Curling Canada announces new U-25 event aimed at keeping young players in the game (Curling Canada)

For a lot of young curlers, the transition out of juniors can be difficult. This period in life is usually accompanied by a number of other changes like moving away from home, studying at college or university, or starting a new job.

While many schools have programs at the U-Sports or Canadian Collegiate level, the athletes who choose other schools (or maybe don’t make the team) are left with few options to compete beyond diving head-first into men’s or women’s play.

“We tend to lose a lot of athletes at this age group,” said Helen Radford, Manager of Youth Curling and NextGen Programming for Curling Canada. “Life gets in the way. School, work, money, moving away from home… it all makes it difficult to stick with the sport in a meaningful way.”

Langley B.C. January 25, 2020.New Holland Canadian Junior Curling Championship.Men’s Semi Final. Saskatchewan skip Rylan Kleiter.Curling Canada/ michael burns photo

Four-time Saskatchewan junior champion Rylan Kleiter agrees. “It’s tough coming out of juniors and trying to battle against the top teams,” he said.”Even if we have the time, and we’re ready to put the work in, it can put us in a big hole financially. It’s not easy to travel around the country to compete against the best teams out there. It can cost a lot and you don’t usually win much.”

Saskatchewan skip Rylan Kleiter, third Trever Johnsond, second Joshua Mattern. Curling Canada/ michael burns photo

To help provide some more opportunity for these young curlers, Curling Canada is announcing a new event, the U-25 NextGen Classic, which is to be held at the Saville Community Sports Centre in Edmonton, from August 31 to September 3. A U-25 Mixed Doubles event will follow, from September 3 to 5.

“We’re trying to target those young players just out of juniors,” said Radford. “It’s difficult and expensive to keep up with ‘tour’ teams at that age, so we’re trying to provide an opportunity where young teams can play similar teams, and hopefully build that age group.”

“It’ll be nice to play against teams who are all in the same situation,” said Kleiter. “We’ll have a chance to play good, young teams.  It’s a perfect opportunity to use it as something to build off.

The Edmonton event will feature ten men’s and ten women’s teams, each with a combined age of less than 100 years. They’ll be vying for a top prize of $6,000 and an automatic entry into Curling Canada’s NextGen Future program. There will also be a 20 team Mixed Doubles event where teams have a combined age of less than 50 years. The top prize will be $3,000 and an automatic entry into Curling Canada’s NextGen Future program.

“I love the ‘win and you’re in’ model,” said Kleiter. “It’s a really great opportunity for young teams, and it’s really transparent about how to get into the program.”

Both reigning U-21 Canadian Junior champs are guaranteed to be in the field, along with others selected by Canadian Team Ranking System points. Teams who may not have a lot of CTRS points can also apply, and be reviewed by a Curling Canada selection panel.

“You can already see this idea is starting to snowball,” said Radford. “Already we’ve seen the ‘Best in the West’ event which was aimed at young teams, and you’re seeing more and more Member Associations coming up with U-25 events that are designed to keep this age group in the sport. It’s about creating meaningful competition.”

Starting today, teams are invited to download and submit the application form (see below) to Curling Canada. The deadline for applications is June 30th.

DOWNLOADS:

 
Click to read this post at Curling Canada: https://www.curling.ca/blog/2022/05/30/new-u25-event/

Application deadline is June 30, 2022 for PEI Curling Hall of Fame student bursaries

 

The Prince Edward Island Curling Hall of Fame is once again offering bursaries to junior curlers from PEI who will be attending college or university in the upcoming season. There are two $1000 bursaries, one for a female curler, one for a male, plus two $500 bursaries, one for a female curler, one for a male, for a total of $3000. Bursaries are awarded based on financial need and passion for the game.

Application Deadline is June 30, 2022

To be eligible to apply for a bursary, an applicant must be eligible to participate in provincial junior playdowns for the upcoming curling season. Also, an applicant must be enrolled as a full-time student at the university or college they are attending. An applicant can only be awarded one bursary.

Please submit your application form via email to Derek MacEwen at [email protected]

The information provided will be kept confidential.

Click to download Bursary Application Form in MS Word Format

Click to download Bursary Application form in Adobe PDF format

Nova Scotia’s Team Purcell wins World Junior bronze (Curling Canada)

Canada’s Team Owen Purcell is taking home the bronze medal after emerging victorious on Sunday at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships in Jönköping, Sweden.

Team Owen Purcell won bronze at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships. (Photo, Cheyenne Boone/World Curling Federation)

The junior men’s team from the Halifax Curling Club defeated Norway’s Grunde Buraas 13-4 in eight ends at the Jönköping Curling Club to win the bronze-medal game.

“It’s awesome. This is a fantastic moment in my curling career, and I hope it leads to more. Considering we started the event at 0-2, I’m really proud of how we were able to claw back and the way we handled the pressure of needing to make the shots and play the games that counted,” Purcell said.

A spot in the playoffs – never mind the podium – was in question early in the week after Canada started the event with back-to-back losses to the United States and Germany. But Purcell, vice-skip Joel Krats, second Adam McEachren, lead Scott Weagle, alternate Scott Mitchell, coach Anthony Purcell, and team lead Jeff Hoffart dug their collective heels in and battled back. The team finished the round robin on a four-game winning streak to finish third in the standings and secure a playoff spot.

Canada took control of the game in the third end with a score of four and followed with a steal of two in the fourth end to take a 7-2 lead. Team Purcell had the inside track to the bronze-medal victory from that point forward.

“We played phenomenally, set up really good angles and went from there,” Purcell said of the third-end score. “We never looked back, and the guys played extremely well. This is probably one of our best-played games this week, so I’m really proud of the guys.”

Canada forced Norway to one in the fifth end and scored a second four-ender in the sixth end to get a stranglehold on the game. 

Norway conceded after being forced to one point the next end and gave up a deuce in the eighth.

Purcell is quick to credit the team around him for this week’s success, as he wouldn’t be here without them. His teammates on the ice, who battled back from the slow start, to his father sitting behind the bench as the team coach, have played a crucial role in the bronze-medal run.

Joel Krats, left, and Adam McEachren after winning bronze at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships. (Photo, Cheyenne Boone/World Curling Federation)

“It shows that the guys have that ‘star’ attitude. They can play really well when the game is on the line, and I’m really proud of what they’ve done,” Purcell said, adding that getting to wear the Maple Leaf for the first time with his dad has been an incredible experience for the family. 

