New-look Grand Slam of Curling series begins under new ownership

The Grand Slam of Curling season kicked off Tuesday with a new look and improved viewing options as The Curling Group made its presence felt right away at the HearingLife Tour Challenge in Charlottetown.

Addition of live online streaming on all sheets in Tier 1 event a noticeable change

Skip Reid Carruthers delivers a stone during curling action against Team Asselin at the PointsBet Invitational in Calgary on Sept. 26, 2024.
Winnipeg skip Reid Carruthers opened the Grand Slam of Curling season with a 7-5 loss to Sweden's Niklas Edin on Tuesday in Charlottetown. (Jeff McIntosh/Canadian Press/File)

The Grand Slam of Curling season kicked off Tuesday with a new look and improved viewing options as The Curling Group made its presence felt right away at the HearingLife Tour Challenge.

Live online streaming was available for all Tier-1 games at the Bell Aliant Centre in Charlottetown, addressing a longtime complaint of curling fans eager to see the first two days of competition and non-feature games.

It was one of the first noticeable differences since the series was purchased from Sportsnet last April by a group led by former PointsBet Canada chief commercial officer Nic Sulsky and Rumble Gaming founder Mike Cotton.

"I think if we can achieve half of what they're looking to do, I think it's going to be good for the sport," veteran skip Brad Gushue said in a recent interview. "I think the Grand Slams stayed a little stagnant in the last probably five or 10 years.

"Nic and Mike certainly want to grow it and expand it, which I think is good for this generation and certainly for the next generation of top curlers."

WATCH | Grand Slam of Curling about to 'blow up the roaring game':

Acquisition of Grand Slam of Curling is about to 'blow up the roaring game'

8 months ago
Duration 11:36
The Curling Group founder Nic Sulsky explains the changes he hopes to bring to the newly acquired curling circuit alongside supporters John Morris and Jennifer Jones.

Sportsnet, which had owned the series since 2012, remains the domestic broadcaster of the series. It will continue with its traditional Thursday start at Slam events leading up to the finals on Sunday.

The Curling Group will oversee operations of all five Slams on the calendar. Sulsky, who serves as chief executive officer, has said that any major changes to the series will likely wait until the current quadrennial wraps in early 2026.

Tinkering with the product was already underway, though, with a new logo, refreshed website and the rollout of a new podcast. Organizers also planned live music and entertainment at the 'Apres Curl' area at Slam host venues.

"It's all good, positive and exciting," said curling broadcaster Mike Harris. "I'm excited as someone who has covered the sport for 20 years to see how much impact these new ideas can have.

"It has always been an ongoing challenge for as long as I can remember, to try to attract younger audiences to the events and to follow along. I think that's their primary focus."

Live streaming — a first for the Slam series — was handled by the Canadian-based HomeTeam Live service. However, the opening draw came with some hiccups.

Scoreboard graphics not updated on some sheets

Team introductions could be heard but not seen. The audio was raw from ice level rather than via player microphones.

Scoreboard graphics were sporadically shown and weren't updated on some sheets. Camera viewpoints and angles were jarring at times and sometimes rock movement in the house was missed altogether.

One sheet had commentary while the other three did not. Live streaming was not available for the Tier-2 competition featuring lower-ranked teams.

The Curling Group announced last week that it had raised $5 million US in seed funding to "take the sport of curling to new heights" through strategic investments, innovation, and content production that will broaden the sport's global reach.

A five-person board of directors, which included former Bell Media president Maryann Turcke as chair, was also introduced.

"I'm feeling very excited about where the state of the Grand Slams is heading and what they're going to be," said Canadian skip Matt Dunstone. "I think we've got the right people in there for sure."

WATCH l CBC Sports' Devin Heroux talks with the retired Jones:

The top 16 men's teams and top 16 women's teams based on the final rankings last season were invited to play in the triple-knockout Tier-1 event.

Ottawa skip Rachel Homan continued her stellar play with a 9-3 win over Delaney Strouse of the United States in Tuesday's third draw. Homan, the defending women's world and Canadian champion, opened the season by winning last week's PointsBet Invitational in Calgary.

In other Draw 3 results, Italy's Stefania Constantini defeated four-time Canadian champion Kerri Einarson of Gimli, Man., 6-4, Winnipeg's Kaitlyn Lawes doubled South Korea's Eun-Jung Kim 6-3 and Switzerland's Silvana Tirinzoni was a 9-1 winner over Scotland's Rebecca Morrison.

Earlier, Winnipeg's Reid Carruthers dropped a 7-5 decision to Sweden's Niklas Edin in the first draw and Bruce Mouat topped fellow Scot Cameron Bryce 6-2. Sweden's Anna Hasselborg dropped an 8-5 decision to Japan's Satsuki Fujisawa and Italy's Joel Retornaz beat American Korey Dropkin 6-3.

In Draw 2, Calgary's Kevin Koe topped Switzerland's Yannick Schwaller 7-4 and Brad Jacobs of Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., shaded American John Shuster 6-5.

Switzerland's Xenia Schwaller edged Sweden's Isabella Wrana 7-6 and Ross Whyte beat James Craik 6-3 in a battle of Scottish teams.

In Tuesday's late draw, Matt Dunstone's Manitoba-based squad edged Mike McEwen's Saskatoon, Sask., foursome 6-5, Brad Gushue's team from St. John's, N.L., edged Michael Brunner of Switzerland 7-6 in an extra end, American Tabatha Peterson defeated Winnipeg's Chelsea Carey 9-6, and Eun-ji Gim of South Korea got by Edmonton's Selena Sturmay 8-7 in an extra end.

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