Curling Controversy: Canada, Britain Face Double-Touch Accusations at Winter Olympics

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Curling Controversy: Canada, Britain Face Double-Touch Accusations at Winter Olympics
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Multiple curling teams, including Canada and Britain, are under scrutiny at the Winter Olympics for allegedly double-touching the stone after its release, a violation of the rules. The accusations have stirred controversy, with video evidence surfacing and players denying the infractions. The World Curling Federation has issued a statement clarifying the rule.

The Canadian men's and women's teams, as well as the British men's team, have been accused of the same infraction: double-touching the curling stone after it is released. It comes as Canada , a historic curling powerhouse, finds its ego bruised.

Its mixed doubles team didn't even play for a medal, and its women's team cannot afford to lose more matches if it hopes to advance.On Friday, Oskar Eriksson of Sweden accused Canada's Marc Kennedy of breaking the rules by touching the rock again after initially releasing it down the sheet of ice. Kennedy responded with an expletive-laden outburst. That was before video appearing to show a clear double-touch by Kennedy circulated on social media, taken by Swedish public broadcaster SVT. Still, he maintained his innocence. The Canadians won the match, 8-6. Late Saturday, an umpire accused acclaimed Canadian skip Rachel Homan of the same infraction in a game against Switzerland. The umpire stopped play and the stone was removed from play. Homan looked shocked and denied the allegation. Again, video spread on social media appearing to show her double-touch. The Canadians lost to the Swiss, 8-7. Then, on Monday, in the ninth end of Britain’s round-robin game against Germany, officials said Bobby Lammie of Scotland had touched a stone after releasing it. Sweden accused Canada’s Marc Kennedy of illegally touching his stone during a heated Olympic match. Here’s what to know about what happened and how World Curling responded.that double-tapping is not allowed, issuing a statement: “During forward motion, touching the granite of the stone is not allowed. This will result in the stone being removed from play.”Asked about the footage, Kennedy said: “If somebody said to you, ‘Hey, do you double-touch all the time?’ I honestly, in that split second of a moment, I couldn’t even tell you if I do or not.”“They’ve come up with a plan to catch teams in the act,” Kennedy said. Homan, meanwhile, postulated that she was being unfairly targeted because of the controversy on the men’s side. “I don’t understand the call. I’ll never understand it. We’ve never done that,” she said. “It has nothing to do with us.” Every Olympic curling stone begins on Ailsa Craig, a tiny uninhabited island off Scotland. The island produces the ultra-dense granite, including the rare “blue hone,” found nowhere else in the world, used to make the 44-pound stones seen at the Winter Olympics.As fierce as the competition can be, curling has a quiet camaraderie even though there have been scandals (see: Broomgate, a sweeping-related headache thatCanada is also the top nation in curling, easily its biggest market and where the biggest non-Olympic competitions tend to take place. The Canadians are taking it personally that their integrity is coming under attack in front of a global audience at the Olympics, which touts the values of respect and friendship. The athletes playing for Canada and Sweden used to be close off the ice — huge rivals, sure, but admiring of each other’s skills. Now there’s clear animosity between the teams, which is intriguing for the casual viewer but a blow to the curling community. Canada’s curlers are where they don’t want to be in the middle of a Winter Olympics: on the back foot, not just questioning their technique — “We’ll make some adjustments, release-wise, if we have to,” Kennedy said — but also scrambling to be in the mix for medals at the end of the week.of Canada’s four players in its only game Saturday. Canada lost 9-5 to Switzerland, a team it was expected to beat. All eyes are on both teams now. The Canadian men would not face Sweden again before the semifinals, should both teams make it, and that would be must-see TV whether you’re a curling fan or not.2026 Milan Cortina Olympics

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Curling Winter Olympics Canada Rules Violation Double-Touch Controversy

 

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