This experience isn’t just about the victories on the ice either for the 21-year-old skip. Purcell and his team have developed grit and learned a lot about being mindful and staying positive when not everything is going their way. Resiliency was the key theme all week and a trait that everyone on the team can take to wherever life takes them.

“I’m really proud of how we’ve been able to grow as people and players this week. I’m extremely grateful for this opportunity,” Purcell said.

Purcell, a computer science student at Dalhousie University, has another opportunity to represent Canada soon. This September, he and his university curling team will compete at the qualification event to determine Canada’s representation at the 2023 FISU World University Games

In 2020, Purcell and teammate McEachren played on a team that earned silver at the U SPORTS Canadian University Championships.

Team Purcell’s win marks the ninth bronze medal a Canadian junior men’s team earned at the event and increases Canada’s leading medal count to 40 medals earned. 

Click to read at Curling Canada: https://www.curling.ca/blog/2022/05/22/bronze-for-team-purcell/

Meanwhile, Canada’s Team Isabelle Ladouceu, which included PEI’s Katie Shaw, finished the World Juniors with a 3-6 record. It drops Canada into the B event next season.

Canadian junior women will now have to place top-3 in the World Junior B event to be able to compete in the World Juniors. Info from Devin Heroux (CBC)

Nova Scotia’s Team Purcell to play for bronze at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships (Curling Canada)

After a semifinal loss on Saturday, Canada’s Team Owen Purcell will play for bronze at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships.

Canada’s Team Owen Purcell will play for bronze at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships. (Photo, World Curling Federation/Cheyenne Boone)

Team Purcell of the Halifax Curling Club succumbed to Germany’s Benjamin Kapp by 8-5 in Jönköping, Sweden.

Germany took an early 4-0 lead against Canada, and while Team Purcell battled back in the second half of the game, it was short of winning. In the 10th end, Germany’s Kapp led by two with the hammer and made an open hit for one to clinch a spot in the gold-medal game. 

“They’re a really strong team, and giving up early points like that is very tough to come back from. They played really well and capitalized on a lot of our misses,” Purcell said.

After blanking the first end, Germany made an open draw for two in the second. Canada blanked the third but then gave up a steal of two in the fourth. Kapp played a tap to sit two, and Purcell tried to come off his own stone. The line was off, and Germany took a four-point lead. 

In the fifth end, Canada flirted with the idea of making a tough, thin double for three but took its two with a hack-weight hit to halve the score 4-2.

Germany was playing phenomenally halfway through the game, with all four players owning shooting percentages in the high 80s and low 90s. Canada opened the second half of the game by focusing on making Germany’s ends more complicated and attempting to get an early force. 

In the second half, Canada achieved both of those tasks and got back into the game. In the sixth, Canada put a draw behind its centre guard and forced Germany to one after Kapp was light on a draw for two. In the seventh, Purcell played a double raise takeout to mould a cluster of stones in the four-foot into a deuce for Canada.

Now with only a one-point lead, Germany was attempting to get control of the game in the eighth end. On Canada’s last shot, Purcell and the team couldn’t get the roll required to sit one behind cover and gave Germany a draw for two and three-point lead. 

Germany added to its momentum in the ninth end after Germany vice-skip Felix Messenzehl made a long double takeout that flipped the end in his team’s favour. Purcell and Canada scored one on a draw against four, while Germany took a two-point lead with the hammer into the final end.

“I feel like we eventually started making a lot more shots and junking it up a little better. We started getting some misses out of them after that. I really liked how we played the second half, but it’s just so tough to come back from what ended up happening in the first half,” Purcell said.

With the loss, Purcell, vice-skip Joel Krats, second Adam McEachren, lead Scott Weagle, alternate Scott Mitchell, coach Anthony Purcell, and team lead Jeff Hoffart will take on Norway’s Grunde Buraas on Sunday at 3 a.m. ET.

“I think we’re going to play it cool and chill out for a little bit to decompress. A lot of energy and intensity goes into a game like that. So we’ll need to regroup and prepare for the next game the same way we did for this game.”

In the gold-medal game, Germany plays Scotland’s James Craik, who was victorious against Norway in the other semifinal by 7-5.

Germany is attempting to win its first-ever gold medal at the World Junior Men’s Curling Championship, and Scotland is seeking its 11th.

Canada’s last bronze-medal game appearance was in 2016, when Matt Dunstone defeated Switzerland’s Yannick Schwaller. Canada has won eight bronze medals at this event.

World Curling TV’s Curling Channel on Recast will stream select Canadian games with either light coverage (two static cameras, no commentary) or full coverage (multi-camera with commentary). To see the streaming schedule, click here

For Team Canada updates, go to www.curling.ca. Follow us on TwitterInstagram and Facebook.

For the list of teams, draw information and live scoring, visit the event website.

Click to read at Curling Canada: https://www.curling.ca/blog/2022/05/21/bronze-medal-bound/

Nova Scotia’s Team Purcell advances to World Junior semis, Canadian women’s team with PEI’s Shaw finishes with 3-6 record (Curling Canada)

Skip Owen Purcell and his Canadian junior men’s team from the Halifax Curling Club are among the final four teams to keep their dreams of winning a world junior curling championship alive at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships in Jönköping, Sweden.

Owen Purcell and his team from the Halifax Curling Club are moving onto the semifinals at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships. (Photo, World Curling Federation/Cheyenne Boone)

Canada bested Sweden’s Axel Landelius (1-8) by 6-3 during the final round-robin draw for the men at the Jönköping Curling Club. 

Purcell, vice-skip Joel Krats, second Adam McEachren, lead Scott Weagle, alternate Scott Mitchell, coach Anthony Purcell, and team lead Jeff Hoffart finished third overall in the round robin with six wins and three losses. 

“It’s the ultimate goal,” Purcell said of making it this far into the event. “Ever since the start of the season, this was our goal to be in this position. To be able to be doing this with my best friends as well is fantastic.”

Canada’s path to defend its world junior men’s title in 2020 (the event was cancelled in 2021 due to Covid-19) goes through Germany’s Benjamin Kapp (7-2) in a semifinal game slated for 8 a.m. ET (all times ET) on Saturday.

Team Purcell’s spot in the semifinals was never guaranteed after the team started with a 2-3 record. But the unit persevered and made improvements all week long, leading to wins in the remaining four games to clinch the spot. That four-game win streak also included wins against two other playoff teams: first-place Team James Craik of Scotland (8-1) and fourth-place Grunde Buraas of Norway (6-3). 

