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McCarville hopeful for future after another tough exit at Scotties for Northern Ontario – TSN

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KAMLOOPS, B.C. – It’s back to the drawing board for Krista McCarville and her rink out of the Fort William Curling Club in Thunder Bay after another tough exit from the Scotties Tournament of Hearts playoffs.

The Northern Ontario foursome – featuring McCarville, third Kendra Lilly, second Ashley Sippala, lead Sarah Potts and coach Rick Laing – dropped their semi-final clash to Canada’s Team Kerri Einarson, 7-5, Sunday afternoon at the Sandman Centre in Kamloops.

The game was an improvement from Saturday’s loss to Manitoba’s Team Jennifer Jones in 1 vs. 2 page playoff, but far from their strong 7-1 round robin performance which earned them the top seed in Pool B.

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“Once again close, but not quite there,” McCarville said. “Proud of the team for battling and working this hard and getting to the final day again in the Scotties, but of course very disappointing.”

Similar to Saturday’s playoff loss, the middle of McCarville’s lineup – Sippala and Lilly – were outplayed by their counterparts on Team Einarson in second Shannon Birchard and third Val Sweeting, leaving McCarville with difficult shot attempts throughout most of the game.

Sippala shot 79 per cent and Lilly 69 per cent on Sunday compared to 86 per cent and 84 per cent from Birchard and Sweeting, respectively. McCarville still managed to shoot a stronger percentage (79 per cent) than Einarson (71 per cent), who struggled at times during the win.

McCarville says the team as whole weren’t as sharp with their draw weight in the playoff games.

“I felt like we managed our draw weight a lot better in the round robin,” she said. “I thought we had it [in the playoffs], but we were just a little bit off with our draw weight. When you’re playing great teams like Jones and Einarson, a hair short or a hair deep is a difference with them. I think that’s maybe where we went wrong.”

Team McCarville weren’t able to score an all-important deuce in the semi-final.

Strong runs at the Tournament of Hearts, capped by losses in the playoffs have been a recurring theme for Team McCarville since their formation in 2015.

In their six Scotties appearances together, the close-knit group have made the playoffs each time, losing in the gold-medal game in 2016 and last year in their hometown of Thunder Bay.

McCarville and company tweaked a few things during the off-season – including changing how they practise and a focus on mental performance – following their loss to Team Einarson in last year’s final and the skip is hoping they can build on those changes going forward into the 2023-24 curling campaign.

“We worked really hard this year and made a few changes,” explained McCarville. “We thought we were doing some things right and I though we were really consistent this year and maybe that’s a good thing for building into next year.”

Team McCarville’s consistency at the national championship is an impressive achievement for any rink, especially this foursome considering the limited schedule they play against elite competition leading up to the Scotties.

However, the 40-year-old McCarville says ramping up their schedule next year isn’t in the cards due to work, family and just the logistics of getting to places from up in Thunder Bay.

“We’d have to really dial down with our jobs and that’s something we’re not willing to do right now,” she said. “We like our schedule. It would be easier if we could play some more [events] around us that didn’t involve taking as much time off work. Being from Thunder Bay, it’s a lot of time off work to even fly to Toronto, it’s two-to-three extra days sometimes with the way things are.”

McCarville is an elementary school teacher, Lilly works as an operations manager, Sippala is a lab technician and Potts is a social worker. McCarville, Sippala and Potts live in Thunder Bay while Lilly resides in Sudbury.

“You always want to be in that final,” said McCarville. “One day we’re going to win. We just don’t know when.”

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Bruins F Greer suspended one game for cross-checking Habs F Hoffman – TSN

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Boston Bruins forward AJ Greer has been suspended one game by the NHL’s Department of Player Safety for cross-checking Montreal Canadiens winger Mike Hoffman on Thursday night. 

The incident occurred in the first period of Thursday’s 4-2 Bruins win over the Canadiens when the two players were battling prior to a faceoff, which resulted in Greer cross-checking Hoffman in the face.

Greer received a five-minute major for cross-checking and a game misconduct, while Hoffman briefly left the game with an injury but returned in the second period.

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Greer, 26, has five goals and 11 points in 52 games this season.

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Play-off field complete at LGT World Women's Championship – worldcurling.org

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The play-off field is set at the LGT World Women’s Curling Championship 2023, taking place from 18–26 March in the Göransson Arena.

Switzerland women completed their round-robin campaign unbeaten (12-0), secured first place in the rankings and a spot in Saturday’s semi-finals.

Norway finished second in the rankings with an 8-4 win-loss record, and they also secured a direct place in the semi-finals.

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Canada are ranked third (7-5) and will play sixth-ranked Japan (7-5) in one qualification game. Fourth-ranked Italy (7-5) and fifth-placed hosts Sweden (7-5) will play in the other qualification game.

Both qualification games will take place on Saturday 25 March at 10:00 and the winners of these games earn a place in the semi-finals.

Switzerland will play the winner of the Italy vs Sweden game in one semi-final, while Norway will meet the winner of the Canada vs Japan game in the other semi-final.

Both semi-finals will take place on Saturday at 16:00.

The winners of the semi-finals will play for gold medals and the world title on Sunday 26 March at 15:00. The losers of the semi-finals will play for bronze medals earlier that day, at 10:00.

All times are CET (Central European Time) which is Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) +1 hour, except for 26 March, when times are CEST (Central European Summer Time) which is Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) +2 hours.

Engage with the World Curling Federation during the LGT World Women’s Curling Championship 2023 on TwitterInstagramFacebook and Weibo and be searching the hashtags #WWCC2023 #curling

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Canada narrowly qualifies for playoffs at women's curling worlds despite late loss – CBC.ca

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Canada’s Kerri Einarson closed her round-robin schedule with an 11-5 loss to Denmark’s Madeleine Dupont on Friday but still managed to secure a playoff berth at the women’s world curling championship in Sandviken, Sweden.

Her Manitoba-based rink of Val Sweeting, Shannon Birchard and Briane Harris, which defeated Turkey’s Dilsat Yildiz 10-4 earlier in the day, finished in third place at 7-5 and will face sixth-place Japan (7-5) on Saturday in a qualification match at the Goransson Arena.

The top six teams advanced to the playoffs, with three-time defending champion Switzerland (12-0) and Norway (8-4) getting byes to the semifinals as the top two teams.

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Canada fell to Japan 6-5 in round-robin play on Thursday.

Sweden (7-5) and Italy (7-5) meet in the other qualification game.

Canada earned the third seed through having the best head-to-head record (2-1) among the 7-5 teams.

After conceding to Denmark after eight ends, Canada locked up a spot in a qualification game a short time later when American Tabitha Peterson dropped a 10-6 decision to South Korea’s Seungyoun Ha.

“We were going to have some anxious moments here waiting, but we knew there were a lot of scenarios here where we still make it through,” Birchard said.

The Americans missed the cut at 6-6.

Qualification games and semifinals were scheduled for Saturday and medal games were on tap Sunday.

Einarson won bronze at last year’s world playdowns in Prince George, B.C. Canada hasn’t won gold at this competition since 2018 when Jennifer Jones was victorious in North Bay, Ont.

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