(Curling Canada Release) An iconic curling facility with more than 110 years of history will play host to the 2025 Canadian Curling Club Championships, it was announced today by Curling Canada.
The event will be played Nov. 18-23 at Winnipeg’s Granite Curling Club, which opened its doors in 1913 and is popularly known as The Mother Club for Curling in Winnipeg.
“It’s truly fitting that a club with as much history as the Granite Curling Club gets the opportunity to host one of our most popular and meaningful events,” said Nolan Thiessen, Chief Executive Officer of Curling Canada. “The Canadian Curling Club Championships give opportunities to grassroots curlers across Canada to enjoy a national championship experience, and they’ll have a truly special setting in 2025 at the Mother Club in Winnipeg.”
Women’s and men’s champions from Curling Canada’s 14 Member Associations will be competing in Winnipeg in the 16th edition of the Canadian Curling Championships.
While the Granite Club building was opened in 1913, the club itself had already been in existence for three decades.
“We’re thrilled to welcome the 2025 Canadian Curling Club Championship to the Curling Capital of the World,” said Winnipeg Mayor Scott Gillingham. “This city lives and breathes the game, and I know Winnipeggers will give curlers from across Canada a warm and enthusiastic welcome.”
It will be the second time Winnipeg has hosted the Canadian Curling Club Championships. In 2023 at the Assiniboine Memorial Club, New Brunswick’s Team Abby Burgess (Oromocto) won the women’s title while Alberta’s Team Dan Sherrard (Beaumont) claimed the men’s championship.
In the history of the Canadian Curling Club Championships, Manitoba has won a leading four women’s titles, including Team Meghan Armit from the Granite Club winning in 2011 at Richmond, B.C.
Alberta and Ontario teams have each won three women’s titles.
On the men’s side, Manitoba is still seeking its first Canadian Curling Club Championship. Ontario leads the way with five men’s titles, followed closely by Alberta with four.
“The Granite Curling Club is excited for the opportunity to host the 2025 Canadian Curling Club Championships,” said Host Committee Chair Warren Reimer. “The ‘Mother Club’, founded in Winnipeg in 1880, is the traditional centre of excellence promoting the sport of curling in a positive friendly atmosphere for all ages and abilities. The Tudor-framed clubhouse, with its arching rink to the rear, is the province’s oldest curling institution and one of the oldest sporting groups in the province, and is now considered a Heritage Building by the City of Winnipeg. We look forward to welcoming curlers and fans from across the country to spend a week in our city and our beautiful curling club.”
At the 2024 Canadian Curling Club Championships in Barrie, Ont., Nova Scotia’s Team Michelle Armstrong (Lower Sackville) and Ontario’s Team Jordan Keon (Richmond Hill) were crowned women’s and men’s national champions.
“We’re excited to be welcoming the Canadian Curling Club Championships back to Manitoba in 2025 and I know the Granite Club will do a superb job,” said Craig Baker, Executive Director of CurlManitoba. “There is a dedicated group of volunteers who will be working tirelessly to make the event memorable for curlers and fans alike at our most historic club.”
Dave Boehmer, Dale Lott, Sean Bracken, George Hacking, Alternate Scott Szydlik
(March 14) Dave Boehmer and his Petersfield team (Dale Lott, Sean Bracken, George Hacking, Alternate Scott Szydlik) have won CurlManitoba’s Strathcona Senior Men’s championship. It is the second championship in three years for the team and the win moves Boehmer and Hacking into a tie with the Neufeld team with their now-record five Manitoba Senior championships.
In a re-match of the 2024 final against Randy Neufeld and his La Salle team (Dean Moxham, Peter Nicholls, Dale Michie, Alternate Larry Borus), Neufeld led 2-1 after a conservative first half when Boehmer blanked the third and fourth ends. The Petersfield skip stuck on an attempted blank on the fifth end to tie the game at 2-2 and give Neufeld last stone advantage.
The last three ends of the game turned into a chess match which Boehmer won, stealing two on the sixth end to lead 4-2 and giving back a deuce to come home tied 4-4 with last stone.
On the final end, lying two already, Boehmer executed a near perfect freeze to his shot stone on the button. Facing three and with his clock ticking down, Neufeld’s desperation hit attempt almost worked but he left the new champions a pair of counters without them having to throw their final rock.