“It’s a whole new event now. Everybody is starting from the bottom, so now it’s a whole new ball game. We know what we’re doing, we have a game plan that we’re going to stick to it, and we’re ready to get going,” Purcell said.

Heading into Canada’s last round-robin game, Landelius and his team from Sweden already knew they would be relegated to the World B Junior Curling Championship by finishing in one of the bottom three spots at the event. But his team came out firing and determined to go blow for blow against a Canadian team looking to cement a place in the playoffs. 

Sweden started the game with the hammer and blanked the first two ends before taking a single point in the third. Sweden added a steal of one in the fourth end by securing its stone onto the button with backing. It forced Purcell and his team to play a big-weight in-off to dislodge the Sweden stone, and while it was a valiant attempt, Sweden stole the point. 

Canada tied the game in the fifth end, aided by a superb double from Krats to sit two behind cover. Both teams were managing a difficult draw path to the four-foot, which neither could master. Purcell had a triple raise hack-weight shot for three, but it didn’t curl enough.

“I thought we were able to do a lot of what we wanted this game. They played really well, especially in the first half, but they made a few mistakes in the second half, and I thought we capitalized on that really well,” Purcell said.

Those mistakes started in the sixth end when Team Purcell took its first lead of the game. The Canadians played a draw and were a bit wide; however, the stone clipped a guard out front and redirected behind a centre guard. Sweden attempted to follow it in, but it over-curled and Canada stole a point. 

In the 10th end, Purcell made a lone Swedish stone in the house go away and run his opponents out of rocks to win.

“The most important thing that I’ve learned so far is patience. You need to keep making simple shots and then attack when the time is right. That patience and picking your spots have been the most important thing for us this week,” Purcell said of what he’s learned over the nine games played this week.

The winners of the Canada/Germany and Scotland/Norway games will advance to the gold-medal games, while the losers will play in the bronze-medal game. Both of those games are scheduled for Sunday at 3 a.m.

Isabelle Ladouceur, left, and Jamie Smith of Canada split a pair of games on Friday to end the round robin. (Photo, World Curling Federation/Cheyenne Boone)

Team Isabelle Ladouceur of Curl Sudbury was not in playoff position on the women’s side. However, there was plenty to play for on Friday, with relegation in the World B Junior Curling Championships being a possibility. 

The team from Curl Sudbury split its final two games to finish the event with a 3-6 record and was relegated to the B division event.

In the morning, Ladouceur, vice-skip Jamie Smith, second Lauren Rajala, lead Katie Shaw, alternate Katy Lukowich, coach Steve Acorn and team leader Lori Olson-Johns defeated South Korea’s Bo Bae Kang (3-6) by a score of 10-3.

Leading 2-1, Canada scored four in the fifth end for a five-point lead and stole a single point in the sixth. South Korea scored single points in the seventh and eighth ends, and Canada ended the game in the ninth with a three-spot for the win.

In the evening, Canada lost to Japan’s Sae Yamamoto by 6-5 in an extra end. The win elevated Japan to a 6-3 record and qualified the team for playoffs. 

Canada will need to finish near the top of the standings at that event to qualify for the 2023 World Junior Curling Championships in Fussen, Germany from Feb. 23 to March 4.

World Curling TV’s Curling Channel on Recast will stream select Canadian games with either light coverage (two static cameras, no commentary) or full coverage (multi-camera with commentary). To see the streaming schedule, click here

For Team Canada updates, go to www.curling.ca. Follow us on TwitterInstagram and Facebook.

For the list of teams, draw information and live scoring, visit the event website.

Click to read at Curling Canada: https://www.curling.ca/blog/2022/05/20/playing-for-a-medal/

Fall Fling Junior Cashspiel set for Summerside Oct. 7-9

The Fall Fling Junior Cashspiel at the Silver Fox Entertainment Complex in Summerside PEI will take place October 7th, 8th & 9th 2022. Spots are filling up fast! Secure one of the 12 spots in either the male or the female division by emailing;
[email protected]

Entry form and details:

Application deadline is June 30, 2022 for PEI Curling Hall of Fame student bursaries

 

The Prince Edward Island Curling Hall of Fame is once again offering bursaries to junior curlers from PEI who will be attending college or university in the upcoming season. There are two $1000 bursaries, one for a female curler, one for a male, plus two $500 bursaries, one for a female curler, one for a male, for a total of $3000. Bursaries are awarded based on financial need and passion for the game.

Application Deadline is June 30, 2022

To be eligible to apply for a bursary, an applicant must be eligible to participate in provincial junior playdowns for the upcoming curling season. Also, an applicant must be enrolled as a full-time student at the university or college they are attending. An applicant can only be awarded one bursary.

Please submit your application form via email to Derek MacEwen at [email protected]

The information provided will be kept confidential.

Click to download Bursary Application Form in MS Word Format

Click to download Bursary Application form in Adobe PDF format

Ron Matters is new Cornwall icemaker

 

Ron Matters, on the ice crew at a Grand Slam event in Summerside

Canadian men’s curling team won its third-straight game, while the women’s team. with PEI’s Katie Shaw, is focused on having a solid finish at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships (Curling Canada)

The Canadian men’s curling team won its third-straight game, while the women’s team is focused on having a solid finish at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships in Jönköping, Sweden. 

A two-win day for Team Owen Purcell (5-3) elevated the junior men’s foursome from the Halifax Curling Club into the playoff mix with victories over playoff-calibre teams at the Jönköping Curling Club on Thursday. 

Purcell, vice-skip Joel Krats, second Adam McEachren, lead Scott Weagle, alternate Scott Mitchell, coach Anthony Purcell, and team lead Jeff Hoffart started with an all-around efficient morning game win against Jae Beom Lee of South Korea (3-5) by a score of 7-4. Canada leapfrogged South Korea in the standings and was one step closer to a playoff spot with the win. 

“We’re definitely starting to get rolling here a little bit. I think we’re more confident. The ice is starting to straighten out, which I think is working to our favour, as well. But for the most part, it’s the confidence,” Weagle said.

With the game tied 1-1, Team Purcell found its form in the fourth end and carried it throughout by putting a series of well-placed draws and accurate hits on display for the remainder of the match. 

