The Canadian Press
Emanuel Sequeira
PENTICTON, B.C.–Stacie Curtis came out on top in a battle of unbeaten teams at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts.
The Newfoundland and Labrador skip defeated Alberta’s Casey Scheidegger 9-5 in yesterday afternoon’s marquee matchup at the South Okanagan Events Centre.
Curtis is 4-0 and first in the Pool ‘B,’ followed by Scheidegger with a 3-1 record.
“It is kind of a little surreal right now,” admitted Curtis of the St. John’s Curling Club.
“We had a really great game just now against Alberta,” she noted. “They are a really tough team.”
On Sunday evening, Curtis took in some extra practice delivering her rocks with coach Eugene Trickett keeping a close eye.
“We had a couple of games yesterday [Sunday] and I wasn’t throwing quite as well as I wanted to,” said Curtis, a border services officer with the federal government.
She said the practice was a good tune-up prior to facing Alberta and the extra work paid off by shooting 91 percent.
Newfoundland and Labrador shot 80 percent as a team.
Scheidegger, on the other hand, shot just 68 percent while her team shot 77 percent.
In other afternoon action yesterday, B.C.’s Kesa Van Osch (2-2) defeated Quebec’s Emilia Gagne (1-3) 10-4 in eight ends.
“We had a tough game today,” said Gagne from Alma, Que.
“We had difficulties with the ice, with the weight,” she noted.
“That is what made the difference today.”
Team Canada’s Michelle Englot (3-1) defeated Nunavut’s Amie Schackleton (0-4) 13-4 in eight ends.
Englot’s Winnipeg rink is replacing defending champion Rachel Homan as the Ottawa skip prepares for the Olympic Games next month in South Korea.
Ontario’s Hollie Duncan (2-2) defeated P.E.I.’s Robyn MacPhee (1-3) 8-6 in 11 ends.
In Pool ‘A’ action, meanwhile, Manitoba’s Jennifer Jones led 6-1 through four ends en route to an 11-5 win over Nova Scotia in the morning draw.
The five-time champion then sealed her fourth-straight double-digit victory with a 12-4 win over Kerry Galusha of the Northwest Territories (1-2) last night.
“I feel like we’re playing well and making a lot of big shots when we have to,” Jones said after the morning win.
“We had some tough shots there today and we made them.
“I feel like we’re in a good place.”
Nova Scotia chipped away at Manitoba’s lead with two in the seventh and one in the eighth to make it an 8-5 contest.
But Mary-Anne Arsenault wasn’t happy with her rink’s play.
“It wasn’t very good, we were kind of flat,” admitted Arsenault, who curls out of the Dartmouth Curling Club.
“I personally didn’t play as well as I have been.
“Skips have got to make saves and I didn’t make them,” she remarked.
Nova Scotia needed 11 ends to edge New Brunswick’s Sylvie Robichaud 7-6 last night.
Wild-card entry Kerri Einarson (3-1) dropped her first game of the tournament yesterday, falling 7-5 to Northern Ontario’s Tracy Fleury (2-2).
Einarson’s rink had beaten Saskatchewan’s Sherry Anderson 8-4 in the morning.
Einarson secured the win in the ninth end after Anderson missed her shot to give Einarson a four-point lead.
Einarson said her team struggled a little bit with some shots but overall felt the match was pretty well played.
Facing a veteran curler like Anderson, Einarson expected a good game.
“We definitely had to come out and be on top of them,” she stressed.
In other evening draw play, Anderson (2-2) scored deuces in the ninth and 10th ends to beat Yukon’s Chelsea Duncan 10-7.
The top four teams from each pool advance to the championship round.






