KANESKI TEAM WINS PICKEN ‘SPIEL

Rory Kaneski  and his East St. Paul team (Dave Johannson, Dave Sesak, Richard Ervick) have won the Bob Picken Open Masters Bonspiel presented by Access Credit Union. Pending confirmation of eligibility by CurlManitoba, the Kaneski foursome also earned the first provincial championship berth won in the 2025-26 season – an entry in the Manitoba’s Credit Union Masters in Brandon in  February.

The final game against Lynn Coleman and his Pembina team  (Stan Struthers, John Norget, Brian DeRiviere) was controlled by the East St. Paul team. Kaneski blanked the opening end and took two on the second. Coleman’s single on the third gave Kaneski the hammer for two more on the fourth and the fifth went all bad for Coleman (all good for Kaneski!). Coleman had a difficult in-off facing three with his last stone but rolled out the back of the rings to win the game 7-1.

Each team in the final featured one player who was a former Picken Bonspiel champion. Johannson was with Bob Minaker in winning the event a year ago while DeRiviere was with Lionel Walz when he won it in 2021.

The win for Johannson makes him the first two-time winner in the six year history of the event. His undefeated win this year marks a run of 10 consecutive wins when matched with the undefeated run a year ago with the Minaker team.

In the Consolation final, Randy Neufeld and his team won the  bonspiel’s Consolation division with a 6-0, 6-end win over Joe Fouasse (Fort Garry). Both the Neufeld and Fouasse teams are former Picken Open champions although Neufeld is adjusting to a new third, with Paul Armstrong replacing the now-retired Dean Moxham. This week’s lineup was Neufeld with Armstrong, Peter Nicholls and Larry Borus.

Fouasse’s lineup includes his teammate of 52 years, Real Chabbert, along with Marty Foidart and Charles Arbez.

NEW NAME & FORMAT FOR MANITOBA MEN’S CURLING CHAMPIONSHIP

(CurlManitoba Release) For only the fifth time in over 100 years, the Manitoba Men’s Curling Championship will have a new title sponsor when the event takes place at Selkirk Recreation Complex on February 3-8, 2026.

As a result of Viterra’s successful business combination with Bunge, the former Viterra Championship will become the Bunge Championship for 2026.

Bunge is only the fifth title sponsor in the history of the men’s championship event.

“We are extremely pleased to have Bunge carry forward the great relationship which we have developed with Viterra,” says Craig Baker, Executive Director of CurlManitoba. “We have always felt that Manitoba curling has an international stature and that is only enhanced by Bunge’s international name recognition.”

“We’re excited to continue our partnership with CurlManitoba, which is a great opportunity to support one of the province’s premier sporting events, as well as local talent from across its communities,” said Kyle Jeworski, head of Canada, Bunge.  “Most importantly, the values exhibited by our curlers – integrity, respect for others, and teamwork – are qualities that are shared by our employees as they work to provide our farm customers with superior service.”

Competitors will not just have a new name in Selkirk but a new format as well. The 24-team competition will be played as a triple knock-out. Six teams will advance to the playoffs.

“A change of format has been under consideration by our competitions committee for a few years and the time is now right to make the change,” Baker says. “We celebrated 100 years of men’s championship competition last year in Portage. There were decades of tradition in the former 32-team format and our committee, who are all competitors themselves, wanted to respect that tradition as we celebrated 100 years.”

Six of the first 100 Manitoba Men’s Championships were played in Selkirk. Most recently, the 2022 championship was played in the Selkirk Curling Club and won by Mike McEwen.  Prior to that McEwen’s team had also won in 2016 in the Selkirk Recreation Complex.  Previous arena championships in Selkirk were played in 2009 (won by Jeff Stoughton), 2005 (won by Randy Dutiaume), 2001 (won by Kerry Burtnyk), and 1993 (won by Vic Peters).

About Bunge: At Bunge (NYSE: BG), our purpose is to connect farmers to consumers to deliver essential food, feed and fuel to the world. As a premier agribusiness solutions provider, our team of ~37,000 dedicated employees partner with farmers across the globe to move agricultural commodities from where they’re grown to where they’re needed—in faster, smarter, and more efficient ways. We are a world leader in grain origination, storage, distribution, oilseed processing and refining, offering a broad portfolio of plant-based oils, fats, and proteins. We work alongside our customers at both ends of the value chain to deliver quality products and develop tailored, innovative solutions that address evolving consumer needs. With 200+ years of experience and presence in over 50 countries, we are committed to strengthening global food security, advancing sustainability, and helping communities prosper where we operate. Bunge has its registered office in Geneva, Switzerland and its corporate headquarters in St. Louis, Missouri.

SOME THOUGHTS ON THE GRANITE CURLING CLUB

There may be no right answer in the current discussion about parking lot, affordable housing project, and future of the Granite. I have to admit I would not want to be a Granite CC Board member OR a City of Winnipeg Councillor or bureaucrat right now. For sure, I wouldn’t want to be member of The Municipal Board charged with the final decision. (That Board reconvenes todayfor the four day of hearings.)

