only is the Saskatoon rink wearing the colours of a province that has won this event twice, the lead shares a last name with a Canadian curling legend.

“It’s a lot to live up to. I have never have been and never will be as good as her,” David Schmirler, a distant relative to the late Sandra Schmirler, admitted with a smile.

Kohuch opens the tournament on Tuesday morning against Quebec. The Quebec champions dropped their first game in Draw 1 action, 7-4 to Manitoba.

In front of fans and families from across the country, the 2016 event opened at the Kelowna Curling Club with a ceremonial first rock thrown by Kelowna curling royalty.

Sonja Gaudet, three-time Paralympic Games gold medallist and former world wheelchair gold medallist delivered the opening stone with the assistance of Sasha Carter, two-time Scotties champion and world champion. Pat Ryan, a two-time Canadian and World champion, joined Carter on the brush.

Jim Ursel, the 1977 Brier champion, held the broom.

Paralympic gold-medallist Sonja Gaudet delivers the ceremonial first rock of the 2016 Travelers Curling Club Championship, with sweepers Sasha Carter and Pat Ryan alongside (Curling Canada/Jessica Krebs photo)

Elsewhere in men’s play host B.C. squeaked out a 5-4 win over Newfoundland and Labrador. Prince Edward Island, Alberta, Nova Scotia and Ontario were also victorious to open the event.

In women’s play of Draw 1 it was the Saskatchewan women who fell to Manitoba 7-5. Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and Labrador, British Columbia, Quebec and Ontario were winners in the opening draw of the women’s event.

The 14 men’s and 14 women’s teams will be split into two seven-team round-robin pools. After a single round-robin, the top three teams in each pool will make the playoffs. The first-place teams will be seeded directly into the semifinals, Friday, Nov. 25, at 7 p.m. (all times Pacific). The second- and third-place teams will meet in crossover quarter-finals Friday at 2 p.m., with the winners moving into the semis.

The semifinal winners will play for gold, and the losers will play for bronze, Saturday, Nov. 26, at 10 a.m.

Selected games from the 2016 Travelers Curling Club Championships will be live-streamed at www.curling.ca/2016travelers/

Scores and standings from the event will be available at www.curling.ca/scoreboard/.

For draw times, team lineups and other event info, go to: www.curling.ca/2016travelers/

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