The final game was also a re-match of this year’s Page 1-1 Playoff game which was won 6-2 by Neufeld.
Boehmer trailed in the Monday morning semi-final but stole singles on the home end and the extra end to defeat Paul Scinocca (Charleswood) 6-5. Scinocca had beaten Dean Dunstone (Granite) 5-4 in the Page 2-2 Playoff game.
In the playoff quarterfinal games, which serve as qualifiers for the Page 2-2 Playoff game, Scinocca stole single points on ends 6, 7, and 8 to beat Mike Mahon (Granite) 5-4. Dunstone scored two coming home to defeat Butch Mouck (Minnedosa) 5-3.
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(March 23)FIRST EVER SENIOR WOMEN’S TITLE FOR ST. VITAL: Marlene Lang and her St. Vital team (Pamela Kok, Jackie Hendrickson, Patti Ulrich) have won the Pharmasave Senior Women’s Championship with a Sunday afternoon victory at the East St. Paul Curling Club. Remarkably, it is the first Senior Women’s title for a St. Vital team in the 56-year history of the event.
The Lang foursome completed their four-game round robin with a 3W-1L record but were awarded a spot in the Page 1-1 Playoff game based on the tiebreaker formula. Joelle Brown’s Fort Rouge team had an identical record and tiebreaker advantage.
The Lang-Brown Page 1-1 Playoff game was won 10-1 by the St. Vital team, forcing the Fort Rouge team to the semi-final where they defeated Jennifer Clark-Rouire’s Fort Garry team in a close 5-4 match.
In the final game re-match, coming out of the mid-game break, the Lang foursome scored a four to lead 6-2 enroute to a 10-3 victory.
The CurlManitoba record book shows numerous St. Vital based junior champions, Karen Young and Jennifer Jones (several times) as women’s/Scotties champions, and three Masters Women champions; Elaine Jones, Sylvia Erickson, and Pat Malanchuk.
There has only been one St. Vital Men’s champion, Dave Smith, in the 100 year history of the Manitoba men’s championship. No St. Vital team has ever won the Mixed title.
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(March 19 – CurlManitoba Release) CHAMPIONSHIP RECORDS COULD BE SET AT CURLMANITOBA’S SENIOR CHAMPIONSHIPS: Randy Neufeld (La Salle) and Terry Ursel (Portage) can set new records in Manitoba Senior curling by winning championships this week at East St. Paul in the Strathcona Senior Men’s and Pharmasave Senior Women’s respectively. Dave Boehmer (Petersfield) and Kim Link (East St. Paul) can join the current record holders if their teams win the championships
Neufeld and his La Salle team (Dean Moxham, Peter Nicholls, Dale Michie) will attempt to add to an already record number of Manitoba Senior Men’s championships when the Strathcona Trust Senior Men’s Championship takes place at East St. Paul Curling Club beginning March 19-24.
The defending, and five-time champion, Neufeld team has been seeded #1 in the 16-team field by the other competing teams.
Petersfield’s Dave Boehmer, who has won four senior championships with two different line-ups and can move into a number-of-wins tie with Neufeld, skips the #2 seeded team. The Boehmer line-up is the same which won the 2023 championship (Dale Lott, Sean Bracken, George Hacking).
Dean Dunstone’s Granite team (Greg Melnichuk, Al Purdy, Bruce Wyche) is the number three seed with 2017 champion Murray Warren’s Brandon team (Jim Renwick, Terry Warren, Ray Tomiak) ranked number four by the teams.
The listed alternates on the four top seeded teams are Larry Borus (Neufeld), Scott Szydlik (Boehmer), Scott Kidd (Dunstone), and Reg Warren (Warren).
Neufeld and Warren headline the Asham Pool in the 16-team round robin format event. Their group includes Wayne Ewasko (Beausejour), Sam Anitla (Burntwood), Paul Scinocca (Charleswood), Barry Swain (Granite), Butch Mouck (Minnedosa), and Gord MacKay (Pembina).
Boehmer and Dunstone lead the Asham Ultra Force pool which also includes Lawrie Hogg (Assiniboine Memorial), Mark Anderson (Brandon), Dean North (Carman), Mike Mahon (Granite), Lawrence Daniel (Hamiota), and Colin Grenkow (Pembina)
Competition begins at 9AM, Thursday, March 20 and continues through to the final at 1PM on Monday, March 24.
