91原创

Skip to content

Canada鈥檚 Gushue rolls to 8-2 victory over New Zealand鈥檚 Hood at men鈥檚 curling worlds

Gushue is ranked fourth
32308786_web1_20230402160416-6429e31a1b3a198d6442ad29jpeg
Canadian skip Brad Gushue calls sweep as they play New Zealand at the Men鈥檚 World Curling Championship in Ottawa on Sunday, April 2, 2023. Gushue needed only seven ends to complete an 8-2 rout of New Zealand鈥檚 Anton Hood on Sunday at the world men鈥檚 curling championship. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

An opening weekend round-robin game was part of the usual buildup to the playoffs for a perennial curling contender like Canada鈥檚 Brad Gushue.

It was quite the opposite for New Zealand鈥檚 Anton Hood.

The 23-year-old Auckland skip was in new territory Sunday at his first world men鈥檚 championship, playing a curling power like Canada in front of the host team鈥檚 adoring crowd.

Hood 鈥 ranked No. 188 in the world 鈥 soaked in the full TD Place experience and was still smiling afterward despite dropping an 8-2 decision.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just awesome to watch how they do it and how they play,鈥 said Hood. 鈥淲e learned so much just from that game alone.鈥

The fourth-ranked Gushue opened with a deuce and iced the win with a hit for three as New Zealand conceded after seven ends.

鈥淚t was pretty incredible to play in front of a crowd of (several) thousand against Canada in Canada,鈥 Hood said. 鈥淲e loved every minute of it.鈥

Gushue did face some anxious moments in what looked like a lopsided matchup on paper.

Hood made an angle-raise double-takeout to sit three in the second end. Gushue drew the button but still left an around-the-horn possibility that could have given New Zealand a whopping six points if made.

However, Hood played the wrong turn 鈥 using an out-turn instead of an in-turn 鈥 and nosed the stone to give up a steal.

鈥淲e dodged that bullet,鈥 Gushue said. 鈥淩eally from that point on I feel like we controlled the game and didn鈥檛 give him much of a chance.鈥

Hood called it a good example of a learning experience on one of the sport鈥檚 biggest stages.

鈥淲e really just needed to take a second and slow down and take that opportunity,鈥 he said.

Canada would force Hood to make some great draws to prevent big ends. He successfully drew against four in the third end and against five Canada stones in the sixth.

Gushue improved to 2-1 after four draws while Hood remained winless at 0-3.

鈥淲e鈥檙e just going to get better and better from this point onward,鈥 Hood said. 鈥淪o we鈥檙e excited.鈥

In other Draw 4 matchups, defending champion Niklas Edin of Sweden defeated Scotland鈥檚 Bruce Mouat 7-4 in a rematch of last year鈥檚 Olympic final.

Switzerland鈥檚 Yannick Schwaller beat Germany鈥檚 Sixten Totzek 7-3 and Japan鈥檚 Riku Yanagisawa dumped South Korea鈥檚 Byeongjin Jeong 9-2.

Canada was scheduled to play Norway鈥檚 Magnus Ramsfjell on Sunday night.

Entering evening play, Switzerland and Sweden led the standings at 3-0. Japan and Norway were also unbeaten at 2-0 ahead of Canada and Scotland at 2-1.

鈥(Hopefully) we can start to get that mojo going,鈥 Gushue said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e getting closer though. I felt much better today than I did when we played yesterday.鈥

The top six rinks in the 13-team field at the end of round-robin play will qualify for the playoffs. Medal games are scheduled for April 9.

Gushue鈥檚 St. John鈥檚, N.L.-based side took silver at last year鈥檚 world championship in Las Vegas. His lone world title came in 2017 at Edmonton.

Gregory Strong, The Canadian Press

Like us on and follow us on .





(or

91原创

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }