1970 Canadian Ladies Curling Association Championship Explained

1970 Canadian Ladies
Curling Association Championship
Host City:Calgary, Alberta
Arena:Stampede Corral
Dates:February 23–27
Winner:
Curling Club:Nutana CC, Saskatoon
Skip:Dorenda Schoenhals
Third:Cheryl Stirton
Second:Linda Burnham
Lead:Joan Andersen
Attendance:13,796
Coach:Sylvia Fedoruk (chaperone)[1]
Finalist: (Donna Clark)
(Glenda Buhr)

The 1970 Canadian Ladies Curling Association Championship the Canadian women's curling championship was held from February 23 to 27, 1970 the Stampede Corral in Calgary, Alberta.[2]

British Columbia, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan all finished round robin play tied for first with 7–2 records, necessitating a tiebreaker playoff between the three teams to determine the championship. Team Saskatchewan, who was skipped by Dorenda Schoenhals captured the championship by defeating both Manitoba 8–6 in the semifinal and British Columbia 8–4 in the final. This was Saskatchewan's third championship and second in a row.[3] This was the first time in history that a three-way tiebreaker determined the championship.

British Columbia's 13–0 victory over Quebec in Draw 7 was the second time in which a team posted a shutout in tournament history. The only other shutout was also posted by BC in .

The tournament set or tied several records, some of which still stand as of .[4]

Event Summary

Heading into the Wednesday evening draw (Draw 7), there were five teams with a shot at the championship. Saskatchewan sat in first at 6–0, Manitoba was in second at 5–1, while both British Columbia and Quebec sat at 4–2, and Ontario was 3–3.

The Wednesday evening draw dwindled that number down to three. Saskatchewan remained unbeaten with their 13–9 victory over Nova Scotia and eliminating Ontario from contention despite their 11–7 win over New Brunswick. BC shutout Quebec 13–0, which eliminated Quebec while Manitoba held off Prince Edward Island 9–8. At this point, Saskatchewan appeared to be heading for a championship as a win over Manitoba on Thursday morning would clinch Saskatchewan the title.

The penultimate draw on Thursday morning would see a couple of comebacks that turned the event from an easy victory to coming down to the final draw. After scoring three in the seventh, Saskatchewan lead Manitoba 6–4. However, Manitoba would come back to tie the game at 6 with one in the eighth and a steal of one in the ninth. With Saskatchewan having hammer and a chance to clinch the championship in the last end, it was Manitoba who would steal three for a 9–6 victory and handing Saskatchewan their first loss of the tournament. Meanwhile, it appeared that BC would be eliminated as they trailed PEI 10–0 through six ends. But BC would score six in the seventh and steal one in the eighth to make it a game. After PEI scored one in the ninth, BC would score four to tie the game at 11 and force an extra end. BC remained alive as they completed the largest comeback in tournament history with a steal of one in the extra end for an improbable 12–11 win. Heading into the final draw, both Manitoba and Saskatchewan sat at 7–1 with BC one game back at 6–2.

The final draw of round robin play would end up as exciting as the previous draw. BC would do their job with a 12–3 victory over Nova Scotia to remain alive as they needed both Manitoba and Saskatchewan to lose to be in the playoff. Saskatchewan was in a back and forth battle with PEI as they were tied at 5 through seven ends. After a blank eighth end, PEI took a 7–5 lead heading into the final end. Saskatchewan would counter with two to force an extra end. But with hammer, PEI would score two for a 9–7 victory. Now it appeared that Manitoba would control their destiny as they lead 6–3 after seven ends against Ontario. However, Ontario would proceed to score one in the eighth and stole one in each of the next two ends to force an extra end. Ontario completed their comeback with a steal in the extra end for a 7–6 victory. This meant that a three-way tiebreaker playoff between BC, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan on Friday would determine the championship.

For the playoff, following a draw from a stetson hat,[5] Manitoba and Saskatchewan drew the semifinal pairing while British Columbia received a bye into the final.[6] In the semifinal on Friday morning, Saskatchewan regained their footing as they jumped out to a 6–3 lead through five ends and 8–4 after eight ends. Despite Manitoba cutting the lead to 8–6 after nine, it was too little too late as Manitoba conceded the final end, setting up a BC/Saskatchewan final.

In the championship on Friday afternoon, Saskatchewan scored two in the first end but BC scored singles in the next four ends to take a 4–2 lead at the halfway point. However, Saskatchewan scored three in the sixth to regain the lead then sealed the championship by stealing one in three straight ends for an 8–4 victory after BC conceded the tenth end.

Teams

The teams are listed as follows:[7] [8]

British ColumbiaManitobaNew BrunswickNewfoundland
Bathurst Ladies CC, Bathurst
Skip: Shirley Pilson
Third: Anne Orser
Second: Patricia Maher
Lead: Geraldine Lenihan
Grand Falls CC, Grand Falls
Skip: Violet Pike
Third: Gladys Clark
Second: Caroline Ball
Lead: Lillian Howse
Nova ScotiaOntarioPrince Edward IslandQuebec Saskatchewan
Nutana CC, Saskatoon
Skip: Dorenda Schoenhals
Third: Cheryl Stirton
Second: Linda Burnham
Lead: Joan Andersen

Round robin standings

Final Round Robin standings

ProvinceSkipWLPFPA
7 2 93 58
7 2 82 58
7 2 89 56
6 3 78 64
6 3 77 78
4 5 82 78
3 6 65 87
2 7 52 91
2 7 63 84
1 8 57 84

Round robin results

All draw times are listed in Mountain Standard Time .[9]

Draw 1

Monday, February 23, 2:30 pm

Draw 2

Monday, February 23, 8:00 pm

Draw 3

Tuesday, February 24, 9:30 am

Draw 4

Tuesday, February 24, 8:00 pm

Draw 5

Wednesday, February 25, 9:30 am

Draw 6

Wednesday, February 25, 2:30 pm

Draw 7

Wednesday, February 25, 8:00 pm

Draw 8

Thursday, February 26, 2:30 pm

Draw 9

Thursday, February 26, 8:00 pm

Tiebreakers

Semifinal

Friday, February 27, 9:30 am

Final

Friday, February 27, 1:30 pm[2]

Notes and References

  1. Curling Legends: Dorenda Bailey. The Curling News. Sports Illustrated . Kevin Palmer . February 17, 2024 . February 19, 2024.
  2. News: Queen Dorenda Erases Doubts. February 28, 1970. 30. Calgary Herald. June 22, 2022.
  3. https://curlingzone.com/event.php?view=Main&eventid=386 1970 Ladies Curling Championship - Curlingzone
  4. Web site: Canadian Women Records . Curling Canada Stats Archive . Curling Canada . 22 February 2023.
  5. Curling Legends: Dorenda Bailey. The Curling News. Sports Illustrated . Kevin Palmer . February 17, 2024 . February 19, 2024.
  6. News: Wood . Larry . Nobody Stood To Be Crowned . 22 February 2023 . Calgary Herald . Newspapers.com . February 27, 1970 . 24.
  7. Web site: 2022 Scotties Tournament of Hearts Media Guide . Curling Canada . 25 May 2022 . 104,107,111,114,117,122,126,129,132,135 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220405105800/https://www.curling.ca/files/2022/01/2022-Scotties-Tournament-of-Hearts-media-guide-2.pdf . 2022-04-05.
  8. Web site: 1970 CLCA Curling Championship . Curling Canada Stats Archive . Curling Canada . 22 February 2023.
  9. News: ...And The Draw . 22 February 2023 . Calgary Herald . Newspapers.com . February 23, 1970.