Canada scored two when it had hammer and forced South Korea to one from that point on. In the eighth end, Canada sat one and made a full four-foot draw to get a second point, taking a 7-3 lead. South Korea scored one in the ninth but opted to concede instead of going into the final end three down without hammer.

But to rise into the four-team playoffs, Canada will need to knock one of those existing teams out. On Thursday night in Sweden, it took another step closer to that goal by defeating Norway’s Grunde Buraas 9-3.

The game reached its peak in the ninth end. Leading by one, Purcell settled into the hack and made a stellar triple takeout to score five and finish the game.

“We’re definitely feeling great right now. Skipper made a peach. Definitely one of the best shots I’ve seen in a long time for the five,” said Weagle. “It doesn’t get a whole lot better than that. It was exciting, and it got the boys fired up. It was a lot of fun to be a part of.”

Team Purcell kept Norway off the board for nearly the entire first half of the game. Canada started with the last stone and opened with a score of one. Norway blanked the second, gave up a steal of one to Canada in the third, blanked the fourth and then scored its first point of the game in the fifth end to trail 2-1 at the halfway mark.

It picked up in the second half of the game. The teams traded scores of two in the sixth and seventh ends. Then in the eighth, Canada put the game away with the five-ender, its biggest single-end score of the event.

Weagle and Purcell joined forces in 2018 and found immediate success, winning the 2018 Canadian Under-18 Curling Championships men’s gold medal. Over the past four years, it’s been a whirlwind of an adventure for the team and filled with moments of joy and anguish on and off the ice. 

In 2019 McEachren joined the team, and it had lofty expectations of repeating at the national under-18 event. But the team lost the bronze-medal game to Manitoba. In 2020, Weagle and Purcell competed at the New Holland Canadian Juniors but did not qualify for playoffs. But the Nova Scotia-based team bounced back in 2021 and earned the right to represent Canada at the world juniors by winning a qualification event.

“There’s been some ups and some downs. We had Covid cancel most of our season last year and some of it this year, but it’s been really good for the most part. He’s just a really great guy and fun to be around,” Weagle said, who is embracing every moment representing Canada.

Canada’s combined win with Norway’s loss levelled both teams to records of five wins and three losses and are now in a three-way tie for the final two playoff spots alongside Switzerland’s Kim Schwaller.

Germany’s Benjamin Kapp and Scotland’s James Craik have both qualified for the men’s playoffs with 7-1 records.

For its best chance of qualifying for playoffs, Canada must win its final round-robin game on Friday against Sweden’s Axel Landelius (1-7) at 8 a.m. (all times ET).

“We’re going to keep it the same. Keep rolling with what we’re doing. We’ll try to play a little more conservative but will take our chances when we get them,” Weagle said.

Canada’s Katie Shaw, left, and Lauren Rajala of Curl Sudbury at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships. (Photo, World Curling Federation/Cheyenne Boone)

Team Isabelle Ladouceur (2-5; Curl Sudbury) took on Delaney Strouse of the United States (6-1) in its lone game of the day in the women’s competition.

The United States defeated Canada 11-5 and became the first team to qualify for the playoffs with the win. In the middle of the game, the Americans stole three consecutive ends and capped the victory off with a four-ender in the ninth.

Ladouceur, vice-skip Jamie Smith, second Lauren Rajala, lead Katie Shaw, alternate Katy Lukowich, coach Steve Acorn and team leader Lori Olson-Johns started the game with hammer. After giving up a first-end steal of one, the team had the U.S.A. against the ropes in the second. Strouse came through for her team, making a double to limit some damage, and it kept Ladouceur to a draw for two instead of a potential three or more.

In the third end, the U.S.A. regained its lead with a score of two and went on a roll stealing one in the fourth, one in the fifth and two in the sixth. 

Canada scored one in the seventh and stole two in the eighth after the U.S.A. pulled the string on its final draw attempt, but Stouse and the Americans made a hit for four in the ninth and finished the game.

The Canadian women’s team will miss out on the four-team playoffs but aims to finish the final day of the round-robin competition firmly on Friday. Team Ladouceur plays two important games. First, it takes on Bo Bae Kang of South Korea (3-4) at 3 a.m., followed by Japan’s Sae Yamamoto (5-2) at 1 p.m.

The 10 teams of each gender play nine-game round-robin schedules, with the top four advancing to the semifinal playoffs on Saturday. The winners advance to the gold-medal game and losers will play in the bronze-medal game on Sunday. 

World Curling TV’s Curling Channel on Recast will stream select Canadian games with either light coverage (two static cameras, no commentary) or full coverage (multi-camera with commentary). To see the streaming schedule, click here

For Team Canada updates, go to www.curling.ca. Follow us on TwitterInstagram and Facebook.

For the list of teams, draw information and live scoring, visit the event website.

Click to read at Curling Canada: https://www.curling.ca/blog/2022/05/19/momentum-canada/

Canadian Junior Men defeat medal contenders, women (including PEI’s Katie Shaw) split games at 2022 World Juniors (Curling Canada)

The Canadian junior men’s curling team found a big win against a medal contender, while the Canadian women’s team split a pair of games on Wednesday at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships.

Team Owen Purcell (Halifax Curling Club) improved to 3-3 at Jönköping, Sweden on the men’s side, while Team Isabelle Ladouceur (Curl Sudbury) is at 2-4 in the women’s competition.

Team Purcell found confidence after stealing the 7-6 extra-end win against a top tier and previously undefeated Scottish team led by two-time world junior bronze-medallist James Craik (5-1).

Two Canadian front-end stones picked during the extra end, and it led to some early frustration. However, Scotland’s shot rock was on the back of the button and allowed Purcell to freeze up to it for shot stone. Scotland, needing to hit the Canadian stone with peel weight and on the nose, over-curled and hit it on the high side. Canada stole one and served Scotland its first loss at the national championship.

“They’re an unreal team. I know they maybe didn’t have their best game this game, but they’re still a phenomenal team. That win does more than just put a win under the ‘W’ section of our record,” said Team Canada second Adam McEachren. “Getting in a good win against a good team that’s undefeated does a lot for our confidence.”

Trailing 3-2 in the sixth end, Canada took a timeout to discuss its strategy with several rocks scattered around the four-foot. The team opted to punch one of its stones on the side of the four-foot further into the house and lock it onto another stone for backing. That led to Canada scoring three and taking a two-point lead in the game.

“That three in that end was huge,” McEachren said. “We’ve been consistent with the hammer this week, but to get two up on those guys was massive.”

