Rachel Homan opens Scotties with extra-end win over Chelsea Carey

Ontario's Rachel Homan opened the Canadian women's curling championship Saturday with a 7-5 win in an extra end over defending champion Chelsea Carey.

Kerry Galusha gains berth in 12-team main draw

Ontario skip Rachel Homan calls the sweep while taking on Canada during the Scotties Tournament of Hearts in St. Catharines, Ont. on Saturday. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

Ontario's Rachel Homan opened the Canadian women's curling championship Saturday with a 7-5 win in an extra end over defending champion Chelsea Carey.

Homan controlled the game early stealing a point in the second end and scoring a deuce in the fourth. But she gave up a steal of two in the seventh and led 5-4 without the hammer heading into the 10th.

Carey was held to a single point to tie it. Homan, the crowd favourite at the Meridian Centre, hit to score two for the win with her last rock of the game.

Manitoba's Michelle Englot scored two in the 10th to pull out a 7-6 win over Quebec's Eve Belisle. Nova Scotia's Mary Mattatall opened with a 5-4 victory over B.C.'s Marla Mallett.

Galusha triumphs

Kerry Galusha's Northwest Territories rink downed New Brunswick's Melissa Adams 5-3 in Saturday's opening draw to secure the final berth in the 12-team field at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts.

Adams, Yukon's Sarah Koltun and Nunavut's Geneva Chislett are going home early in the final year of the unloved play-in of the four lowest-seeded provinces and territories.

The three-year experiment with it is over with Curling Canada introducing 16-team formats to next year's men's and women's national championships.

The 2018 Hearts and Tim Hortons Brier will each incorporate all provinces and territories, Team Canada, Northern Ontario, and a 16th team to be named later.

The qualifier wasn't a hurdle Galusha had to clear when she skipped N.W.T. nine times at the Tournament of Hearts between 2001 and 2013.

After falling a win short of the main draw the last two years, Galusha was too relieved to still be playing Saturday to heavily bash the format making its exit.

'It's been a cruel last couple years'

"It's been a cruel last couple years," Galusha said. "This feels amazing to be on the other side of it.

"Losing the last two years, I was crying because we lost. This year I'm crying because we won.

"The territories have not been represented the last two years. It's huge to have a territory in it this year, for sure."

Her Yellowknife team then won their first game of the main draw, beating Prince Edward Island's Robyn MacPhee 9-4 at night.

Alberta's Shannon Kleibrink, Manitoba's Michelle Englot, Nova Scotia's Mary Mattatall and Stacie Curtis of Newfoundland and Labrador also started out 1-0.

P.E.I's MacPhee, Quebec's Eve Belisle, B.C.'s Marla Mallett, Northern Ontario's Krista McCarville and Saskatchewan's Penny Barker joined Carey at 0-1.

Kleibrink downed McCarville 11-6, Curtis beat Barker 7-4 and Mattatall edged Mallett 5-4. Englot scored two in the 10th to pull out a 7-6 win over Belisle.