Since the Manitoba Senior Men’s championship began in 1965 Neufeld leads the way with five championships while Boehmer and Lloyd Gunnlaugson both have four titles. Kelly Robertson and Barry Fry each skipped three champion teams.
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In the Pharmasave Senior Women’s, three-time former champion Kim Link and her East St. Paul team (Colleen Kilgallen, Renee Fletcher, Pam Namaka) have been rated the #1 seed by their competitors.
The second seed is the Fort Garry team of Jennifer Clark-Rouire (Karen Klein, Susan Baleja, Michelle Shields Buchanan, Coach Howard Restall) while the third seed is 2023 champion Joelle Brown and her Fort Rouge team (Maureen Bonar, Allyson Bell, Natalie Claude).
Defending champion Kathy Isaac’s Hamiota team (Lynn Sandercock, Sheila Gregory, Sandra Cowling) are the fourth seed in the ten-team event.
Link and Isaac are joined in the Asham pool by Laurie Macdonell (Beausejour), Marlene Lang (St. Vital), and 2012 champion Laurie Deprez (Stonewall).
With Clark-Rouire and Brown in the Asham Ultra Force pool are Lori Pelissier (East St. Paul), Terry Ursel (Portage), and Marla Boyd (St. Vital)
Listed alternates for the four top seeded teams are Karen Fallis (Link) and Kim Horne (Brown).
Competition begins at 9AM, Thursday, March 20 and continues through to the final at 4PM on Monday, March 24.The Manitoba Senior Women’s began in 1969. Ursel, who is already a four-time champion skip, can set a record with a fifth win in 2025. With a win on home ice, East St. Paul’s skip Kim Link can move into a tie at the top of the number-of-championships list with Joan Ingram and Elaine Jones and Ursel who each won four championships. Dorothy Mackenzie, Mabel Mitchell, Joyce McDougall, Linda Van Daele, and Lois Fowler each skipped three champion teams.
(Curling Canada News Release) The Gimli, Man., tandem of Kadriana Lott and Colton Lott added another chapter to its storied mixed doubles history Friday afternoon, winning the 2025 Canadian Mixed Doubles Curling Championship with a 9-8 extra-end victory over Team Nova Scotia’s Marlee Powers and Luke Saunders (8-3; Halifax) at the Gerard “Turk” Gallant Arena in Summerside, P.E.I.
Colton & Kadriana Lott Canadian Mixed Doubles Champions (photo: Curling Canada/Mike Bernard)
The duo will now go on to represent Canada at the 2026 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship at a location to be named later. The historic win marks the first ever back-to-back Canadian championship victories for any Canadian mixed doubles curling team, with Team Lott/Lott having won in 2024 at Fredericton. “The feeling you get of winning a national championship; there’s no words to really describe it,” said Colton Lott. “It’s an unbelievable feeling and just for us to have that opportunity to do it back-to-back is phenomenal. We’re going to be great at worlds next year.”
The Manitobans opened the gold-medal final with a score of three that set the tone early for the match, proving to be the game’s biggest score. It was enough to outpace Team Nova Scotia, who managed to pull even in the sixth and eighth ends, but never once lead.
“They played a great game,” said Kadriana Lott. “They kept us on our toes. We knew we had to make those key big shots which I think we executed really well. We keep pitching away at every shot and, fingers crossed, that you come out win the win.”
Three shots defined the outcome of the final for Team Lott/Lott; the first being a clutch draw for a second point in the second end, where Kadriana Lott had little more than a third-of-a-rock sized piece of the button to sneak an extra point on the board.
The second was an extremely thin double takeout to pick two Nova Scotia stones off the four-foot, both of which were nearly fully buried behind a corner-frozen Lott/Lott stone, to leave a single Lott/Lott counter around to score in the fifth end.
It was a shot so difficult that it was barely there, but the successful outcome changed the complexion of the final for Kadriana Lott. “I’m a lot more comfortable throwing those draws,” said Kadriana Lott. “That pick? From my eyes, you couldn’t really see much down there. It was definitely a momentum swing for myself. It made me feel more confident in making my next shots.”
The third came in the extra end, where Colton Lott managed a heavy-draw-bump around two guards to remove a Team Nova Scotia stone off the tee-line in the four-foot. Lott was perfect on the execution, forcing Marlee Powers to attack on Team Nova Scotia’s final stone, but the offering hung wide, giving the national title to Team Lott/Lott.
