Canadian Pride Curling Championship | |
Organizer: | Canadian Pride Curling Association (CPCA) |
Current Host City: | St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador |
Current Year: | 2024 |
The Canadian Pride Curling Championships, also known as the Canadian Gay Curling Championships, is an annual national bonspiel organized by the Canadian Pride Curling Association (CPCA). First contested in 2006, the event features teams representing CPCA members, which are LGBTQ-friendly curling leagues across the country.
There are fifteen leagues that are members of the CPCA, situated in twelve cities in eight out of ten Canadian provinces. The annual championship includes representatives from each city hosting member leagues, with the number of teams from any one city in a given year determined by the previous years' results.[1] Member leagues typically hold their own playdown bonspiels to determine representatives.
Toronto is home to the oldest and largest member leagues in the country; the Rotators and Riverdale leagues curl out of the Royal Canadian Curling Club in Toronto's Riverdale neighbourhood, with the former established in 1962.[2] The next oldest league is found in Vancouver, where the Pacific Rim Curling League was founded in 1983; it began at the University of British Columbia and now operates out of the Vancouver Curling Club at the Hillcrest Centre, which was constructed ahead of the 2010 Winter Olympics and hosted the Olympic curling events. The leagues in both Toronto and Vancouver have over the years hosted teams from the United States.[3] [4] The 1990s saw leagues established in Alberta's two largest cities, with Apollo Curling launching in Calgary in 1991 and Curling With Pride in Edmonton in 1997.[5] Since the turn of the century leagues have been established in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Quebec, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland and Labrador.
Many of the leagues have been credited with revitalizing local clubs and attracting new members and people to the sport. For example, the Pacific Rim league, which grew to be one of the largest curling leagues in British Columbia, helped revive a flagging Vancouver Curling Club in the 1990s; in Ottawa, the Rainbow Rockers league has been credited with consistently attracting beginners to the Ottawa Curling Club and its programs.[6] Many of the leagues across Canada have been started by members moving around the country. The Loose Ends league in Halifax was founded by Curtis Cartmill, who had been a member of Pacific Rim in Vancouver; likewise in Saskatoon, where George Hall moved to the city from Vancouver before helping to launch the Prairie Lily league, and in Winnipeg, where curlers from a number of leagues helped to launch the Keystone.
Many leagues host their own bonspiels throughout the year in addition to the Canadian Championships, such as the Bison Cup in Winnipeg, the Rock the River Cup in Saskatoon, and the Over the Rainbow bonspiel in Ottawa.
Apollo Curling | Calgary, AB | North Hill | 1991[7] |
Curling With Pride | Edmonton, AB | Granite | 1997[8] |
FCSSC LGBTQ2+ Curling | London, ON | Highland Country Club | 2023 |
Keystone Curling | Winnipeg, MB | Granite | 2005[9] |
Langley Pride | Vancouver, BC | Langley | 2023 |
Pacific Rim Curling | Vancouver (Hillcrest Centre) | 1983 | |
Les Fous du Roi | Montreal, PQ | Saint-Lambert | 2002[10] |
Les Phénix | Ville de Mont-Royal | ||
Loose Ends | Halifax, NS | Mayflower | 2006[11] |
Odds & Ends | St. John's, NFL | St. John's | 2016[12] |
Prairie Lily Curling | Saskatoon, SK | Nutana | 2014[13] |
Queen City Curling | Regina, SK | The Callie | 2023 |
Rainbow Rockers | Ottawa, ON | Ottawa | 2002[14] [15] |
Riverdale | Toronto, ON | Royal Canadian | 1983[16] |
Rotators | 1962 |
After Calgary hosted a Western Cup LGBT curling bonspiel in 2003, leagues from across the country began discussing the formation of a Canadian Gay Curling League; the result of those discussions was the first Canadian Gay Curling Championships, which were hosted by Curling With Pride in Edmonton in 2006.[17] By the time Edmonton hosted the Championships for a second time, in 2014, the bonspiel was buoyed by $20,000 in government support, and Canadian Olympic gold medallist Marc Kennedy threw the ceremonial first rock.[18] At the 2015 event, hosted for a second time at the Royal Canadian Curling Club in Toronto, the first rock was thrown by John Epping—an openly gay curler who has skipped Ontario's Brier entry three times.[19] [20] Winnipeg hosted the 3rd national bonspiel in 2008 only three years after the founding of the Keystone Curling League there; it hosted again in 2016, when Olympians Kaitlyn Lawes and Jill Officer threw the ceremonial first rocks. By 2016, the winning team was awarded $1,000.
After the 2021 Championship was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Saskatoon became the ninth city to host the bonspiel in 2022.[21] Halifax—which had been slated to host in 2021 before the event was cancelled—hosted its second national championships in 2023 after previously hosting the first east coast edition in 2013.[22]
Altogether, Edmonton, Toronto, Winnipeg, Montreal, Calgary, Ottawa, Vancouver, and Halifax have each hosted the National Championships twice, while Saskatoon has hosted the bonspiel once. St. John's is set to host for the first time in 2024.
2006 | Vancouver | Aaron Thompson | Garrison Kuhlmann | Rob MacDonald | Brian Oldham | Edmonton | |
2007 | Montreal | Sylvain Bellavance | Ryan Johnson | Stephane Laforge | Alain Lessard | Toronto | |
2008 | Toronto | Scott Harcourt | Liam Hughes | Stephen Caldwell | Karl Zielbauer | Winnipeg | |
2009 | Toronto | Scott Harcourt | Liam Hughes | Karl Zielbauer | Stephen Caldwell | Montreal | |
2010 | Toronto | Scott Harcourt | Liam Hughes | Karl Zielbauer | Stephen Caldwell | Calgary | |
2011 | Ottawa | Joey Taylor | Mathieu Gravel | Lee Mantha (skip) | Darren McEwen | Ottawa | |
2012 | Vancouver | Stephen Schneider | Shawn Eklund | Shelly Birston | Glenn Smith | Vancouver | |
2013 | Vancouver | Stephen Schneider | Shawn Eklund | Shelly Birston | Glenn Smith | Halifax | |
2014 | Vancouver | Stephen Schneider | Shawn Eklund | Shelly Birston | Glenn Smith | Edmonton | |
2015 | Vancouver | Christopher Ordog | Aaron Lindgren | Greg Ohashi | Logan Chinski | Toronto | |
2016 | Vancouver | Aaron Thompson | Jack Holmes | Brian Oldham | Mark Trowell / Gerald Gunn | Winnipeg | |
2017 | Saskatoon | Derek Larsen | Darryl Finch | Bryce Lisitza | Jon Rennie / Norm Douville | Montreal | |
2018 | Ottawa | Joey Taylor | Lee Mantha | Darren Sutherland | Darren McEwen | Calgary | |
2019 | Toronto | Glen Newell | Lawrence Mudryk | David Jensen | Mark Richardson | Ottawa | |
2020 | Vancouver | Stephen Schneider | Shawn Eklund | Jason Larence | Brant Amos | Vancouver | |
2021 | Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic | ||||||
2022 | Saskatoon | Dustin Anderson | Avry Cline | Spencer McKnight | Daniel Carriere | Saskatoon | |
2023 | Toronto[24] | Bill Francis | Jeff Junke | Stephen Courteau | Ian Kasper | Halifax | |
2024 | Toronto | Bill Francis | Jeff Junke | Stephen Courteau | Ian Kasper | St. John's |
Vancouver | 7 | 2020 | |
Toronto | 6 | 2024 | |
Ottawa | 2 | 2018 | |
Saskatoon | 2 | 2022 | |
Montreal | 1 | 2007 |