Scotland blanked the seventh and tied the game with two in the eighth. In the ninth end, Canada faced a choice: a raise for a potential two or a more difficult high-weight double for three. Team Purcell opted for the latter but hit the intended stone too thin. Scotland stole a point and Canada kept the hammer in the 10th end. Canada scored one in that frame to force the extra end.

McEachren, skip Purcell, vice-skip Joel Krats, lead Scott Weagle, alternate Scott Mitchell, coach Anthony Purcell, and team lead Jeff Hoffart have three games left in the round robin and figure they must win the remaining games to secure a playoff spot. The win against Scotland was a great start.

“We could be playing better up until this point, but we’re playing really well. It seems like every single time we play a team that is coming off a big loss, or they just had a phenomenal game and outplayed us,” McEachren said.

But in the end, perspective is what prevails. McEachren is representing Canada for the first time in his career after losing a national championship final in the past. McEachren and Purcell lost the 2020 U SPORTS Curling Championship final representing Dalhousie University. That kind of loss puts into perspective how special this opportunity in Jönköping is.

Canada hopes to maintain its momentum on Thursday with two games on the docket. Canada starts the day at 3 a.m. against Jae Beom Lee of South Korea (3-3), followed by Norway’s Grunde Buraas (5-1) at 1 p.m. (all times ET).

Canada split a pair of games Wednesday in the women’s competition. 

Canadian vice-skip Jamie Smith and her team from Curl Sudbury split a pair of games on Wednesday. (Photo, World Curling Federation/Cheyenne Boone)

Team Ladouceur fell just shy of a win in the morning against Sweden’s Moa Dryburgh (3-3) in a 9-8 loss.

Canada trailed by one in the fifth end and managed to take advantage of some missed draws by Sweden. Ladouceur and the team made a draw for three and took a one-point lead at the game’s halfway mark.

However, Sweden struck back the following end with three of its own and then stole two points in the seventh after Canada rolled away on its intended nose hit for one. 

Canada bounced back over the eighth and ninth ends. First, it made a hit for two in the eighth, followed by stealing two in the ninth after Sweden was heavy on a draw. 

The game was tied eight apiece in the 10th end, but Canada couldn’t sit shot stone on its last, meaning Sweden didn’t have to throw its final shot to win.

In the evening, the Canadian junior women’s team played Karolina Jensen of Denmark (0-6) and got back into the win column with an 11-7 victory.

Ladouceur and her team were simply efficient when they had the hammer. They opened the game with it and scored three points immediately. Canada was methodical over the next four ends by forcing Denmark to one, taking two with hammer and repeating the process until the fifth end for a 7-2 lead.

Denmark upped the ante in the sixth by scoring three points, but Canada maintained its orderly fashion and continued by scoring two in the seventh end. The teams traded scores of two in the eighth and ninth ends to finish the game.

Up next, the Canadian women play Delaney Strouse of the United States (5-1) in a battle of North American teams at 8 a.m. 

The 10 teams of each gender play nine-game round-robin schedules, with the top four advancing to the semifinal playoffs on Saturday. The winners advance to the gold-medal game and losers will play in the bronze-medal game on Sunday. 

World Curling TV’s Curling Channel on Recast will stream select Canadian games with either light coverage (two static cameras, no commentary) or full coverage (multi-camera with commentary). To see the streaming schedule, click here

For Team Canada updates, go to www.curling.ca. Follow us on TwitterInstagram and Facebook.

For the list of teams, draw information and live scoring, visit the event website.

Click to read at Curling Canada: https://www.curling.ca/blog/2022/05/18/confidence-boosting-win/

Canadian Teams battling for playoff spots at 2022 World Junior Curling Ch’ships (Curling Canada)

The Canadian junior men’s and women’s teams are now at the halfway mark of the round robin at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships in Jönköping, Sweden and both teams are battling for contention in the playoffs this upcoming weekend.

As of Tuesday night at the Jönköping Curling Club, Canada’s Team Owen Purcell (2-3; Halifax Curling Club) is in sixth place in the men’s standings, while Team Isabelle Ladouceur (1-3; Curl Sudbury) is tied for seventh. Both teams are just outside of the playoff mix, where the top four teams of each gender advance to the playoffs, and are still in contention.

In the women’s competition, Canada’s Ladouceur, vice-skip Jamie Smith, second Lauren Rajala, lead Katie Shaw [from PEI], alternate Katy Lukowich, coach Steve Acorn and team leader Lori Olson-Johns took on a tough test in undefeated Eirin Mesloe of Norway (4-0) and succumbed 11-5.

 

The 2022 World Junior Curling Championships marks the second time Lauren Rajala has represented Canada at an international event. (Photo, World Curling Federation/Cheyenne Boone)

“I think we went into it with a positive mindset. We’re not really thinking about the competition itself, but just focusing on how we play,” Rajala said.

Trailing by one in the sixth end, Norway came off its own rock to sit two. Team Canada missed a freeze on its final shot, which gave Norway a draw for three and a four-point lead.

Canada attempted to come back and made a draw for three in the eighth end following a missed double attempt by Norway. However, Mesloe – competing in her fourth world juniors and won bronze at the 2019 world mixed championship as lead – put together a score of four in the ninth end. 

Trailing by six, Canada conceded in its lone game of the day. 

“We’re all playing really well, and we’re super proud of how we’re doing right now. There are a few minor things that we’re putting into work, and we’re learning as we go,” Rajala said. “We’re putting together some really great ends. I think it’s just a matter of stringing great end after end together and making those key shots when we need them.”

It is not the first time Rajala has represented Canada on the international stage. In 2020, she played lead on the Canadian mixed team at the Youth Olympic Games in Lausanne, Switzerland. Now she’s back at an international event for the second time in her career and has savoured every moment.

“No, it definitely doesn’t get old. It’s super amazing to be here, and I’m really proud to have a second shot at representing my country,” she said.

On Wednesday, the Canadian junior women’s team plays Sweden’s Moa Dryburgh (2-2) at 3 a.m., and Karolina Jensen of Denmark (0-4) at 1 p.m. (all times ET).

Canadian skip Owen Purcell calls line during his team’s win against New Zealand on Tuesday morning in Jönköping, Sweden. (Photo, World Curling Federation/Cheyenne Boone)

On the men’s side, Canada opened the day with a 10-2 win against William Becker of New Zealand (0-5). 

Purcell, vice-skip Joel Krats, second Adam McEachren, lead Scott Weagle, alternate Scott Mitchell, coach Anthony Purcell and team lead Jeff Hoffart started the game with a two-ender. Leading 3-2 to start the second half of the game, Canada went on a run, scoring two in the sixth, stealing single points in the seventh and eighth, and another steal of three in the ninth to end the game.

The evening game proved to be a more closely contested battle with Canada and Switzerland’s Kim Schwaller (3-2) going to the 10-end distance.

Switzerland, up by one point and with the hammer in the last end, scored one to fend off a Canadian comeback attempt and win the game by 7-5. Switzerland has gained an edge on Canada in the race to the playoffs with the win.

Schwaller and his team obtained the upper hand earlier in the game, which put Canada in the position of playing catch up. In the fourth end, Canada led 1-0, but a four-ender by Switzerland gave the team a buffer which helped it cross the finish line as the victors of this game. 

Switzerland forced Canada to one in the fifth. After trading scores of two, Schwaller and his team blanked the eighth end to put some pressure on Canada. Team Purcell replied by stealing a point in the ninth end and trailed by one without the hammer in the 10th. 

On Wednesday, the Canadian junior men’s team has one game on the docket. Team Purcell takes on two-time world junior bronze-medallist James Craik of Scotland (5-0) at 8 a.m.

The 10 teams of each gender play nine-game round-robin schedules, with the top four advancing to the semifinal playoffs on Saturday. The winners advance to the gold-medal game and the losers will play in the bronze-medal game on Sunday. 

World Curling TV’s Curling Channel on Recast will stream select Canadian games with either light coverage (two static cameras, no commentary) or full coverage (multi-camera with commentary). To see the streaming schedule, click here

For Team Canada updates, go to www.curling.ca. Follow us on TwitterInstagram and Facebook.

For the list of teams, draw information and live scoring, visit the event website.

Click to read at Curling Canada: https://www.curling.ca/blog/2022/05/17/in-the-mix/

Synergy Fitness and Nutrition once again offering off-season Sport Performance Training to PEI curlers of all ages

Synergy Fitness & Nutrition in Charlottetown is once again offering an off-season Sport Performance Training Program to Island curlers.  All ages are welcome.  They will work with your level of fitness to ensure your training is fitting your needs.

Participating Curlers will receive:

  • 2 x  60 minute Training Sessions for 14 weeks
  • Training Program designed to improve strength and endurance required for curling

This 28 Session Package is $325 taxes included.

The program starts soon. 

  • 19+ will be in the gym Mondays and Wednesdays 5:30-6:30 pm (option to add Saturdays 8:30-9:30 am for $100)
  • 18 & under will be in the gym Tuesdays and Thursdays 5:30-6:30 pm

If you miss a session you will be provided makeup times/dates.  If you are unable to attend on the scheduled times, you can work with Synergy Fitness & Nutrition to find a schedule that works for you.

This is a great opportunity to work on conditioning in the off-season to prepare to reach your goals next winter.

If you are interested in participating in this program or have any questions, please contact Amy at Curl PEI  as soon as possible.  

Amy Duncan, Executive Director, Curl PEI, Tel: 902-368-4208 email [email protected]

 

Canadians, including PEI’s Katie Shaw, pick up 1st wins at 2022 World Junior Curling Ch’ships (Curling Canada)

The Canadian teams at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships bounced back with some wins on Monday. After a winless debut yesterday, the teams combined for two victories during three games played in Jönköping, Sweden.

PEI’s Katie Shaw, left, and Lauren Rajala at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships. (Photo, World Curling Federation/Cheyenne Moore)

Team Isabelle Ladouceur (1-2; Curl Sudbury) split a pair of games in women’s competition at the Jönköping Curling Club, while Team Owen Purcell (1-2; Halifax Curling Club) won its only game of the day on the men’s side.

Canadian junior men’s vice-skip Joel Krats is the first person from Newfoundland & Labrador to represent Canada at the world level in junior men’s competition in 21 years. In 2001 Brad Gushue, Mark Nichols and Mike Adam of Newfoundland would represent Canada at the world juniors and win gold. The trio would also win gold at the 2006 Olympic Winter Games alongside Russ Howard. Gushue and Nichols followed that up with four Tim Hortons Brier championships, a world men’s championship and a bronze at the 2022 Olympic Winter Games.

Those performances created a surge of young curlers from the province aiming to replicate those performances, and Krats was no exception. 

“I’m very proud of being a Newfoundlander. I’m only one of three to come from Labrador City to play at a world juniors with Mark Nichols and Mike Adam. They have a banner up there with their names next to world champions, and I hope I can add my name to that at the end of the week.”

Team Purcell held a training camp in Newfoundland & Labrador before the world juniors, and Nichols stopped by to lend some advice and chat with the team about what to expect while representing Canada. One of the key things Krats took away from the discussions was that every team would be aiming to have its best game of the week against Canada.

That was the case on Monday with Purcell, Krats, second Adam McEachren, lead Scott Weagle, alternate Scott Mitchell, coach Anthony Purcell and team lead Jeff Hoffart taking on Italy’s Giacomo Colli (1-2). Canada pulled away with an 8-3 win in eight ends. 

Italy started the game with hammer and took one in the first end. After blanking the second, Canada was forced to take one in the third. 

But the Canadians hit full speed ahead by the fourth end with a steal of three. Italy’s Colli missed his first shot, putting Canada in a position to sit three. Purcell played a guard, and Italy was left with nothing but a tough in-off to try and score one. The shot was off, and Canada took a three-point lead it would not relinquish. 

“I think we pretty much made all eight shots that end, which set up a tough shot for their skip, and we were able to capitalize,” Krats said.

Italy was in trouble in the fifth and had to make a long angle-raise for a score. Colli missed the line, and Canada stole a point. In the sixth, Canada tacked on another stolen single when Italy was heavy on its last stone hit attempt.

In the seventh, Italy scored a deuce and had Canada in trouble in the eighth. But a spectacular double-raise takeout on Canada’s last by Purcell gave Canada two and ended the game. The raise angles were not favourable for the Canadians, but Purcell saw the shot, and the team executed it. 

“I was a little concerned because I didn’t want to run another [Italy stone] in there for a two steal, but the guys liked it, and Owen was seeing it. It was a good way to cap off a game and make a great shot like that,” Krats said.