However, curling has been my sport from the time I played my first game with my dad at the age of seven – so I have an obvious bias.

Manitoba’s rich curling history is important to me and it should be to all Manitobans – not because it is curling but because it is Manitoba history.  

I admit I get excited every time I stumble upon a “new” curling pin from 1895, a “new” Yearbook from 1923, a “new” sweater from the 1940’s. There is no doubt in my mind these old things are an important part of curling history and of early Manitoba life. I believe it is vitally important for the young curlers of today to have an appreciation for the history of their sport – which began in the Red River settlement days and progressed to formation of the first curling organization west of Ontario in 1888.

For example, the Manitoba Curling Museum’s collection includes several curling “irons”. I think it is important for the people in our sport to know that the Granite Curling Club formed about 1880 when a group of curlers splintered from the existing Winnipeg Curling Club because they wanted to play the game with granites – not irons.

So obviously, I think it is important for not just young curlers but all Winnipeggers and all Manitobans to have the same feeling of awe and appreciation that I have for the nearly 150 year history of the Granite Curling Club when they drive by and especially when they walk into the grand old club building at 1 Granite Way in Winnipeg.

Admittedly, the building itself is ONLY 110+ years old but the club is such a central part of Manitoba’s great curling history. Soon after the club itself was created, Granite took the lead role (along with the Thistle) in forming the forerunner of the Manitoba Curling Association when five rural clubs were invited to a meeting for just that purpose. In the early 20th century, it was a primary site for games in the annual Winnipeg bonspiel – deemed to be a sort of unofficial world championship of the time, attracting teams from as far away as Yukon, from the northern United States and occasionally even from Scotland. When Manitoba started its first Men’s Championship in 1925, it was played at the Granite. When the Brier was played outside Toronto for the first time (1940 in Winnipeg), it was a Granite team skipped by Howard Wood Sr. which represented Manitoba and won! Granite’s Ray Turnbull helped develop the first curling ‘how-to’ program, travelled the curling world teaching the sport and gets much of the credit for creating the first European World curling champions. When Manitoba won its first world championship, it was Granite’s Don Duguid team who were undefeated in 1970 and repeated, undefeated in 1971.

No question, that history will always exist whether or not the Granite CC building exists. However, it saddens me to think that the time may come, sooner than later, when the magnificent heritage which lies in the photos on the walls and the trophies in the showcases of that building will only be available in a Manitoba Curling Museum and not in the building where that history occurred.

I do not have the knowledge or wisdom to know what is right in the current debate about parking, affordable housing and the future of the club.

So yes, I am glad I am not one of the decisions makers on this.

Does the fate of the legendary club truly hang in the balance? I just don’t know how you make a decision which could add the iconic Granite building to the list of curling clubs which have disappeared in the last half century.

From the very first game that I ever played in the MCA bonspiel (in 1967 on sheet #2 at Granite against Bruce Hudson), I have played in every curling club in the city at one time or another. In addition to Granite, I have been a member of seven other clubs – four of them (Highlander, Wildewood, Transcona, Grain Exchange) all closed because their business model no longer worked.

I have played in many other clubs which no longer exist – West Kildonan, Victoria, CFB Westwin, CFB Fort Osborne, Strathcona, Civic Caledonian, Highlander, Thistle, Valour Road, Rossmere and Winter Club. All but Thistle, which burned down, closed because for various reasons, their volunteer board members believed their business model no longer worked. Winter Club and Rossmere, of course, still exist but their curling business model no longer worked. The second iteration of the Thistle, in the former Valour Road CC building, also closed because the business model no longer worked.

I do not know the Granite Curling Club’s business model particularly well. However, I do know that most curling club board members in Winnipeg and rural Manitoba face the fact daily that they are probably one major problem (like a broken down ice plant, a roof replacement or an irreversible drop in membership revenue) from having to debate the question – do we try to find the money or do we close the doors?.

At one time Winnipeg was unquestionably the “centre of the curling world”. That may no longer be the case; certainly other jurisdictions can make the argument that they now are.

That is as it may be. However, I will suggest this – if you offered any curler anywhere in the world an expenses paid trip to visit any curling club anywhere, the vast majority choice (perhaps the unanimous choice) would be Winnipeg’s Granite Curling Club. It is that well known and that important around the world.

I will never argue against the importance of the proposed housing project. I just don’t envy the position that the decision makers are in – if their decision about a parking lot and a housing project truly could lead to the demise of all that history and heritage.

Once in my life I had the chance to play golf at the Old Course at St Andrews. I said at the time, if it wasn’t so special, you’d plow it up. The same might be said for the Granite Curling Club – it is just an old building, no reason not to knock it down. The simple fact is that the Granite Curling Club is special. The decisions which affect its future must be made with that specialness, with all of that history, in mind.