It’s the third time that Team Lott/Lott will wear the Maple Leaf at a World mixed doubles event; the first at the 2024 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship at Östersund, Sweden and, the second, at the 2018-19 World Curling Cup at Jönköping, Sweden.
“We played in the world cup,” said Lott. “But the actual world mixed doubles event just a totally different environment. It makes us that much more prepared for next year when we go.”
Team Lott/Lott posted a near-perfect 10-1 record on its way to the 2025 Canadian mixed doubles crown, with its only loss coming to Team Jones/Laing 6-4 back in pool play.
The Canadian mixed doubles title also ties Colton and Kadriana Lott with Team Jocelyn Peterman/Brett Gallant (Chestermere, Alta.) for most all-time with two since the event’s inception in 2013.
Sean Grassie (Deer Lodge) has won his fourth Manitoba Mixed Championship title. Grassie and his teammates Roxie Trembath, Jordan Johnson and Hilary Johnson (with alternates Tyler Drews & Shyla Johnson) won three games Sunday to win the Chicken Chef Mixed.
(l-r) Sean Grassie, Roxie Trembath, Jordan Johnson, Hilary Johnson – 2025 Chick Chef Mixed Champions
The Grassie foursome opened the Sunday afternoon final with a four in the first end against Jeff Stewart and his Carberry team (Alyssa Calvert, Trevor Calvert, Kylee Truscott) and put another three on the board on the forth end enroute to a six end victory.
The Grassie team had beaten Zach Wasylik (Stonewall) and #1 seed Brett Walter (Assiniboine Memorial) to advance to the final. The Stewart foursome had beaten Michael Siwicki (Granite) and #2 seed Daniel Birchard (Pembina) to reach the final game.
Grassie, with different teams, won the 2009, 2012, and 2014 Manitoba Mixed titles. In 2009, he and teammate Allison Nimik were the first Canadians to win a World Mixed Doubles medal, a bronze. He also won the 1999 Manitoba junior title, making this year’s Mixed his fifth Manitoba championship.
It was a second Manitoba title for Roxie Trembath, who won the 2004 Junior Women’s. It is a first Manitoba title for both.Jordan Johnson and Hilary Johnson.
The champions will represent Manitoba at the Canadian Mixed in Assiniboia, SK in the fall of 2025.
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Samantha Eagles and Jack Steski – 2025 U20 Mixed Doubles Champions
In the concurrent Dynasty U20 Mixed Doubles Championship presented by Access Credit Union, Samantha Eagles and Jack Steski (West St. Paul & Granite) won a pair of games Sunday to add their names to the record book. It is a second Manitoba championship for Steski, who won the 2023 U-18 championship, and the first Manitoba championship for Eagles.
Eagles/Steski defeated Julie Magnusson & Tyler Fehr (Gimli & Morden) in the championship game, leading by three coming home and running them out of stones.
Earlier, Eagles & Steski had beaten #1 seeds Cassidy Dundas & Rylan Campbell in the Page 1-2 game to advance to the final. Magnusson & Fehr defeated the #2 seeds Tessa Terrick & Rylan Graham in the Page 3-4 game and then beat Dundas & Campbell in the semi-final.
The champions have earned entry into Curling Canada’s U-21 Mixed Doubles West Qualifier (Richmond, BC) or East Qualifier (Guelph, ON) in the fall of 2025.
Tickets are now available for the 2025 Manitoba Curling Hall of Fame Induction and Fundraising Dinner presented by Wellington Altus.
The 2025 inductees will include: TEAM: Mike McEwen (Fort Rouge): 2008-2018 team TEAM: Ron Westcott (Fort Rouge): 2015 Canadian Masters Champions TEAM: Randy Neufeld (LaSalle): 2015 World Senior Silver Medalists CURLER: Dawn McEwen CURLER: Raunora Westcott CURLER: Dan Carey BUILDER: Darren Oryniak
The May 3 Induction and Fund-raising Dinner will begin with a reception at 5:00PM and dinner at 6:00PM. Tickets are available for the discounted price of $115 until March 31 and for the regular price of $125 from April 1 until Thursday, April 24. A children’s meal ticket is available for $35.00.
