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No easy task

P.E.I. third stone John Likely makes a shot while second stone Mark O’Rourke, left, and lead Peter MacDonald are the sweepers. The action took place at the 2013 Canadian senior curling championships on Friday. Jason Simmonds/Journal Pioneer

P.E.I. third stone John Likely makes a shot while second stone Mark O’Rourke, left, and lead Peter MacDonald are the sweepers. The action took place at the 2013 Canadian senior curling championships on Friday.

Published on March 22, 2013
Published on March 22, 2013
Ryan Cooke  RSS Feed

P.E.I., Ontario to faceoff in men’s tiebreaker

SUMMERSIDE - Rod MacDonald’s path to the playoffs hit a major speed bump Friday night, when his P.E.I. rink lost to Newfoundland and Labrador’s Glen Goss.

Topics :
Islanders , Silver Fox Curling and Yacht Club , Ontario , Alberta , Newfoundland and Labrador

That forced the Islanders into a tiebreaker with Ontario’s Howard Rajala foursome on Saturday morning. It’s a rematch of Friday morning’s round-robin game, which P.E.I. won 8-7.

Meanwhile, Alberta’s Wade White solidified his second-place finish with a 9-6 win over Northern Ontario’s Bruce Munro, and will advance to the semifinal.

Rajala cruised past Quebec’s Rob Maclean 10-2, putting himself in a position to force a tiebreaker, if Newfoundland and Labrador could defeat P.E.I.

Rajala’s hopes came down to Newfoundland and Labrador’s final toss, with P.E.I. sitting a heavily-guarded shot rock. Newfoundland and Labrador third stone Geoff Cunningham stepped up to throw last rock, as he had all game.

The packed crowd at the Silver Fox Curling and Yacht Club collectively held their breath and moved to the edge of their seats as the stone curled perfectly around the guards, past shot rock and onto the button.

All P.E.I. third John Likely could do was stand there and admire the shot.

“He went way out wide and made a great draw,” Likely said. “We lost to a great team, a team that was the runner-up in Canada last year.”

There was a mixture of cheers and groans across the room, but nobody could help but clap for the shot.

“I’m all for P.E.I., but that was one heck of a shot,” one lady remarked as she shook her head and clapped.

Rajala stood near the edge of the room and watched in anticipation. Afterwards, he could hardly wipe the smile off his face.

“Oh boy, it’s a rollercoaster ride here,” he said. “We’re still hanging in there.”

His Ontario squad started off the tournament on a tear, going unbeaten through their first five games, even handing first-place New Brunswick its only loss. They ran into trouble later on, however, being handily beaten by Nova Scotia and getting edged out by Alberta for back-to-back losses.

“He went way out wide and made a great draw. We lost to a great team, a team that was the runner-up in Canada last year.” - P.E.I. third stone John Likely

“It’s a long week, and you’re not going to play 100 per cent every game,” he said. “We had our struggles in a few games, but we played a good game there. So hopefully we can continue momentum.”

Wade White’s Alberta squad will get a well-deserved break Saturday morning as they secured their spot in the evening semifinal. The White rink has won seven straight games, with their only losses coming to MacDonald and New Brunswick’s Wayne Tallon.

Alberta lead George Parsons said it was tough to not look around the rink on Friday night, due to the consequences of the MacDonald-Goss game for them.

“We tried not to (look around),” he said. “But with the one game there that could give us second, we glanced over every now and then to make sure (N.L.) were still winning.”

No matter what the result of the tiebreaker is, Parsons expects an exciting matchup Saturday night.

”They’re both really good teams, so it doesn’t matter which one gets in there,” he said. “It’s going to be a tough battle.”

Regardless of the pressure or the ramifications, Likely said the Island squad won’t be overthinking things.

“We’re just going to go out and throw our rocks, and see where they go,” he said.

The men’s and women’s tiebreakers will get underway at 9 a.m., with the women’s semifinal taking place at 2:30 p.m. and then men at 7 p.m.

 

jpsports@journalpioneer.com

 

 

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