Championship round picture becomes clear after cutdown day at Brier

Wayne Middaugh, skipping in place of an injured Glenn Howard (ribs), beat Northern Ontario's Brad Jacobs 8-6 on Thursday to improve to 6-1 at the Tim Hortons Brier.

Existing records carry into 2-day round, with top 3 teams advancing to playoffs

Team Wild Card Three alternate Wayne Middaugh finished the preliminary round of the Brier with a 7-1 record following a pair of wins on Thursday. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press/File)

Wild Card Two's Kevin Koe was the first to book his championship pool ticket. Wild Card Three's Wayne Middaugh was the next to make the eight-team cut at the Canadian men's curling championship.

The veteran skips were soon joined by Canada's Brad Gushue, Saskatchewan's Matt Dunstone and Ontario's John Epping on the right side of the cutline. Alberta's Brendan Bottcher, Northern Ontario's Brad Jacobs and Manitoba's Jason Gunnlaugson then locked down the other berths on Thursday night.

  • Watch and engage with CBC Sports' That Curling Show live every day of The Brier at 7:30 p.m. ET on Twitter, Facebook and YouTube, as well as streamed live on CBC Gem and CBCSports.ca

"There's no more soft games at the Brier," said Wild Card Two lead Ben Hebert. "Every game [now] is going to have the playoff mentality of the semis and the final.

"We're in a good position going in. I like where we're at."

Koe's Alberta-based team beat Quebec's Michael Fournier to take top spot in Pool B at 7-1. Middaugh's Ontario-based rink edged Manitoba 5-4 in the evening to lead Pool A at 7-1.

WATCH | Koe on potential 5th Brier championship:

Kevin Koe says winning a fifth Brier would be 'crazy'

4 years ago
Duration 54:41
The Wild Card 2 skip is heading into the championship pool atop the Pool B standings and tells That Curling Show hosts Colleen Jones and Devin Heroux what it would mean to win a record fifth Canadian title as skip.

Records will carry over to the championship pool. The next cut will come after the Saturday night draw at the Markin MacPhail Centre when the top three teams advance to Sunday's playoffs.

Pool B was rounded out by Canada, Saskatchewan and Ontario, all with 6-2 records. Gushue, the defending champ from St. John's, N.L., beat Nunavut's Peter Mackey 9-2, Epping topped P.E.I.'s Eddie MacKenzie 8-4 and Dunstone held off Nova Scotia's Scott McDonald 7-5.

"We just accomplished step one of three ultimately," Dunstone said. "So it doesn't change: the arena, the rocks, everything stays the same come tomorrow."

In Pool A, Bottcher moved into second place at 6-2 with a 7-5 evening win over B.C.'s Steve Laycock. Gunnlaugson and Jacobs, who dropped an 8-6 decision to Middaugh in the morning, took the last two spots at 5-3.

WATCH | Middaugh downs Gunnlaugson to claim top spot in pool:

Middaugh leads Howard's Wild Card team to top of Pool A at Brier

4 years ago
Duration 0:55
Wayne Middaugh, skip for Glenn Howard's Wild Card rink, edges Manitoba's Jason Gunnlaugson 5-4 to finish first in Pool A with a 7-1 record.

Greg Skauge of the Northwest Territories dashed James Grattan's tiebreaker hopes with a 10-6 win over the New Brunswick skip.

It has been an impressive return for Middaugh, who last played at the Brier in 2013. He was originally tabbed to serve as an alternate but an injury to skip Glenn Howard forced them to switch roles.

"Expectations weren't super high," Middaugh said. "We knew we could make a lot of shots. We weren't sure if we could run with the big guys, it turns out if we play really well [we can]."

Laycock beat Gunnlaugson 7-4 in the morning and Bottcher dumped Yukon's Dustin Mikkelsen 11-2.

"It's a long week," Bottcher said. "It started out OK, I think we're gaining some momentum here and I hope we can take that through into the last couple days."

WATCH | Morris, Dunstone recall memorable bonspiel:

John Morris and Matt Dunstone relive one of their favourite bonspiels

4 years ago
Duration 1:36
The curlers tell the story of the time they played the 2018 Canadian Open with legendary lead Don Bartlett in Camrose, Alberta.

The Alberta-B.C. evening game was delayed about 45 minutes so that the ice crew could repair a divot.

Laycock smacked his broom on the ice but the pad side was up, creating a significant chip when the hard plastic made contact. The B.C. skip will be fined an undisclosed amount.

Wild Card One's Mike McEwen defeated the N.W.T. 12-3 in an early game between two teams out of contention. It was a disappointing preliminary round for McEwen and his fifth-ranked Manitoba-based team.

""I'm ready to go home to be quite honest," he said after the morning draw. "That's how I feel."

Wild Card One crushed Yukon 14-2 in the evening to finish at 4-4. B.C. was 3-5, the N.W.T. was 2-6 and Yukon was 0-8.

In Pool B, Quebec and Nova Scotia settled for 4-4 marks. Greg Smith of Newfoundland and Labrador was in seventh place at 2-6, Prince Edward Island finished at 1-7 and Nunavut was 0-8.

In Sunday's playoffs, the first seed advances straight to the evening final. The two other teams meet in an afternoon semifinal.

The Brier winner will represent Canada at the world men's curling championship in the same Canada Olympic Park venue.

WATCH | Kevin Martin on why Koe, Morris can win Brier:

'Untouchable': Kevin Martin thinks Johnny Mo and Team Kevin Koe can win the 2021 Brier

4 years ago
Duration 51:42
Canada's most decorated curler drops by That Curling Show and tells hosts Devin Heroux and Colleen Jones, "you better watch out for Johnny Mo when he's interested. And he's interested."

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