Ticket purchases can be made through the CurlManitoba on-line process:
Contact the CurlManitoba office: mca@curlmanitoba.org OR talk to Tracy (204) 925-5723 if you need information on the process.
Complete details on the inductees follows in the February announcement news release.
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FATHER-DAUGHTER INDUCTION HIGHLIGHT OF MANITOBA CURLING HALL OF FAME INDUCTEE ANNOUNCEMENT
The Manitoba Curling Hall of Fame & Museum has announced its 2025 Inductee Class, a group which includes a dedicated curling volunteer, three accomplished athletes and three champion teams.
The announcement, made Tuesday evening, February 4th, at CurlManitoba’s Reunion of Champions Opening Banquet at the 2025 Viterra Championship, includes the rare father-daughter induction of Ron Westcott and his daughter Raunora.
Curlers Raunora Westcott, Dan Carey, and Dawn McEwen will be joined by Builder Darren Oryniak, as well as the champion teams of Ron Westcott (Canadian Masters (2015), Randy Neufeld (Canadian Seniors 2015), and the dominant Mike McEwen team of 2008 to 2018 which won Manitoba titles in 2016 & 2017.
The formal induction ceremony will take place at Winnipeg’s Victoria Inn on Saturday, May 3, 2025. Those interested in attending, to support a specific inductee OR to celebrate the end of another great curling season and some of the greats in the game, are invited to contact the committee at mbcurlmuseum@gmail.com.
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BUILDER: Darren Oryniak
Curling Canada Governor (2020-2024)
CurlManitoba Director (2014-2020), President (2018-19 & 2019-20)
Coach/Instructor, Certified NCCP Level III (beginning 2008)
Vice-Chair (Facilities) 2013 Roar of the Rings
CURLER: Dan Carey
Manitoba and Canadian Men’s Champion (1992)
World Championship Semi-finalist (1992)
Manitoba Men’s Champion (1993 & 1997)
** Previously inducted into the Manitoba Curling Hall of Fame in 2005 as a member of the Vic Peters 1992 & 1993 team.
CURLER: Dawn McEwen
Canadian Women’s Champion (2008, 2009, 2010, 2015 & 2018)
** Coach Neufeld was previously inducted as a curler in 2020 and with the Vic Peters 1992 Canadian Champion team in 2005
TEAM: Randy Neufeld – Dean Moxham – Peter Nicholls – Dale Michie (LaSalle CC)
Five-time Manitoba Senior Men’s Champions (2015, 2016, 2021, 2022, 2024
Canadian Senior Men’s Champion – 2015
World Senior Men’s Silver Medalist – 2016
Canadian Senior Men’s Finalist – 2016
** Nicholls was previously inducted into the Manitoba Curling Hall of Fame as a Curler in 2018.
TEAM: Ron Westcott – Ken Dusablon – Bob Boughey – Howard Restall (Fort Rouge CC)
Manitoba and Canadian Masters Champions – 2015
Undefeated at the 2015 Canadian Championship
** Westcott and Boughey were previously inducted, in 2016, into the Manitoba Curling Hall of Fame – Boughey as a Curler-Builder and Westcott as a Curler
Active Aging Board Chair Louise Hutton presented the medals to Bev Haas (Dawn Ammeter, Diane Goodbrandson, & Maureen Fryza
Active Aging in Manitoba’s 55+ Games (Curling) wrapped Thursday, March 6 in Steinbach with the Bev Haas team wining the 7-team Women’s event. Doug Kok and his team won the Mixed division gold medal, Paul Scinocca’s team won the Men’s 55+ division, and the Dennis Vassart entry was awarded the Men’s 65+ gold medal.
In the 2-person Stick events, Manitoba’s recently crowned Open and Women’s champions both advanced to the finals.
In the 8-team U70 group, Ralph Nespor & Rob Lacombe played Warren McKennitt & Daniel Botha. Tied coming home, 3-3, Nespor made a hit to win.
Steinbach Curling Club’s Cody Bergen presented the medals to Stick curlers Warren Johnson & Dan McDonald (l) and Ralph Nespor & Rob Lacombe (r)
In the 19-team 70+ group, Lynne Rehbein & Gwen Smith played reigning Canadian champions Warren Johnson & Dan McDonald. Johnson & McDonald led 3-2 coming home but bottled up the home end and didn’t have to throw their final stone.
