Alberta skip Laura Walker's change of heart leads to perfect start at Scotties

Laura Walker wasn't going to curl with a team this season.

Alberta tops Pool A, Jennifer Jones' wild-card team claws to victory

Alberta skip Laura Walker helped lead her team to a perfect 2-0 start at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts after defeating Nunavut 8-3 on Sunday. (Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian Press)

Laura Walker wasn't going to curl with a team this season.

She was ready to dial back to mixed doubles events while she and husband Geoff Walker — Brad Gushue's lead — contemplated starting a family.

"I was pretty set on playing just mixed doubles and taking a little bit of time for myself," Walker said.

"Geoff and I are wanting to start a family. I just wasn't sure I could give the women's game 100 per cent any more.

So she declined Taylor McDonald's initial invitation to skip a team that included her, Kate Cameron and Nadine Scotland.

McDonald tried a second time with the message the team would accommodate any changes in Walker's life.

Flipping the switch

"I think the words that changed it for me was when Taylor said they would support me through anything because they 'hate that women feel like they have to choose,"' Walker said.

"Those were the words that kind of flipped the switch.

"I said 'you know you're right. I can do it all. I shouldn't have to choose. Knowing I have the support of my teammates was the biggest thing for me."'

In their first season together, Walker, Cameron, McDonald and Scotland out of Edmonton's Saville Community Sports Centre went undefeated to win the Alberta women's championship.

Walker, 29, is making her Scotties Tournament of Hearts debut.

Alberta tops Pool A

"I said I wasn't going to join a team unless I felt we could win," she said. "When I said yes, it was because I felt like we could compete.

"I didn't know we could do it right away, but I felt in the long run if we were work together we could do that. So far, so good."

Alberta topped Pool A on Sunday at 3-0 with Manitoba and Northern Ontario also undefeated at 2-0.

Saskatchewan was 2-1 and defending champion Chelsea Carey 1-1. Nunavut, Quebec and New Brunswick were still looking for their first wins of the tournament.

Ontario, B.C., Prince Edward Island and the wild-card team skipped by Jennifer Jones were bunched atop Pool B at 2-1.

Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador were both 1-1 ahead of Northwest Territories and Yukon at 0-2.

Round-robin pool play continues through Wednesday evening. Championship pool play begins Thursday.

The Page playoffs are Saturday followed by Sunday's semifinal and final.

Jones shows resilience

Walker beat New Brunswick's Andrew Crawford 8-3 on Sunday evening for a third straight win to start the Hearts.

Jones trailed B.C.'s Corryn Brown 6-1 after four ends, but scored three in the fifth and stole four in the sixth to claw her way back into the game.

The six-time Canadian champion made a tough draw for two in the 10th for an 11-10 victory.

"We said when we were down 6-1 we said 'this is going to have to be one of those games we talk about at the end of the week that we found a way to win' and we found a way to win," Jones said.

P.E.I.'s Suzanne Birt had last-rock advantage coming home in an extra end against Ontario's Homan and drew the four-foot rings to win 9-8.

Late curler Aly Jenkins honoured

Saskatchewan's Robyn Silvernagle rebounded from an earlier loss to Carey beating Lori Eddy of Nunavut 11-8.

An afternoon pre-draw ceremony honouring the late Aly Jenkins of Warman, Sask., had competitors and spectators wiping their eyes.

The 30-year-old curler died during childbirth in October.

Jenkins played lead for the Sherry Anderson team that lost the 2019 provincial final to Silvernagle.

Jenkins' teammates Anderson, Nancy Martin and Meaghan Frerichs presented Jenkins' husband Scott and their three young children with Saskatchewan jackets.

"It's Saskatchewan, so it makes it so much more close to home," Martin said. "She was important to all of us."

Earlier in the day, Manitoba's Kerri Einarson escaped with a 6-4 victory over Nunavut's Lori Eddy.

Eddy gave up a steal of two in the ninth end and Einarson ran her out of rocks in the 10th to avoid a massive upset. Einarson is second in the Canadian rankings while Eddy holds the No. 134 position.

Alberta's Laura Walker defeated Quebec's Noemie Verreault 8-3 and Team Wild Card's Jennifer Jones dumped Yukon's Hailey Birnie 10-1.

Ontario's Rachel Homan posted a 10-5 win over Erica Curtis of Newfoundland and Labrador.