Jean-Michel Menard and his Quebec rink win world mixed curling gold medal

Canadian skip leads way in 7-4 victory over host Scotland in Aberdeen, U.K.

Image | menard-michel-jean-1180

Caption: Skip Jean-Michel Menard, pictured, and his Quebec rink of Marie-France Larouche, Ian Belleau and Annie Lemay defeated Scotland 7-4 in the gold-medal game at the world mixed curling championship in Aberdeen, United Kingdom. Earlier Saturday, they posted a convincing 9-4 semifinal win over Switzerland. (Ansis Ventins/World Curling Federation)

Jean-Michel Menard led Canada to gold at the world mixed curling championship on Saturday in the United Kingdom.
Canada needed just eight ends to beat host Scotland 7-4 after Menard's stone placement in the eighth made it impossible for Scotland to score three at the Curl Aberdeen facility.
The Scots conceded.
The victory from Menard and teammates Marie-France Larouche, Ian Belleau and Annie Lemay came hours after they defeated Switzerland 9-4 in six ends in the semifinals.
Canada got off to a great start in the final, scoring two in the first end after a double take-out by Menard.
Scotland, skipped by Cameron Bryce, responded straight away, putting three points on the board in the second end.
Canada gave up a single steal in the third when Menard's last take-out overcurled, but the Canadians recovered scoring two in the fourth to tie it up 4-4.
Canada stole a point each in the fifth and sixth ends, to take a two-point lead, and then in the seventh, Bryce's double take-out attempt wasn't successful, and Scotland gave up another single steal.
The Scots had clinched their berth in the final by beating Sweden 6-5 in an extra end.
Switzerland captured bronze with a 6-4 win over Sweden.
WATCH | CBC Sports' That Curling Show examines the curling landscape:

Media Video | That Curling Show: State of the Union with 3-time world champ Silvana Tirinzoni

Caption: Hosts Devin Heroux and Colleen Jones examine the curling landscape as a new quadrennial begins. They talk to newly-appointed World Curling Federation President Beau Welling, 3-time world champion skip from Switzerland Silvana Tirinzoni, Curling Canada's Nolan Thiessen and close the show with journalists Ted Wyman and Greg Strong.

Open Full Embed in New Tab (external link)Loading external pages may require significantly more data usage.