In all 52 curlers from Southern, Winnipeg, Eastman-Interlake, and Prairie Mountain Health Regions were part of the 13 teams in the event. An additional 52 curlers took part in the two divisions of 2-person stick curling.
The curling is the preliminary event to the Manitoba 55+ Games which will be hosted by Steinbach in June.
Steinbach Curling Club’s Cody Bergen presented the medals to Mixed winners Doug Kok, Pamela Kok, Bryan Harder, & Karen HarderActive Aging Board Chair Louise Hutton presented the Men 65+ medals to Dennis Vassart, Don Neufeld, Allan Meyers, & Robert Desautels
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Steinbach Curling Club’s Cody Bergen presented the medals to Mixed winners Doug Kok, Pamela Kok, Bryan Harder, & Karen Harder
Paul Scinocca (Richard Muntain, Paul Armstrong, Joel Newbury)
The playoff teams have been determined in both the Men’s and Women’s divisions of the Coops of Manitoba Provincial Junior Championships underway at the Brandon Curling Club.
In the Junior Men’s, U-18 Champion Nash Sugden (Morden), Jace Freeman (Virden) and Zach Norris (Morris) will advance although playoff positioning will be finalized after the Sunday morning final round-robin draw. In the Junior Women’s, Cassidy Dundas and Rylie Buchalter (Heather), 2024 champion Shaela Hayward (Carman), and Springfield’s Julia Van Ryssel will advance to the Sunday playoff round.
Nash Sugden (thecurler file photo)
Top seeded Cassidy Dundas and her Heather team (Lauren Evason, Eryn Czirfusz, Tessa Terrick, Coach Craig Terrick) were the first to qualify for the four team Page Playoff round. The Heather foursome is unbeaten, winning three games to win the “A” qualifying game.
Second seeded Shaela Hayward, and her Carman team (Keira Krahn, Grace Beaudry, Emily Ostrowsky, Coach Ron Westcott) have lost only once, in the “A” qualifying game. Their 4W-1L record includes a “B” qualifying game win over Karys Buchalter and her West St. Paul team.
Buchalter and her team (Ainslee Card, Amy Buchalter, Eva Le Heiget, Coach Kelsey Meger) dropped into a “C” qualifying game against Julia Van Ryssel’s Springfield team (Gina Giasson, Eva Armstrong, Jillian Diotte, Alternate Bella Diotte, Coach Faith Van Ryssel, Assistant Coach Jeff Van Ryssel). The Van Ryssel foursome improved their record to 4W-2L with an 8-5 victory to advance to the playoff round.
The other “C” qualifying game had Rylie Buchalter – Heather (Amelie Le Heiget, Audrey Despins, Meghan Lagadi, Coach Richard Hawkins) post a 7-6 win over Samantha Eagles – Elmwood (Shyla Johnson, Anais McCormick, Emerson Urquhart, Coach Amanda Duff). The Buchalter team’s 4W-2L gave them the fourth playoff spot.
The winner of the Sunday morning Page 1-2 game between Dundas and Hayward will advance to the 5:00PM final while the loser will play the semi-final against the Page 3-4 (Buchalter vs Van Ryssel) winner.
In the Junior Men’s Championship, Zachary Norris and his Morris team (Ethan Brandt, Blake Good, Carter Malmquist, Coach Albert Bazinet, Assistant Coach Jonathon Friesen) have finished their round robin and are assured of being in the Sunday afternoon semifinal with a 4W-2L record.
Jace Freeman’s Virden team (Timothy Marin, Nick Senff, Luke Robins, Coach Graham Freeman) and Nash Sugden’s Morden team (Tyler Fehr, Tanner Treichel, Ryan Thiessen, alternate Quinn Lagace, Coach Gord Titchkosky) both have 4W-1L records with a game to play Sunday.
If both win and improve to 5W-1L, or even if both lose to finish 4W-2L, the tiebreak by W-L for/against the tied teams and by Last Stone Draw total will both put Norris in third position and in the semi-final. If both Freeman and Sugden finish with 5W-1L records, Freeman will be awarded first place thanks to a round robin win over Sugden. If both finish with 4W-2L records, first place will be awarded based on the last stone draw tally. Freeman is currently ranked first and Sugden second but that could change after the Sunday morning game pre-game draws.