Curling competition at Ottawa, Ontario
The 2001 Nokia Brier , Canada's national men's curling championship, was held March 3–11 at the Ottawa Civic Centre in Ottawa , Ontario . It was the very first Brier to be sponsored by Nokia . The theme of the event was the 2001: A Space Odyssey . In the finals, Team Alberta, consisting of skip Randy Ferbey , fourth David Nedohin , second Scott Pfeifer and lead Marcel Rocque would capture their first of four Brier wins as a team. They edged out Team Manitoba skipped by Kerry Burtnyk in the final, 8–4. While the Brier was not unsuccessful, it did end up losing money.[ 1] The total attendance was 154,136.
Teams
The 2001 Brier featured the 1981 and 1995 champion Kerry Burtnyk rink of Manitoba, 1982 and 1985 champion Al Hackner rink of Northern Ontario, 1998 champion Wayne Middaugh rink of Ontario, 1988 and 1989 champion third Randy Ferbey with his new Alberta rink, 1998 and 1999 runner-up Guy Hemmings rink of Quebec, 1990 runner-up Jim Sullivan rink of New Brunswick, 1999 Mixed champion Paul Flemming , 5-time PEI champion Peter MacDonald , 4-time territories champion Steve Moss , 2-time Saskatchewan champion Doug Harcourt along with newcomers 1989 Canadian Junior champion Dean Joanisse of BC, and Keith Ryan of Newfoundland.
Alberta
British Columbia
Manitoba
Ottewell CC , Edmonton
Fourth: David Nedohin
Skip: Randy Ferbey
Second: Scott Pfeifer
Lead: Marcel Rocque
Alternate: Dan Holowaychuk
Victoria CC , Victoria
Skip: Dean Joanisse
Third: Jay Tuson
Second: Glen Jackson
Lead: Randy Tervo
Alternate: Chris Atchison
Assiniboine Memorial CC , Winnipeg
Skip: Kerry Burtnyk
Third: Jeff Ryan
Second: Rob Meakin
Lead: Keith Fenton
Alternate: Andy Hick
New Brunswick
Newfoundland
Northern Ontario
Thistle St. Andrews CC , Saint John
Skip: Jim Sullivan
Third: Charlie Sullivan, Jr.
Second: Dan Alderman
Lead: Jeff Lacey
Alternate: Peter Case
Carol CC , Labrador City
Skip: Keith Ryan
Third: Garry Pinsent
Second: Mike Ryan
Lead: Dennis Langdon
Alternate: Gary Wensman
Fort William CC , Thunder Bay
Skip: Al Hackner
Third: Bryan Burgess
Second: Joe Scharf
Lead: Mike Assad
Alternate: Marshall Bagdon
Nova Scotia
Ontario
Prince Edward Island
Mayflower CC , Halifax
Skip: Mark Dacey
Third: Paul Flemming
Second: Blayne Iskiw
Lead: Tom Fetterly
Alternate: Mathew Harris
St. George's G&CC , Toronto
Skip: Wayne Middaugh
Third: Graeme McCarrel
Second: Ian Tetley
Lead: Scott Bailey
Alternate: David Carruthers
Silver Fox C&YC , Summerside Charlottetown CC , Charlottetown
Skip: Peter MacDonald
Third: Peter Gallant
Second: Mark O'Rourke
Lead: Mark Butler
Alternate: Robert Campbell
Quebec
Saskatchewan
Yukon/Northwest Territories
CC Saint-Lambert , Saint-Lambert
Skip: Guy Hemmings
Third: Don Westphal
Second: Guy Thibaudeau
Lead: Dale Ness
Alternate: Michel Ferland
Humboldt CC , Humboldt
Skip: Doug Harcourt
Third: Kevin Kalthoff
Second: Greg Harcourt
Lead: Brian Wempe
Alternate: Dean Kleiter
Yellowknife CC, Yellowknife
Skip: Steve Moss
Third: Darcy Moshenko
Second: Brad Chorostkowski
Lead: Jaret Moshenko
Alternate: Brian Kelln
Map of teams
Provincial Winners
Round-robin standings
Final round-robin standings
Round-robin results
All draw times are listed in Eastern Standard Time (UTC−5 ).
