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Updated: Canadian Mixed Curling Ch’ship begins Sunday in Winnipeg, PEI represented by Melissa Morrow team (Curling Canada/Curl PEI)

The best Canadian mixed curling teams will converge at Winnipeg’s Fort Rouge Curling Club this Sunday for the 2019 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship. The field is rounded out with tried-and-true champions and up-and-comers.

Photo (Back Row L-R):  Andrew MacDougall, coach Jamie Newson, Eric Brodersen
(Front Row L-R): Melissa Morrow, Miranda Ellis

PEI  will be represented by the combined Silver Fox and Charlottetown Curling Club rink of:

Skip: Melissa Morrow (calls the game, throws third stones)
Erik Brodersen (throws fourth stones)
Second: Andrew MacDougall
Lead: Miranda Ellis
Coach: Jamie Newson

2017 Canadian mixed champion Trevor Bonot of Northern Ontario returns to the event after representing Canada at the World Mixed Curling Championship last season. He led his Thunder Bay, Ont., team to a silver medal at the worlds and has his sights set on winning his second national title. Bonot’s third, Jackie McCormick, returns to the lineup and they are joined by Mike McCarville at second and lead Angela Lee-Wiwcharyk. Lee-Wiwcharyk is making her national mixed debut while McCarville – the husband of 2016 Scotties Tournament of Hearts silver-medallist Krista – is back for his third edition of the Canadian Mixed.

Bonot isn’t the only former champion at the event. 2012 Canadian mixed champions Jason and Colleen Ackerman are back in the mix for Saskatchewan at skip and lead respectively. The Regina duo is joined by teammates vice-skip Deanna Doig and second Mitch Criton. In 2012, Ackerman defeated Alberta’s Kurt Balderston in the final. Balderston, the 1992 national mixed champion from Grande Prairie, will be at the Fort Rouge Curling Club this year, representing Alberta for the sixth time in his career.

But there are other teams at the Canadian Mixed making debuts in Winnipeg and are determined to compete for a chance to represent Canada at the 2019 World Mixed Curling Championship (date and location to be announced by the World Curling Federation) at the end of the week.

Quebec’s Félix Asselin is coming in fresh off an appearance at the 2018 Tim Hortons Brier, playing vice-skip for his province. Asselin skipped Quebec at four national junior championships (2016, ’15, ’13, ’12), with his most notable performance in 2016 when he battled through a dislocated shoulder to come from behind and win a game. The Quebec team arrives in Winnipeg with a wealth of junior experience. Asselin’s brother Émile plays second for Quebec. He joined Felix at the 2018 Tim Hortons Brier as an alternate and played lead for Quebec at the 2015 and 2016 national junior championships. Quebec vice-skip Laurie St-Georges and lead Emily Riley guided Quebec to a silver medal at the 2018 New Holland Canadian Junior Championships.

Manitoba fans will keep a close eye on Colin Kurz’s Assiniboine Memorial Curling Club team. Kurz played second for Manitoba at the 2018 New Holland Canadian Juniors, where his team – skipped by JT Ryan – won bronze. Second Brendan Bilawka was also part of that team as lead. Kurz – whose mom Lynn Fallis-Kurz won the 2002 Manitoba women’s championship with Jennifer Jones – is joined by third Megan Walter and lead Sara Oliver. Oliver represented Manitoba twice at junior nationals and was named a first team all-star on both occasions.

Manitoba and Quebec’s youthful teams meet in the first draw of the event on Sunday at 7 p.m. (all times Central). It will be preceded by the Opening Ceremony at 5:30 p.m., where Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister will throw the ceremonial first stone. Pallister is closely connected to the Canadian Mixed Curling Championship. In 2001 the premier skipped Manitoba’s team at the event in Weyburn, Sask. Tickets for the Sunday evening draw include the Opening Ceremony and cost $10 at the door.

The championship features 14 teams (10 provinces plus Northern Ontario, Northwest Territories, Nunavut and Yukon) seeded and separated into two pools of seven teams each. The teams first play a round robin within their pool. At the conclusion of the round robin, the top four teams in each pool advance to the Championship Pool, when the teams play the teams from the opposite pool, carrying forward their full win-loss records. Meanwhile, the bottom three teams in each pool will go to the Seeding Pool, where they will compete against the three teams from the opposite pool. These teams also carry forward their full win-loss records. 

The Championship Pool concludes on Friday and will be followed by two semifinals Saturday, Nov. 10 at 10 a.m., pitting 1 vs 4 and 2 vs 3. The two winners then advance to the gold-medal final Saturday afternoon at 2:30 p.m. while the two losing teams meet in the bronze medal game at the same time. Final results will determine seeding for next year’s Canadian Mixed, at Saguenay, Que.

All games throughout the competition are eight ends. Also, no tiebreaker games will be played at the conclusion of either round. Instead, any unsolvable ties for position after head-to-head results will be determined by accumulated Draw Shot results. 

Last season’s winning Canadian mixed team, skipped by Ontario’s Mike Anderson, just achieved a new milestone in Canadian curling at last month’s World Mixed Curling Championship in Kelowna, B.C.

Canada was tied with Norway for the best record in Group D, but its 6-1 record finished second by virtue of it’s head-to-head record.  Anderson and his Thornhill Curling Club team won all four playoff games (including a rematch against Norway in the semifinal) to earn Canada gold for the first time in the event’s history. Team Canada capped its historic run with a 6-2 victory against Spain’s Sergio Vez in seven ends.

The Mixed, which began in Toronto in 1964, has been won a leading 11 times by Alberta, while Manitoba has eight victories: by skips Ernie Boushy (1964 and 1966), Barry Fry (1973), Harold Tanasichuk (1977), Jim Dunstone (1980), Jeff Stoughton (1988 and 1991) and Sean Grassie (2009).

This will be the seventh time the Canadian Mixed Curling Championship is hosted in Manitoba  — 1968, 1974, 1981, 1989, 2011 and most recently, the 2018 edition in Swan River.

Full event passes can be purchased at the door for $100. Daily passes and evening passes are also available for $25 and $10 respectively.

Beginning Monday, Nov. 5 each draw will be available via live-streaming coverage at cbcsports.ca and on the CBC Sports app for iOS and Android devices.

CBC Sports’ broadcast and streaming schedules are posted here. As well, fans can set up calendar alerts to notify them of CBC Sports’ streaming coverage here and can follow the latest news from the curling world on the dedicated curling page at cbcsports.ca.

For event, team and draw information, visit https://www.curling.ca/2019mixed/. Draw scores/standings will be immediately available on Curling Canada’s scoring website.

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