Manitoba

Disbanding of Mike McEwen's team among sweeping changes in Canadian curling after Olympics

Free agency among Canada's top curling teams picked up steam with another team announcing changes Wednesday.

Winnipeg rink breaking up after 11 years together at end of this season

Skip Mike McEwen at the Olympic curling trials final on Dec. 9. His Winnipeg team has announced they will disband after 11 years at the conclusion of this season. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Free agency among Canada's top curling teams picked up steam with another team announcing changes Wednesday.

Mike McEwen's rink from Winnipeg announced on Facebook it would split after 11 years at the conclusion of this season.

McEwen, B.J. Neufeld, Matt Wozniak and Denni Neufeld lost in the men's final of December's Olympic trials to Kevin Koe.

They were the first team to earn a wild-card spot at the Canadian men's curling championship in its new format. McEwen just missed the playoffs at 7-4.

"We will part ways with fond reflections and we hope continued success for whichever direction each one of us should choose, on or off the ice," the team said in a statement.

Movement between curling teams is particularly frenetic after a Winter Olympics as teams re-form with a view to qualifying for the next games.

Braeden Moskowy is leaving Reid Carruthers' Winnipeg team after four years playing vice. Moskowy said on Twitter that he curled on a broken ankle this season.

The Koe team from Calgary that finished fourth at the Olympic Games is looking for a replacement at third. Marc Kennedy is taking a hiatus from competitive curling.

More changes to come

A significant change next season for the Jennifer Jones team that won Olympic gold in 2014 will be Jill Officer serving as the team's alternate instead of playing second.

Officer will be in the Jones lineup at second for the women's world championship starting Saturday in North Bay, Ont., but Officer said she's known for some time she would not play another quadrennial to 2022.

Jocelyn Peterman — who won a Canadian championship in 2016 as Chelsea Carey's second — will join the Jones team for 2018-19.

Carey, who lost the women's Olympic trials final with Cathy Overton-Clapham, Peterman and Laine Peters, will skip a completely new team out of Edmonton next season that includes Sarah Wilkes, Dana Ferguson and Rachel Brown.

Curling Canada allowing one member of the team to be from out-of-province for playdowns has made for some new interesting combinations.

Winnipeg's Kerri Einarson and Edmonton's Val Sweeting have formed a new team comprised of former skips, with Sweeting serving as Einarson's vice and Shannon Birchard and Briane Meilleur on the front end.

Tracy Fleury from Sudbury, Ont., will skip Einarson's former teammates who are in Winnipeg.