Draw 1
Saturday, March 3, 1:30 pm
Draw 2
Saturday, March 3, 7:00 pm
Draw 3
Sunday, March 4, 9:00 am
Draw 4
Sunday, March 4, 1:30 pm
Draw 5
Sunday, March 4, 7:30 pm
Draw 6
Monday, March 5, 9:00 am
Draw 7
Monday, March 5, 1:30 pm
Draw 8
Monday, March 5, 7:30 pm
Draw 9
Tuesday, March 6, 9:00 am
Draw 10
Tuesday, March 6, 1:30 pm
Draw 11
Tuesday, March 6, 7:30 pm
Draw 12
Wednesday, March 7, 9:00 am
Draw 13
Wednesday, March 7, 1:30 pm
Draw 14
Wednesday, March 7, 7:30 pm
Draw 15
Thursday, March 8, 9:00 am
Draw 16
Thursday, March 8, 1:30 pm
Draw 17
Thursday, March 8, 7:30 pm
Playoffs
1 vs. 2
Friday, March 9, 7:30 pm
3 vs. 4
Friday, March 9, 1:30 pm
Semifinal
Saturday, March 10, 1:30 pm
Final
Sunday, March 11, 1:30 pm
Statistics
Top 5 player percentages
Round robin only
Playdowns
Alberta : Team Nedohin, skipped by Randy Ferbey won the Alberta Safeway Select , defeating Kevin Martin 6–4 in the final at the Stettler Recreation Centre in Stettler on February 11.[ 2]
British Columbia : Dean Joanisse of Victoria won the Safeway Select B.C. men's curling championship , defeating defending Brier champion Greg McAulay of New Westminster , 5–4 in the final at the McArthur Island Sports Centre in Kamloops on February 11.[ 3]
Manitoba : Kerry Burtnyk (Assiniboine Memorial ) won the Manitoba Safeway Select 10–7 over Dale Duguid (Granite ) in the final at the Selkirk Recreation Complex in Selkirk on February 11. Duguid's last draw in the 10th came up short after picking on a piece of straw, giving the victory to Burtnyk.[ 4]
New Brunswick : Jim Sullivan of Saint John defeated Russ Howard of Moncton 6–5 in an extra end in the New Brunswick final played in Moncton .[ 5]
Newfoundland : Keith Ryan of Labrador City beat Ken Peddigrew of St. John's in the Newfoundland championship final, 5–4 in Stephenville .[ 5]
Northern Ontario : In an all-Thunder Bay final, the Al Hackner rink beat Team Bill Adams (skipped by Scott Henderson ) 6–5 in an extra end at the Northern Ontario Labatt Tankard played at the North Bay Granite Club in North Bay on February 11. Hackner made a draw to the button for the win.[ 6]
Nova Scotia : Paul Flemming defeated Ken Myers (both of Halifax) 9–7 in final of the Nova Scotia championship played in Sydney .[ 5]
Ontario : Wayne Middaugh beat Stayner 's John Morris , 4–3 in the final of the 2001 Ontario Nokia Cup played February 11 in Woodstock .[ 7]
Prince Edward Island : Peter MacDonald of Charlottetown won the Prince Edward Island Tankard on February 5.[ 8]
Quebec : Guy Hemmings downed François Roberge of Quebec City 7–2 in the Quebec final , played on February 10[ 9] in Chicoutimi .[ 10]
Saskatchewan Quill Lake 's Doug Harcourt went 22–0 through playdown play, culminating in a 5–2 victory over Rocansville 's Daryl Williamson in the final of the Pool Tankard played in Kindersley February 11.[ 11]
Northwest Territories /Yukon : Steve Moss of the Northwest Territories won the Yukon/NWT Men's Curling Championship played at the Mt. McIntyre Recreation Centre in Whitehorse, Yukon over the January 27–28 weekend. He posted a 5–1 record, two wins more than second place Jon Solberg of the Yukon.[ 12]
References
^ 2007 Brier to Hamilton | Curling at InTheHack
^ "Nedohin locks up Brier berth" . Edmonton Journal . February 12, 2001. p. 43. Retrieved January 30, 2023 .
^ "Brier-Bound" . Victoria Times-Colonist . February 12, 2001. p. 12. Retrieved January 30, 2023 .
^ "Burtnyk wins shootout" . Winnipeg Sun . February 12, 2001. p. 16. Retrieved January 30, 2023 .
^ a b c "Graber let Martin off the hook" . Calgary Herald . February 12, 2001. p. 4. Retrieved January 30, 2023 .
^ "Another Brier on Ice" . North Bay Nugget . February 12, 2001. p. 9. Retrieved January 30, 2023 .
^ "Morris searches for silver lining" . Ottawa Citizen . February 12, 2001. p. 29. Retrieved January 30, 2023 .
^ "Hack To House" . Regina Leader-Post . February 8, 2001. p. 15. Retrieved January 30, 2023 .
^ "Hemmings off to Brier" . Montreal Gazette . February 11, 2001. p. 8. Retrieved January 30, 2023 .
^ "Martin refuses to stay down" . Calgary Herald . February 11, 2001. p. 22. Retrieved January 30, 2023 .
^ "Shooting the lights out" . Saskatoon Star-Phoenix . February 12, 2001. p. 17. Retrieved January 30, 2023 .
^ "N.W.T. will be sending teams to both national curling championships" . Whitehorse Daily Star . January 29, 2001. p. 19. Retrieved January 30, 2023 .
Sources
Macdonald Brier Labatt Brier Nokia Brier Tim Hortons Brier Montana's Brier