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Montana Briar weekend wrap up

7 mins read
Brad Gushue at the Hog Line at the 2026 Montana Briar Canadian Curling championships in St John's, Newfoundland. Photo by Greg Locke
Brad Gushue at the Hog Line at the 2026 Montana Briar Canadian Curling championships in St John’s, Newfoundland. Photo by Greg Locke

ST JOHN’S, NL – The first weekend of Curling Canada’s 2026 Montana Briar in St John’s, Newfoundland has seen record crowds great curling.

In Pool A, as of Monday afternoon, Brad Gushue’s Newfoundland and Labrador rink is tied in first place and Olympic gold medalist Brad Jacobs with 3 in 3 wins. This rivalry could make for an exciting final and epic Briar story.

Over in Pool B Kevin Koe is also in first place with a 3 in 3 record and a serious contender for a finals spot.

Quebec’s Jean-Michel Ménard is sitting in second place while Newfoundland’s provincial champion Nathan Young is tied for third with Jayden King of Ontario.

Monday afternoon saw Nathan Young lose to Nova Scotia 11-2.

Tonight the two Newfoundlanders will meet each other in Monday night’s draw. Sure to be a crown favourite.

The OTHER home team raises the roof at the 2026 Montana’s Brier

Newfoundland and Labrador's Team Nathan Young celebrate a tenth-end final-shot victory in a thrilling 9-8 win over Prince Edward Island's Team Tyler Smith Sunday at the 2026 Montana's Brier. (Photo, Curling Canada/Andrew Klaver)
Newfoundland and Labrador’s Team Nathan Young celebrate a tenth-end final-shot victory in a thrilling 9-8 win over Prince Edward Island’s Team Tyler Smith Sunday at the 2026 Montana’s Brier. (Photo, Curling Canada/Andrew Klaver)

The 23-year-old skip for the Newfoundland and Labrador champions from St. John’s — who are officially sharing host-team duties this year with their clubmates at the RE/MAX Centre/St. John’s Curling Club with Team Brad Gushue — added to those memories in dramatic fashion Sunday afternoon at the Mary Brown’s Centre.  

In the last game on the ice, with nearly all of the sellout crowd still in the house and a national television audience watching on TSN, Young coolly navigated a tricky port to remove shot stone belonging to Prince Edward Island’s Team Tyler Smith and score a winning three in the 10th end for a crowd-pleasing 9-8 triumph.  

With the win, Young, vice-skip Colin Thomas, second Nathan Locke, lead Ben Stringer, alternate Jeff Thomas and coach Cory Schuh improved to 2-1 after the opening weekend.  

“That was a pretty special moment,” said Young, a former For The Love of Curling Scholarship recipient, with a wide smile. “I think the crowd really helped the sweepers sweep that past the guard — they did a great job and a great line call and great team shot. Very happy about that. My heart, you probably wouldn’t register on a heart rate monitor right now, it’s going very fast, but (I’m) just so happy.”

Nathan Young, skip of TEAM NL at the 2026 Montana Briar Canadian curling championships. Photo by Greg Locke.
Nathan Young, skip of TEAM NL at the 2026 Montana Briar Canadian curling championships. Photo by Greg Locke.

He had reason to be after a tight game with the Islanders, who had scored nice deuces in the seventh and ninth ends, while holding Team Young to a single in the eighth.  

Still, though, Young believed his team was in good shape in the back half of the game after adjusting to the swingy ice and stones.  

“At the fifth-end break we said we had to get a better handle on the curl; we got to stay ahead of it on the brooms, and we did that better in the second half and it paid off in the last shot,” said Young. “We weren’t getting ahead of the curl with the broom. We’re throwing it good, the weight’s pretty close, we just have to keep the brooms down and give ourselves a chance.”

They did that in the 10th, and as a result, they’re in good shape in the Pool A standings after the opening weekend, tied for third place at 2-1 with Ontario’s Team Jayden King (Tillsonburg) behind the unbeaten Team Gushue and Team Canada, skipped by Brad Jacobs (Calgary).

Even more important is the confidence gained from Sunday’s effort, including the dramatic game-winner.

“Hopefully we have even better ones left to come, but I’ll definitely remember that one and the reaction from our team and the crowd for sure,” said Young. “I think what really stands out there is how we didn’t start off the strongest, but we were able to get together and play well enough in the second half to take out the win. That’s a huge confidence boost going forward because sometimes you’re going to be down against these good teams —you have to stay in it.”

 In other games Sunday afternoon, Team Newfoundland and Labrador-Gushue doubled Ontario 8-4; Team Canada remained perfect with an 11-2 win over Nunavut’s Team Derek Samagalski (0-3; Iqaluit); and Saskatchewan’s Team Kelly Knapp (1-1; Regina) turned back Nova Scotia’s Team Kendal Thompson (0-2; Halifax) 8-5.

Quebec player breaks the broom

Something from the “You Don’t See That Very Often file.

Quebec’s Martin Crête broke his broom while sweeping, which caused a notable moment in the event. This incident highlights the emotional intensity often seen in curling competition. Thankfully no serious injury. Check out the video! 

 

Martin Crête takes a tumble after his broom snapped in half while he was sweeping for Quebec against Brad Gushue and Newfoundland and Labrador at the 2026 Montana's Brier. CLICK TO SEE VIDEO AT TSN
Martin Crête takes a tumble after his broom snapped in half while he was sweeping for Quebec against Brad Gushue and Newfoundland and Labrador at the 2026 Montana’s Brier. CLICK TO SEE VIDEO AT TSN

or click this URL: https://www.tsn.ca/video/2026/02/28/must-see-martin-crete-snaps-his-broom-in-half-while-sweeping-at-the-brier/

With files from Curling Canada. 

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