Canada is back on the ice for two games on Tuesday. First, it takes on New Zealand’s William Becker (0-3) at 3 a.m., followed by Switzerland’s Kim Schwaller (1-2) at 1 p.m. (all times ET).

In women’s competition, Canada’s Team Ladouceur picked up its first win at the event on Monday morning against Xenia Schwaller of Switzerland (1-2) by 8-6.

Ladouceur, vice-skip Jamie Smith, second Lauren Rajala, lead Katie Shaw, alternate Katy Lukowich, coach Steve Acorn and team leader Lori Olson-Johns did not start with the hammer, but after forcing Switzerland to one in the first end, the team manufactured a three-ender in the second.

Switzerland managed to tie the game over the following two ends. First, it scored a single point in the third and stole another in the fourth. After exchanging scores of two over the next three ends, Canada pulled ahead by forcing Switzerland to one point in the eighth end, blanking the ninth, and scoring another point in the 10th. 

On Monday night, Canada faced a tough test in a 12-8 loss against undefeated Evelina Barone of Latvia (3-0).

Latvian curling teams aren’t necessarily known for their prowess at international curling events, but the Latvian junior women’s curling team is putting on a stellar run at the world juniors. 

Barone and her team started with the hammer and, after blanking the first, scored four in the second. In the third end, Latvia added to the lead by stealing three for a 7-0 advantage.

But Canada did find its footing. It scored two in the fourth end and crept back in with a steal of three in the fifth to only trail by two at the fifth-end break.

Latvia maintained the edge in the second half of the game with a solid start. Team Barone scored three in the sixth and then forced Canada to one. While Canada did steal two in the eighth end and narrowed the lead, Latvia pulled away with two in the ninth for a four-point lead and ran Canada out of rocks in the last end.

The Canadian women’s team aims to even its record on Tuesday and faces another tough test against Norway’s Eirin Mesloe (3-0) at 8 a.m.

The 10 teams of each gender play nine-game round-robin schedules, with the top four advancing to the semifinal playoffs on Saturday. The winners advance to the gold-medal game and losers will play in the bronze-medal game on Sunday. 

World Curling TV’s Curling Channel on Recast will stream select Canadian games with either light coverage (two static cameras, no commentary) or full coverage (multi-camera with commentary). To see the streaming schedule, click here

For Team Canada updates, go to www.curling.ca. Follow us on TwitterInstagram and Facebook.

For the list of teams, draw information and live scoring, visit the event website.

Click to read at Curling Canada: https://www.curling.ca/blog/2022/05/16/first-wins/

Canadian teams still looking for 1st win after World Juniors opening day (Curling Canada)

Canadian junior men’s and women’s teams began their round-robin schedules at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships in Jönköping, Sweden on Sunday. The teams played three games combined on opening day and were short of earning a win at the Jönköping Curling Club.

Canada’s Owen Purcell and his team from the Halifax Curling Club didn’t come away with a win on Sunday at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships but remain optimistic. (Photo, World Curling Federation/Cheyenne Boone)

Canada’s junior men’s Team Owen Purcell (0-2; Halifax Curling Club) and junior women’s Team Isabelle Ladouceur (0-1; Curl Sudbury) were winless in three games played at the Jönköping Curling Club. While the teams left the ice without a game in the win column, both remained positive that good things are on the way for the teams donning the Maple Leaf. 

Purcell, vice-skip Joel Krats, second Adam McEachren, lead Scott Weagle, alternate Scott Mitchell, coach Anthony Purcell and team lead Jeff Hoffart started the day with an 11-10 loss against Daniel Casper of the United States. The high-scoring affair featured both teams scoring two three-enders apiece. In the end, the United States had a hit for two in the 10th for the win. 

“That game was just about making the right shots at the right time, I found, and they did it a little bit better than we did. We paid the price for that, but that’s perfectly fine. It was a tough loss, and I thought we played really well,” Purcell said.

The United States opened the game with the hammer and scored two, but Purcell and his team played a hit and roll off their stone to score three and regain the lead. The United States attempted a hit and roll in the third end, but it was wide, and Canada stole two. 

After a blanked fourth end, the United States made the shot of the day in the fifth. Casper successfully made a long angle-raise takeout to score three against Canada and tie the game at five. The United States maintained that momentum in the sixth with a stolen point, and Canada scored two with the hammer in the seventh.

The teams exchanged three-enders in the eighth and ninth ends – first, a draw for three by the United States in the eighth and a hit for three by Canada in the ninth. That led to a Canadian one-point lead in the last end, which the United States overcame.

Canada’s Team Purcell hoped to bounce back in the evening but came up against a strong team from Germany skipped by Benjamin Kapp (2-0). Kapp, the son of two-time world silver-medallist and three-time world bronze-medallist Andy Kapp, led his team to two consecutive steals to secure a 7-2 win in seven ends. 

“This game was definitely a tough game. We ran into a really hot German team. Benny Kapp’s team, they played extremely well, and it was hard to get anything going against them. We’re not terribly flustered with the loss because they played phenomenally. They outplayed us and deserved this one,” Purcell said.

The teams traded single points in the first two ends. Germany blanked the third and scored two in the fourth. After that, Canada couldn’t manage to put together a productive end with the hammer. Germany scored one in the fifth and three in the sixth. Team Purcell added another point in the seventh end and then conceded. 

Despite the winless Purcell, the 2018 Canadian Under-18 champion, remains optimistic heading into the rest of the week. With at least seven more games to be played as Team Canada, Purcell believes there’s still time to both embrace this opportunity and trust the process.

“I caught myself in a couple of moments today out on the ice where I was looking around and being like, ‘wow, this is really cool.’ To be playing in this venue against all these different countries is so amazing,” Purcell said. “In terms of today, I think what we can take away from today is we just need to stay resilient. If we keep throwing our shots and playing our game, good things will happen. We just have to be patient.”

The Canadian men’s team has one game on Monday. It will take Italy’s Giacomo Colli (1-1) at 8 a.m. (all times ET).

Canadian junior women’s skip Isabelle Ladouceur is enjoying every moment she can at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships. (Photo, World Curling Federation/Cheyenne Boone)

Meanwhile, the Canadian women’s team [which includes PEI’s Katie Shaw] fell short in a 9-7 effort against Scotland’s Fay Henderson on Sunday afternoon in Sweden. 

Ladouceur, vice-skip Jamie Smith, second Lauren Rajala, lead Katie Shaw, alternate Katy Lukowich, coach Steve Acorn and team leader Lori Olson-Johns have been soaking in their first international experience together and are representing Canada for the first time at the event. However, with that opportunity comes some excitement and nerves to manage.

