Defending champion Einarson improves to 3-0 at Scotties with extra-end win over Lawes
Ontario's Homan edges Northern Ontario's McCarville in evening draw
Defending champion Kerri Einarson improved to 3-0 at the Canadian women's curling championship on Sunday with a 10-9 win in an extra end over Kaitlyn Lawes's wild-card team in Kamloops, B.C.
Einarson tops Pool A ahead of British Columbia's Clancy Grandy, Nova Scotia's Christina Black and Lawes's Wild Card One — all 2-1 heading into Monday's draws.
Northwest Territories' Kerry Galusha, Ontario's Rachel Homan, Northern Ontario's Krista McCarville and six-time champion Jennifer Jones of Manitoba were bunched atop Pool B at 2-1.
In Sunday evening's draw, Homan edged McCarville 7-5, Jones defeated Stacie Curtis of Newfoundland and Labrador 7-4 and New Brunswick's Andrea Kelly downed Yukon's Hailey Birnie 14-3.
Kelly and Casey Scheidegger's Wild Card Two are both 1-1 ahead of Curtis and Walter, both 1-2, in Pool B.
Quebec's Laurie St-Georges is 1-1 followed by Prince Edward Island's Suzanne Birt and Saskatchewan's Robyn Silvernagle at 1-2 in Pool A.
Alberta's Kayla Skrlik, Nunavut's Brigitte MacPhail and Yukon are 0-2.
The top three teams in each pool at the conclusion of the preliminary round Thursday advance to the championship round.
The four Page playoff teams emerge from that group.
The winner Feb. 26 represents Canada at the world championship March 18-16 in Sandviken, Sweden, and returns to next year's Hearts in Calgary as the defending champion.
WATCH | That Curling Show — Jennifer Jones, Kerri Einarson chase Scotties history:
Wild ride to Tournament of Hearts
Three wild cards in Canada's men's and women's curling championships apparently here to stay means keeping noses to grindstones to earn them.
Bumping up the number of wild-card berths from one to three was a COVID-19 adaptation in Calgary's 2021 curling bubble.
Brought back by popular demand in 2022 and 2023, wild cards are a Plan B ticket to both the Scotties Tournament of Hearts and Tim Hortons Brier for teams that don't win provincial or territorial championships.
Earning a wild card can be a wild ride.
Wild cards go to the top three teams in Curling Canada's Canadian Team Ranking System (CTRS) that don't win their provincial or territorial championship.
So it's a matter of entering enough events and winning enough points during the season, while hoping a team ranked higher wins its province or territory so a wild card lands on you.
When the dust settled, Lawes at No. 4, Scheidegger at No. 6 and Walter at No. 7 in the CTRS earned wild cards for this year's Hearts.
When Walter faced Jones in the Manitoba women's final Jan. 29, Walter's Hearts prospects also rested on Homan winning Ontario that same day.
When Walter lost the final to Jones, Walter's supporters were still happy because of a Homan win that dealt the third and final wild card to Walter.
"It's a very odd thing," Walter said Sunday in Kamloops.
There is no rest for a team that intends to pursue a wild card as a backup plan for entry into the Hearts and Brier.
"You can't really lay off at all," Walter said. "Next season, we've talked about it, we're playing the same amount of events, 14 or 13 we've played.
"You're not guaranteed to qualify [for playoffs] in every event and earn those big points.
Scheidegger, who lost to Skrlik in Alberta's final, chased points this season with third Kate Cameron in charge of math.
"Most of the teams that are in the top 10 probably have that person that's calculating, and making sure that you are in a good situation for that," Scheidegger said.
"We attempted to play in 'spiels that would give us the most kind of bang for our buck, so they would give us the most points.
"When you do come from a province that has had several wild cards come out of it the past couple years, it's good planning to have that in the back of your mind."
Boon for Manitoba women
Three wild cards were a boon for Manitoba women this year.
Lawes and Walter took two for a total of four Hearts entries from that province, including Einarson and Jones.
"I do think everyone wants to win their provincials and everyone wants to wear their crest on their back, but knowing there are some provinces that have a lot of great teams, you do kind of have your eye on wanting to be at the top of the CTRS," Lawes said.
Extra wild cards offer a young team like Walter's, who faces a gauntlet of Einarson, Jones, Lawes and Chelsea Carey in Manitoba, a chance to play in a Hearts early in their career.
"I definitely did not think I'd be playing in a Scotties at 20," Walter said.
Brendan Bottcher and Reid Carruthers lost the Alberta and Manitoba men's finals respectively, but are the first and second wild cards in next month's Brier in London, Ont.
Alberta's Karsten Sturmay snared the third wild card by just five points over veteran John Epping of Ontario.