TORONTO — Brad Jacobs, of Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., has won his first career Pinty’s Grand Slam of Curling title at the Players’ Championship with a 4-3 win over Winnipeg’s Mike McEwen on Sunday night at the Mattamy Athletic Centre.
McEwen opened with hammer, Jacobs had one rock buried and McEwen was forced to draw and take a single for one. Facing four, Jacobs’ final shot ticked McEwen’s shot rock but stopped just in time to count one and tie it.
Jacobs made a double with his final shot in three and McEwen threw his last through the house to blank. McEwen got a deuce in four to pull ahead 3-1 but overcurled on his final rock in the fifth and Jacobs capitalized to take two of his own. McEwen blanked the sixth and seventh ends to hold the hammer coming home.
Jacobs’ shot rock was covered by a guard forcing McEwen to draw for the win but the shot was overswept and Jacobs got the single steal to win.
McEwen captured the Syncrude Elite 10 title last month and defeated Jacobs in the National final in November. Jacobs also captured the Rogers Grand Slam Cup, awarded to the team that finishes first in the standings. Masters and Canadian Open champion Brad Gushue, of St. John’s, N.L., finished third in the points to earn a $20,000 bonus.
Players’ Championship: Men’s Scores | Women’s Scores | Standings
Muirhead wins women’s Players’ Championship
Scotland’s Eve Muirhead was in the winner’s circle again at Ryerson’s Mattamy Athletic Centre.
Muirhead stole points in the final two ends to lift her team to a 4-2 victory over Anna Sidorova of Russia and capture the women’s Players’ Championship on Sunday, her team’s third career Pinty’s Grand Slam of Curling title and their second this season.
The Sterling-based rink of Muirhead, third Anna Sloan, second Vicki Adams and lead Sarah Reid — who also won the inaugural women’s Canadian Open in December — also claimed the 2014-15 Rogers Grand Slam Cup as the overall women’s points leader.
“Oh it’s fantastic,” Sloan said. “We’ve had a tough season of inconsistencies but this week we just really dug in. I think it just showed that we are a strong side, that we’re here to compete, and we played really well there.”
Muirhead, Sloan and Adams (with Claire Hamilton at lead) won both titles the last time the Mattamy Athletic Centre hosted the event in 2013, the same year they captured the world championship.
“It feels just as good the second time around if not better,” Sloan said. “I think the first year, we were playing well, we were playing consistently and everything was going our way. This season has been tough. The results haven’t been going our way. (But now) just loving it.”
As Rogers Grand Slam Cup champions, Team Muirhead collected an extra $35,000 bonus — bringing their total at the event to $58,500 — and they’re already thinking of what to spend the cash on.
“It’s pretty nice,” Sloan said with a laugh. “We’re all full-eyed on what we want to spend it on. Maybe a couple shopping trips are coming our way but yeah it’s just great.”
Team Sidorova, who defeated Muirhead to win the bronze medal at the worlds last month, opened with the hammer but Team Muirhead didn’t let that faze them. After blanking the first, Sidorova drew to the button for a single in the second end to take a 1-0 lead. Muirhead looked to score two in the third with a runback but rolled out and counted just one to tie it.
Sidorova was forced to take a point in four to retake the lead at 2-1. Muirhead attempted to split and get two in the fifth but could only count one knotting it up again. Sidorova blanked the sixth and gave up a single steal in seven when she attempted to score three but her shot overcurled.
Sidorova needed to make a double raise to force the extra end but didn’t get it close enough and Muirhead picked up another steal to close out the game.
Team Sidorova had been on fire during the second half of the season winning the Glynhill Ladies International tour event in January and capturing gold at the 2015 Winter Universiade in February on top of their bronze from the world championship last month.
It was Sidorova’s first time playing in a Pinty’s Grand Slam of Curling final. The Moscow-based rink featuring Sidorova, third Margarita Fomina, second Aleksandra Saitova and lead Ekaterina Galkina started off 1-2 in the round robin and were on the brink of elimination but won five straight to reach the final.
The Players’ Championship is the fifth and final stop on the Pinty’s Grand Slam of Curling season. Masters champion Val Sweeting of Edmonton finished second in the Rogers Grand Slam Cup women’s standings to receive a $20,000 bonus while Ottawa’s Rachel Homan gets $10,000 for coming in third.