“It is an amazing experience, and I’m enjoying every single minute of it. It’s really great to be here with my entire team and how we’ve made it this far. We’re trying to enjoy the moment,” Ladouceur said. “Going in, we were all feeling a little bit nervous. I think we started out strong, and then as the ice was changing, we weren’t adapting quick enough. Now that we’ve got the jitters out, I think we have a clear-set plan on what we need to improve and how to sharpen things up and become more precise. We’re looking ahead to taking the information we learned from this game and taking it forward into our next one.”

Canada started its game against Scotland with momentum and soared to a 5-0 lead after two ends. Canada scored two in the first and stole three in the second. 

However, there’s an adage in curling that if a team is to give up big ends, it is best to do it early so there’s more time in the game to come back. Scotland was tried and true in that process, responding with three of its own in the third, a steal of two in the fourth, and an additional steal of one in the fifth for its first lead of the game.

Scotland forced Canada into an open hit for one in the sixth and then took advantage of a heavy Canadian draw in the seventh to score two. Team Ladouceur had an opportunity to tie the game with a wide draw for two points, but it ticked off a stone in the top-12, and the Canadians settled for one. Scotland blanked the ninth end and kept the 10th end clean courtesy of a couple of tick shots, which allowed Fay and her team to make a draw for one and secure the win.

“Even though it wasn’t the result we wanted, we just have to be adaptable. Things won’t always go our way, but it’s important to move forward. We were happy the game was close, and we just want to sharpen up a little bit,” Ladouceur said. “It’s just all the little things that go into curling because curling is such a precise sport; making sure we’re reading the ice right, mapping all the changes, communicating. Those are little things that add up.”

Team Ladouceur has two games on Monday. It takes on Switzerland’s Xenia Schwaller (0-1) at 3 a.m., followed by Evelina Barone of Latvia (1-0) at 1 p.m.

Canada enters the 2022 World Juniors Curling Championships as defending champions in both the men’s and women’s events. In 2020, Team Mackenzie Zacharias and Team Jacques Gauthier won the women’s and men’s titles, respectively, in Krasnoyarsk, Russia. The event was cancelled in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The 10 teams of each gender play nine-game round-robin schedules, with the top four advancing to the semifinal playoffs on Saturday. The winners advance to the gold-medal game and losers will play in the bronze-medal game on Sunday. 

World Curling TV’s Curling Channel will stream select Canadian games with either light coverage (two static cameras, no commentary) or full coverage (multi-camera with commentary). To see the streaming schedule, click here

For Team Canada updates, go to www.curling.ca. Follow us on TwitterInstagram and Facebook.

For the list of teams, draw information and live scoring, visit the event website.

Click to read at Curling Canada: https://www.curling.ca/blog/2022/05/15/still-positive/

Passing of PEI Curling Hall of Fame member “D Alex” MacDonald

Suddenly at the Prince County Hospital, on Thursday, May 12, 2022, of Daniel Alexander “D Alex” MacDonald, aged 95 years. Born in Travellers Rest on March 3rd, 1927, son of the late Daniel and Clara MacDonald. Husband of 62 years to the late Kathleen “Kay” (Stuart) MacDonald. Survived by his children Roberta (Paul Heer), David (Florence), Danny (Jean), Peter (Karen), Rod (Karen), Joanne (John Postma), Michael (Jennifer), Pam (Tom Wright), Neil (Barb) and Kathy (Mark O’Rourke), 23 grandchildren, 14 great-grandchildren. Brother of Allan (Leona) MacDonald. Predeceased by son Donald, brothers Ronald (Rosella), Hubert (Mary) and Bennett (Marie) and sisters Jean (Alex) MacDonald, Mary (Walter) Leschuck, Marjorie (Ernie) Brennen, Margaret (Ben) DesRoche and Florence (Alex) Simpson. Lifelong friend of Brad (deceased) and Phyllis MacInnis.

D. Alex and Kay were married in 1950 and he soon found his calling in the car business. In 1957 he opened a used car dealership and four years later received the Ford Franchise for the Summerside area. D. Alex and his family would build a successful business, by focusing on great customer service and supporting the local community. He credited his wife Kay for many of their accomplishments. He was proud that many of his 11 children and grandchildren worked alongside him in the family business. D. Alex never really retired and remained a daily visitor at the dealership until the day before his death.

D. Alex was active in the community, serving as a Summerside councillor, past chair of the Prince County Family Welfare Agency, member of the building committee of the Silver Fox Curling and Yacht club and many more community organizations.  D. Alex was inducted into the Junior Achievement PEI Business Hall of Fame, a recipient of the Queen’s Jubilee Award and the George Key Sr. Summerside Citizen of the Year Award.

D. Alex and Kay were both inducted into the PEI Curling Hall of Fame in 2007.  They were extremely proud of their children’s success in this sport at the provincial and national levels. D. Alex enjoyed watching the Summerside Western Capitals and rarely missed a Maple Leaf or Blue Jays game on TV.  He also enjoyed his weekly card games with his friends.

Resting at the Moase Funeral Home, Summerside, until Tuesday, then to St. Paul’s Church for funeral mass at 11:00am. Interment in St. Paul’s Cemetery, Summerside.  No visiting hours by personal request. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations to the St. Paul’s Church Legacy Fund, Prince County Hospital Foundation, or the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Foundation would be appreciated. 

https://www.moase.ca/obituaries/162126

Team Canada, including PEI’s Katie Shaw, aims to defend World Junior titles, starting Sunday in Sweden (Curling Canada)

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ICYMI: Curling Canada now accepting 2022 For the Love of Curling Scholarship applications (Curling Canada)

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Student Athletes: Apply by May 12 for Sport PEI scholarships and credits

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Canadian U18 Ch’ships underway in Oakville ON. PEI Boys’ 9:30 pm game sched. to be streamed on Curling Canada’s YouTube page

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Curling Canada now accepting 2022 For the Love of Curling Scholarship applications (Curling Canada)

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Student Athletes: Apply by May 12 for Sport PEI scholarships and credits

SPORT PEI SCHOLARSHIPS Sport PEI offers 4 $1000 Sport Scholarship awards which recognize excellence and achievement in sport, academics and community involvement. Deadline to apply is Thursday May 12, 2022. The Sport PEI scholarships are made possible with support from … Continue reading