Skip to content

Armitage rink stays unbeaten with win over Australia at world senior championships

FREDERICTION, N.B. — Rob Armitage and Team Canada wanted a close game at the World Seniors Curling Championships. They got it against a familiar face on Monday night at the Grant-Harvey Centre.Armitage’s Red Deer squad — third Keith Glover, second Randy Ponich, lead Wilf Edgar, alternate Lyle Treiber and coach Bill Tschirhart — won a battle of unbeatens in the senior men’s competition, beating former Canadian mixed champ Hugh Millikin and Team Australia 6-4.

FREDERICTION, N.B. — Rob Armitage and Team Canada wanted a close game at the World Seniors Curling Championships. They got it against a familiar face on Monday night at the Grant-Harvey Centre.

Armitage’s Red Deer squad — third Keith Glover, second Randy Ponich, lead Wilf Edgar, alternate Lyle Treiber and coach Bill Tschirhart — won a battle of unbeatens in the senior men’s competition, beating former Canadian mixed champ Hugh Millikin and Team Australia 6-4.

With the win, Canada improved to 4-0, behind only Karl Nordlund (5-0) of Sweden in the 10-team A Pool.

The Aussies, meanwhile, dropped to 4-1.

“That was a big win for us,” said Armitage, who was scored at a blazing 91 per cent — the third time in four games he’s finished at above 90. “Two losses might be too many in this field, and we still have two or three tough games left, so getting by that one was absolutely huge.”

Armitage made a wonderful draw around a wide corner guard in the second end to set up a deuce, and then made an even better draw to bite a piece of the button in the fourth end while looking at two Australian counters.

Australia, though, took the lead with a sixth-end deuce thanks to a Millikin double takeout on his first rock.

But a precision tap-and-roll in the seventh from Glover set the table for Armitage to make a draw to backing in the four-foot for a game-turning three to give Canada the two-point margin going into the final end.

“That’s one of those things where you want to be patient, but it’s an eight-end game,” said Armitage.

“You don’t have the hammer (in the first end), but we hold them to one, we get two, we hold them to one again, but they get their deuce in six and they’re making everything. Oh, yeah, they’re playing well.”

We were trying to force them into a bit of a curling game but they’re answering the bell at every turn. But the patience paid off. And that gives you more confidence to be patient the next time.”

The Canadian men take on Russia’s Sergey Korolenko (0-4) on Tuesday at 7 p.m.

Earlier in the day, Cathy King’s Canadian women’s team from St. Albert improved to 3-0 with an 11-3 victory over Japan’s Mikiko Tsuchiya.

King and her teammates — rhird Carolyn Morris, second Lesley McEwan, lead Doreen Gares, alternate Christine Jurgenson (Tschirhart is coaching both Canadian senior teams) — return to action on Tuesday when they take on New Zealand’s Liz Matthews (1-1) at noon (all times Atlantic).